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Eating Rules

Some rules to remember:

  • Never pass food to someone using chopsticks. This act parallels the Japanese funeral ceremony of passing cremated bones of a deceased relative between family members. If you must share food, pass them with the plate so that they can pick from it instead.
  • If you take food from a shared plate (such as in the above situation), use the reverse ends of your chopsticks rather than the ends, which go in your mouth.
  • Never bite into a piece of food and then replace the other half on your plate. Once you have picked something up you should eat all of it.
  • When not using your chopsticks, you should place them in front of you, parallel to the edge of the sushi bar, with the narrow ends in the provided hashi oki; never place them directly on the bar.

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  • Never leave rice after a meal. Leaving any kind of food is considered rude, but leaving rice is especially so.
  • Never smoke in a sushi bar, it obscures the delicate flavours of the fish for everyone else. Ashtrays will likely be provided in many sushi bars (especially in Europe and America) but to use them is dismissive of the efforts of the chef.
  • Never expect the chef to handle money, another employee will settle the bill for you. People who handle the food never touch the money.
  • Do not ask for knives. This would imply that the food is so tough it can't be properly eaten without them.
  • Don't make wasabi soup with your soy sauce! Sushi Chef's cringe at this spectacle that Americans often make. Wasabi paralyses your palette and will hide the subtle flavours that fish has when eaten raw.
  • Eat sushi with chopsticks or your hands, but never with a fork.
  • Most westerners eat sushi by dipping it rice-side-down into the soy, and let the soy soak up into the rice.Then they wonder why the sushi disintegrates on its way from the soy to their mouth, leaving little black flecks of soy-stained rice all over the bar and their clothing. Japanese people rarely have this problem, because they know that the purpose of the soy is not to flavour the rice, but the fish. As such, the sushi should be dipped rice-side-up in the soy and then carried to the mouth.
EATING WITH CHOPSTICKS
1.Hold the stationary stick with slight pressure between the second joint of the thumb and the index finger.
Support it with the ring finger and little finger.
2.Hold the moving stick between the thumb, index and middle fingers as you would hold a pen.
3.To open the ends of chopsticks, lift the middle finger up.
If you can't do it, please push the supporting point of the ring finger with the other index finger.
4.Drop the middle finger down to shut the ends of the chopsticks.
If you can't do it well, please push the supporting point on the ring finger with the other index finger.