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EATING DIFFERENT TYPES OF FOOD IN ENGLAND

EATING DIFFERENT TYPES OF FOOD IN ENGLAND. Group 3 IORDACHE LARISA MARIA MIHALCIOIU FLORIN BADESCU VASILE FLORIN CLEJ EMILIAN MURARIU DANIEL. How to eat different types of food. Soup When eating soup, tip the bowl away from you and scoop the soup up with your spoon.

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EATING DIFFERENT TYPES OF FOOD IN ENGLAND

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  1. EATING DIFFERENT TYPES OF FOOD IN ENGLAND Group 3 IORDACHE LARISA MARIA MIHALCIOIU FLORIN BADESCU VASILE FLORIN CLEJ EMILIAN MURARIU DANIEL

  2. How to eat different types of food • Soup • When eating soup, tip the bowl away from you and scoop the soup up with your spoon. • Soup should always be taken (without slurping of course) from the side of the spoon, and not from the 'end' as in most of the rest of Europe.

  3. When eating soup, you should hold your spoon in your right hand and tip the bowl away from you, scooping the soup in movements away from yourself. The soup spoon should never be put into the mouth, and soup should be sipped from the side of the spoon, not the end.

  4. Peas • To be very polite, peas should be crushed onto the fork - a fork with the prongs pointing down. The best way is to have load the fork with something to which they will stick, such as potato or a soft vegetable that squashes easily onto the fork. It's sometimes easier to put down your knife and then switch your fork to the other hand, so you can shovel the peas against something else on the plate, thus ensuring they end up on your fork.

  5. Pudding (desserts) • To eat dessert, break the dessert with the spoon, one bite at a time. Push the food with the fork (optional) into the spoon. Eat from the spoon. (Fork in left hand; spoon in right.)

  6. Fingers or not? • It is not acceptable to use your fingers to push food onto your fork, nor to handle most food items. Some foods such as fruit, bread, sandwiches or burgers may be eaten using fingers, and fingers are mandatory for eating some items, such as asparagus spears, which are traditionally served with sauce on the side for dipping.

  7. Rolls and butter • When eating rolls, break off a piece of bread before buttering. Eating it whole looks tacky. • On formal dining occasions it is good manners to take some butter from the butter dish with your bread knife and put it on your side plate (for the roll). Then butter pieces of the roll using this butter. This prevents the butter in the dish getting full of bread crumbs as it is passed around.

  8. Food on Christmas day • It is a tradition to have on the Christmas dinner table roast turkey or goose, brussels sprouts, cranberry sauce, roast potatoes, pigs in a blanket, rich nutty stuffing,hot gravy and…X-mas pudding!!!

  9. If you got hungry…take a look!

  10. That’s all, folks! • Webbliography: http://www.woodlands-junior.kent.sch.uk/CUSTOMS/behaviourfood.html www.thehistoryofchristmas.com/traditions/england.htm www.googleimages.com www.google.ro

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