That is pretty much how I was taught to eat Udon by a Japanese friend many years ago. Japanese restaurants often provide those cheap pull apart chopsticks, which makes everything a little more difficult to manage, especially a heavy load of noodles. My friend would rub the sticks together to remove any splinters. I have also seen people rip the wrapper in half and use it as a protective sheath against the sharp wooden corners of the sticks. BTW, Really great description of the process, a very entertaining reply.titus wong wrote:I'm not Japanese but I think in this instance, a similar standard of etiquette applies to most east asian cultures when tackling a bowl of noodles.
snk wrote:(Frequent lurker, infrequent poster here.)
I just had to post this scene from Tampopo.
titus wong wrote:I'm not Japanese but I think in this instance, a similar standard of etiquette applies to most east asian cultures when tackling a bowl of noodles.* When I was but a wee bairn, me mum taught me that the polite way to slurp noodle soups was to hold the soup spoon above the bowl while your other hand wields a pair of chopsticks. The idea is that the soup spoon serves as sort of a way station floating in mid-air. Thus positioned, you can twirl a skein of noodles with your chopsticks and then suspend them halfway to your mouth, letting the noodles dangle on the spoon. You can blow on the noodles at this point to cool them down somewhat before spooling them into your gaping maw. Mother wong was pretty insistent that the spoon remain airborne throughout, not only for the sake of appearances, but in that unhappy instance should your noodles slip off your chopsticks (or during mid-chew (*gasp*)), and fall back into the bowl. If your spoon is properly aloft, then you stand a decent chance of catching the falling debris before it splashes into its liquid suspension, thus ruining your best cashmere sweater or favorite Wilco t-shirt, as the case may be.
Also, if you have bitten off more noodles than you can chew (ahem), you can return the uneaten portion back to the bowl via the spoon in a deliberate, genteel manner, without looking like you're actually spitting them out. You need not do this if you have apportioned your noodles correctly beforehand, but sometimes, you can be fooled by misjudging the length of the noodles, or in the case of udon, their thickness.
The spoon also serves as a convenient resting place for unwieldy pieces of meat, veggies, or as the example the OP uses, largish cuts of tempura. Most of the time, these items are sliced into smaller pieces out of consideration for the diner. However, when faced with an atypical cut of meat, say a whole porkchop (which nearly represents the very apex of chopstick handling skills), then you can rest the offending item on your upraised spoon, hold it in place with your chopsticks, and politely nibble away.
Hope this helps...
*I really dread making blanket statements like this one without proper citation but I'm pretty confident this custom holds true for those asian cuisines which use chopsticks. I'm aware that some southeast asians hew entirely to forks and spoons, but I imagine this fact ought not to present any difficulties for western diners, with the proviso that it is usually considered vulgar to bring the fork to one's mouth.
d4v3 wrote:That is pretty much how I was taught to eat Udon by a Japanese friend many years ago. Japanese restaurants often provide those cheap pull apart chopsticks, which makes everything a little more difficult to manage, especially a heavy load of noodles. My friend would rub the sticks together to remove any splinters. I have also seen people rip the wrapper in half and use it as a protective sheath against the sharp wooden corners of the sticks. BTW, Really great description of the process, a very entertaining reply.titus wong wrote:I'm not Japanese but I think in this instance, a similar standard of etiquette applies to most east asian cultures when tackling a bowl of noodles.
Cathy2 wrote:
An awkward noodle slurping session:
Procuring udon at a Japanese train station:
titus wong wrote:Here's a random vid I plucked off of YouTube. Disregard the uncouth gents at the beginning of the segment but keep an eye out for the perky young thing midway through, displaying tolerably good form while slurping down some ramen.
snk wrote:(Frequent lurker, infrequent poster here.)
I just had to post this scene from Tampopo.
Santander wrote:In case anyone searches blufish in the future: I coincidentally happened to eat at Blufish last week in a larger party; special requests and sushi newcomers up and down the table were handled patiently, and it is a pretty space. I have to ding them thrice, though: extremely weak miso, oyster shooter unavailable at primetime on a weekend, and all rolls mentioning tako came with a creamed tuna salad-like concoction instead of nice pieces of octopus. The udon presentation was bounteous and artful but commented bland by several. The maki were very colorful, not particularly creative, and the drink menu had no savory notes, all double-sweet or neutral cocktails. A saketini with cucumber was at least refreshing. Overall a gracious and reasonable effort, but nothing sung.
riddlemay wrote:In the FWIW department: A few years ago I read an article on what to do and what not to do in a Japanese restaurant, and on the list of don'ts was: Don't rub your pull-apart chopsticks together to "sand down" the splinters. Supposedly it is highly rude to the sushi chef and/or proprietor to suggest that he would give you chopsticks that had splinters in them.
I make no representation that this is true (except that it is true that I read it in an article in a seemingly reputable source).
Kman wrote:riddlemay wrote:In the FWIW department: A few years ago I read an article on what to do and what not to do in a Japanese restaurant, and on the list of don'ts was: Don't rub your pull-apart chopsticks together to "sand down" the splinters. Supposedly it is highly rude to the sushi chef and/or proprietor to suggest that he would give you chopsticks that had splinters in them.
I make no representation that this is true (except that it is true that I read it in an article in a seemingly reputable source).
This is echoed here (point #8). Though I can't help but wonder . . . if there actually ARE splinters in the chopsticks isn't it likewise rude to have provided them to me in the first place? In any case my own chopstick skills are so poor that I probably benefit from any additional adhesive properties chopstick splinters might provide.