Thursday, July 14, 2005

Table Etiquette


In our family we follow some basic rules while at the table.

However, we'd probably still be considered complete heathens by some.

Let's look at one of our more formal meals - The Sunday Roast Beef Dinner complete with silverware, fine china, and guests.

  1. Complete places are set for every meal. Everyone gets a knife, spoon and fork whether there is a need to use every utensil or not.
  2. We wait until everyone is seated at the table before we make a move. The food is not touched at this point.
  3. Grace is said.
  4. We start helping ourselves to the food placed before us, then pass to the left. That's right, the left, not the right. Got it?
  5. If a dish lands in front of you that you are not interested in, you continue to pass it to the left. You do not leave said dish stranded in front of you.
  6. You only stop passing once you ensure that everyone at the table has partaken of the particular dish you are holding.
  7. You can start eating at any time, but continue to pass dishes as requested (and salt and pepper are always passed together, not separately. Right Grandma?)
  8. Nothing is cleared from the table until everyone has finished eating...unless Grandma is on her own agenda. :)
  9. Dessert is served, guests first. We do not start our desserts until the server, usually Grandma, has returned to their seat and started their own dessert.
  10. All dishes are washed, whether they were used or not.

From here on out there aren't any fast rules that we follow for this type of meal.

Now then, there's the regular, every day family meal. Let's say supper on a Tuesday night. Let's see if things change.

  1. How the table is set depends on who sets it. Grandpa and I usually lay a full setting. Sherri will skip spoons, for example, if she knows neither she nor Glenn will use one at this meal. Sometimes serviettes are forgotten (that's napkins for any American readers), at least until Grandma gets home and puts them out.
  2. We wait until everyone is seated before lifting any food, but we do make exceptions from time to time.
  3. Grace is said.
  4. We help ourselves to the nearest dish then pass to the left, unless say, Sherri or I are having trouble with one of the boys, in which case the others may take their food first and we'll get ours when we're ready. (this can happen during a Sunday Roast Beef Dinner as well).
  5. Pass food even if you aren't interested in it. Sometimes a dish gets stranded, but some hungry person will eventually ask for it.
  6. Stop passing once you ensure everyone's had a helping, or when you're overcome with hunger and HAVE to dig in immediately.
  7. You can start eating at any time, but continue to pass dishes as requested (S&P together, same diff).
  8. The table starts getting cleared when somebody feels like doing it.
  9. If there is dessert to be had (usually left over from Sunday Roast Beef Dinner), we usually wait until everyone is served before eating it. Sometimes Grandpa will bring dessert out to the table and start eating it even before everyone has finished their supper! Say it isn't so!
  10. All dishes are washed, whether they were used or not (unless they can be snuck back away into their respective cupboard or drawer without Grandma seeing).
  • Burping and farting happens. Sorry to have to tell you that.
  • I personally like to cut into anything I can with my fork. Why? I'm too lazy to use a knife unless I have to. I believe there are those who would find that incredibly disgusting.
  • There is often lots of hollering and crying by the youngest members of the family.
  • There is lots of getting up from the table and returning throughout a meal.
  • Phones are often answered during meals, but not always.
  • There is often too much barking by my dog, who gets yelled at until somebody sprays him with some water, or lets him out.
  • We all try to help clean up whenever we can and as much as we can.
  • Us kids are very thankful that Grandpa makes most of our suppers for us, and Grandma does the bulk of the cleaning up. Are we fortunate or what?

Unlike many families in this day and age, we are often able to spend 3 meals a day together around the table, and we wouldn't have it any different. Incredible. I think most of these "rules" came from my paternal grandmother, and to me, they're all about being considerate. It is so important to be considerate of others when you live with 6 other people, and when there are so many people in the world that we need to interact with each and every day.

I'd love to hear about your family meals. Do you have any rules while at the table?

11 comments:

kathryn said...

wow. that's heavy duty!! Martha Stewart would be proud. . . well except for the farting/belching and such! Small families operate a little differently. . not so much need for 'traffic flow control' at the table, cuz there ain't much to control!

i'm usually the one in the 'hot seat'. . as we call it. . the 'getter'. . i'm usually the cook and the pastry chef. . and i'm usually the cleaner upper too. If utensils or dishes aren't used, i put them back in the cupboard! i'm too lazy to wash things that don't need it. i like the forks on the left, the knives with the blades facing the plate and the spoons next to the knives. Glasses go on the left. Serviettes are usually always on the table, in a holder, except when we're out, in which case a torn in half sheet of paper towel will do! s&p-- always on the table. . we don't pass both together. . as for the food, it seems to naturally find its way around the circle. . haven't really ever stopped to see what direction. . hmmm. . grace is this: "God is great, God is good, let us thank Him for our food. . amen. "YAY JESUS!" (that's our 'young children at the table grace') James when he's over he has to be a rebel and say "YAY FEFUZ" there's a lot of chaos when we're all assembled and there may be 2 boyfriends also and Eri's screeching cuz Lindsay is trying to do stuff for her. .The dog is at her 'station' underneath the table, especially near to the young kiddies and James is chattering non stop. . see, that's why i like being in the 'hot seat'. . cuz i get to go in and out between the kitchen and dining room and get a bit of a break from the intensity in there! "special occasion" dinners involve china and the good silver, the good glasses, good everything. . there are usually decorations galore! table 'confetti'. . things hanging from the light fixture, balloons or other decorative items. . streamers often show up and banners. . flowers of course and candles. .

your family is very fortunate to be able to spend so much time at the table. . .you're right, its a bit unusual but wonderful! there are just 3 of us now living her all the time. . (for half of the year anyway, when KK's home from school). . and we all work different shifts!!! the only family meal time we get is Sunday at lunch. . through the week the grandkiddies are often here for meals and i take my breaks to sit with them and Linds. . its nice. Family time is very nice and so important.

Great idea for a post there, girl!!! thanx for sharing that!

supersimbo said...

good for you ..........excellent.
since i been workin in the restaurant i have got very very fussy about how things are done at the table

Krista said...

I can't reacall any farting or belching at a Lavender Family dinner...are you sure?! ;-)P

I miss that routine. I eat most of my meals alone now - usually on the couch. I'll sit at the table if I want to flip through the paper while I'm eating. If Bob and I share a meal at home, we often sit on the couch. I hate it, but it's become such a habit. We often eat outside in the summer - I like that. But we don't really have any rules, since it's just the two of us. Dinner is served out of the dishes it was prepared in - I don't actually have any serving dishes.

It sucks. I wish we(I) treated our mealtimes with more dignity.

supersimbo said...

sort it out krista..........its real fun to make it a little more formal........i promise

Tracy said...

As far as washing clean dishes goes, I have to agree with my mom - at least one pair of hands took them out of the cupboard, possibly another is putting them back, and another yet will take them out again for the next meal. I'd rather take my dishes out of the cupboard knowing they're nice and clean. Anal? You betcha! :)

kathryn said...

hey, we're all anal about something, right?! heh heh. . .

supersimbo said...

haha thats funny, i have to admit i am like that about certain things, like if im sitting watching tv and my shoes are lying on the floor and hang on, they ae not sitting side by side together............arrrghhhh must fix shoes. things like that!!

glennlavender said...

OK...
1st: Nicely done, Tracy! You did leave out the fact that we always have bread plates at the formal meals, and that no, you cannot just dust the crumbs of your plate and use them for dessert. New plates must come out for dessert.
2nd: Krista, yes on the farting and belching, believe it or not, though never at the formal meal, and I'd like to add that it's never from me. There is also often strained pooping going on by the younger family members. Hopefully they'll learn some discretion eventually.

Tracy said...

You're right Glenn, I forgot about the dessert plates...but I thought everybody did that! hahahahaha

Sherri Lavender said...

Oops! When I commented I didn't realize that I was logged in as 'downhere'... I'm surprised you didn't call 'Glenn' on his claim that he didn't contribute to the farting & belching!

Sherri

Tracy said...

Ha! I thought it was Glenn being facetious! We've all come to EXPECT at least a little belching from him!