According to Queen Elizabeth II, the purpose of etiquette is to put others at ease because everyone knows the rules. For this reason, my cutlery handling techniques vary based on whom I'm around. There is no point in appearing to be a cutlery boor/snob by handling it differently than those around you.
When I'm alone or in an informal setting, I do the American hand-switching thing where I use the fork in the left hand when cutting and the right hand when scooping. When I'm in a formal setting, I always keep the fork in the left hand, convex side up. Of course, this formal technique is premised on European modular food where one uses a piece of meat or vegetable at the end of the fork to stop smaller, more mobile objects falling off.
Of course, some formal and many informal settings in which I eat are Chinese, in which case I can use chopsticks. I'm sure I do so boorishly and badly but I cultivate an ignorance of what i'm doing wrong so as not to feel uncomfortable.
I have not observed how left-handed people handle cutlery in informal settings but in formal settings, no allowances are made for handedness.
I'm hoping Thai cutlery protocols eventually come to dominate the world, with the fork and spoon in separate hands and a serrated side on one or both with which meat is cut.
I'm Canadian; most Canadians do the hand-switching thing all the time, as do most Americans. However, a larger percentage of Canadians do the formality-based protocol that I do. Elderly haute bourgeois Canadians and Americans, however, will sometimes use the formal method indiscriminately, regardless of social settign.
When I'm alone or in an informal setting, I do the American hand-switching thing where I use the fork in the left hand when cutting and the right hand when scooping. When I'm in a formal setting, I always keep the fork in the left hand, convex side up. Of course, this formal technique is premised on European modular food where one uses a piece of meat or vegetable at the end of the fork to stop smaller, more mobile objects falling off.
Of course, some formal and many informal settings in which I eat are Chinese, in which case I can use chopsticks. I'm sure I do so boorishly and badly but I cultivate an ignorance of what i'm doing wrong so as not to feel uncomfortable.
I have not observed how left-handed people handle cutlery in informal settings but in formal settings, no allowances are made for handedness.
I'm hoping Thai cutlery protocols eventually come to dominate the world, with the fork and spoon in separate hands and a serrated side on one or both with which meat is cut.
I'm Canadian; most Canadians do the hand-switching thing all the time, as do most Americans. However, a larger percentage of Canadians do the formality-based protocol that I do. Elderly haute bourgeois Canadians and Americans, however, will sometimes use the formal method indiscriminately, regardless of social settign.