Monday, March 19, 2012

How to use chopsticks

  • When you go out with a group of friends to an Asian restaurant, are you always the one that asks for a fork? Well, you dont have to be that person anymore. Its actually not that difficult -- watch the video above and learn how to use chopsticks.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • This year, Chinese citizens of all ages, classes and hometowns joined the fight to create a healthier environment and reverse China's deforestation problem by planting trees in open spaces and trying to use reusable chopsticks more often.
  • (PRWeb)
  • Dont let them ever tell you that learning to use chopsticks is like learning to ride a bike, because I learned how to do both at about the same age, and yet its a laugh riot whenever Im forced to down my sashimi without the aid of a fork.
  • (YAHOO!)
  • SAN ANGELO, Texas — Children of all ages were scattered around the San Angelo Museum of Fine Arts meeting room, making origami cranes, learning how to use chopsticks and sampling traditional Japanese food of rice balls and edamame.
  • (Standard-Times)
  • Here are a few tips on proper sushi etiquette that should earn the respect of your sushi bar chef: If at a sushi bar, place the chopsticks across your plate, parallel to the edge of the bar.
  • (Hindustan Times)
  • This trip was a combination of education, business and pleasure. Travel tip • Learn to use chopsticks before you go. A fork will be offered, but the Chinese are pleased when you go native. Contribute • Email your photo to stlpost@gmail.com.
  • (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
  • Use your non-dominant hand This can be something small — tasting a different food, say, or using chopsticks at dinner — or bigger, such as picking up a new hobby or tackling a skill such as a foreign language. • Combine your senses.
  • (Wichita Eagle)
  • But, says Leela Punyaratabandhu, a food writer who blogs at SheSimmers.com, the worst thing to do at a traditional, rice-based meal would be to use chopsticks. That is awkward and inconvenient at best and tacky at worst, she says.
  • (CNN)
  • The event featured a culture table, which contained origami demonstrations, a lesson on how to use chopsticks and Japanese calligraphy.
  • (Kansas State Collegian)
  • I don't know how to use chopsticks. I don't know any Chinese words. I can't tell the difference between Korean, Chinese or Japanese — when it comes to the spoken word, the written word or physical appearance.
  • (News Enterprise)

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