DINING SKILLS
BOOT CAMP
The basics you should know
to avert social disasters
By DIANE GOTTSMAN
There is nothing more uncomfortable
than sitting across the
table from someone you are
trying to impress and not
knowing what fork to use or, as a guest,
wondering which part of the menu you
should order from.
Would you know when to make a toast
or what to do if you found yourself with a
huge piece of gristle in your mouth?
Years ago, as a novice fund-raiser, I sat
between two VIPs
from separate corporations.
One was drinking my water, and the
other was eating from my bread plate. I
had many options — none of them good.
Should I drink from the next person’s water
glass? Should I skip the bread basket?
Should I tell them? What a dilemma!
How we handle uncomfortable situations
is what sets us apart. Following are
some guidelines to help you avert your
own dining disasters:
1. Wait for your host. Don’t touch
anything on the table until your host
begins. This gives her/him the opportunity
to propose a welcome toast if she/he
intends to do so.
2. Your bread plate is always on your
left, and your glass is always on your right.
There are no alternate rules.
3. Never refuse to toast because you
do not “drink.” A toast does not have to
include liquor. Water, tea or any beverage
will do. Remember, a toast is a gesture
of respect, not a ceremony to
quench your thirst.
4. When drinking to a toast, don’t feel
it necessary, or become offended, if you do
not clink or are not clinked by someone
else. The protocol is raising your glass
towards the center, simulating a clink.
Clink and break a fine crystal glass at
someone’s home and see how quickly you
are invited back!
5. Butter your bread over your bread
plate. Tear off one piece of bread at a
time and butter it – not in midair or on
the way to your mouth. Never hold your
bread in one hand while drinking your
tea in another.
6. Finesse your napkin with aplomb.
Dab around your mouth rather than swabbing
your entire face. Do not treat the napkin
as if it is a foreign object, holding it as
if it will tear or break. In other words, keep
your pinkie down.
7. If you must leave the table, quietly
say, “Excuse me,” place your napkin on
your chair, push your chair in, and walk
away. Do not announce where you are
going. At the end of the meal, the napkin
is placed on the left side of the plate or
center of the place setting if the
dinner/dessert plate has been removed.
8. If your soup is too hot to eat, be
patient. Don’t blow on it or place ice
cubes in it to cool it down faster. If it is
too late and you find yourself with a
scalding teaspoon of hot liquid in your
mouth, quickly take a drink of cold
water. This is a much better option than
spitting it back into the soup bowl.
9. When cutting your food, keep your
elbows down and close to your side.
Otherwise, you look like you are trying to
row a boat upstream and may bump into
your seatmate. Cut only one piece of meat
at a time, gliding the knife behind the fork,
not in front of the fork. The only exception
is if you are dining with your 3-year-old child
and must cut up his/her meat and veggies.
10. Pass food counterclockwise. Please
use your best judgment here. If you are at
a large table and the person directly to
your left asks for the butter, it is not necessary
to follow the counterclockwise rule.
11. Salt and pepper are married. If
someone asks for the salt, no need to give
an etiquette tutorial, simply smile and pass
both. It will keep you from having to pass
the pepper 30 seconds later.
12. Make conversation with guests on
both your left and right. At large events,
refrain from yelling across the table to
get another guest’s attention. As a matter
of fact, refrain from yelling at the dinner
table at all.
13. When you see people you know
at a restaurant, don’t feel it is your
obligation to walk over and say “hello.” Acknowledge them with a smile
and a wave and call them at home or the
office later. They will appreciate the small
kindness, as there is a good chance they
don’t remember your name, or they
don’t want to have to stop eating and
introduce you to their guests.
14. Please, oh please, turn your cell
phone off or at least change the tone to
vibrate. Nothing is more annoying than a
ringing cell phone, and this simple courtesy
will be greatly appreciated by fellow diners.
15. If you absolutely must take a call,
excuse yourself and leave the table.
16. If you invite, you pay and you tip.
Period. As a guest, don’t fight over the
check as if you have just won the lottery
and are wrestling for the winning ticket.
As the host or guest, if an unattractive tug
of war is about to ensue, simply let go and
say a gracious “thank you.” A fistfight
over paying the bill is never a pleasant way
to end a good meal.
17. At a business lunch or dinner, do
not split, share or ask for a doggie bag.
18. If you are not interested in after dinner
coffee, do not turn the cup upside
down to signal “no thank you” to the waiter.
Simply motion to the waiter that you are
not interested by placing your hand above
(not on) the coffee cup when he offers.
19. Pace yourself. You never want to be
the first to finish or the last one that everyone
else is waiting on impatiently.
20. After the meal, don’t push your
plate away from your midsection and
make any “full” comments such as “I’m
stuffed,” “I could just pop,” or “Ugh, I feel
sick I ate so much.” A better alternative is “The food was delicious.”
A final note: At a business event, you
are not there to eat. If you arrive ravenous,
you will lose credibility when you are spotted
at the buffet table, diving into the
shrimp bowl headfirst. Be sure to have a
light snack before you arrive so you can
pay attention to your fellow guests.
And never, ever consider a toothpick a
fashion staple. If you must use a stick to
remove objects from your teeth, do so
privately and out of plain sight of your
best client.
Diane Gottsman is director of the
Protocol School of Texas and appears regularly
on San Antonio Living on WOAI-TV.
back to top