5 Ways British and American Meal Etiquette is Very Different

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 3. 06. 2024
  • We've talked about the different foods between Britain and America, not to mention the words we use to describe them. But what about the etiquette both countries employ at the dinner table? Here are 5 Ways British and American Meal Etiquette is Very Different
    For more videos like this, subscribe to Lost in the Pond right here on CZcams: / @lostinthepond
    Can't get enough of Lost in the Pond? Follow us at these places too.
    Patreon: / lostinthepond
    Facebook: / lostinthepond
    Twitter: / lostinthepondus
    Instagram: / laurence.m.brown
    Website: www.LostinthePond.com
  • Komedie

Komentáře • 8K

  • @LostinthePond
    @LostinthePond  Před 4 lety +1664

    See? I knew I'd mess up the American utensil etiquette. Apparently it's similar to the European way when cutting, but then similar to what I showed thereafter to eat - only switching to your right hand. What a roller-coaster!

    • @trentonnewman9683
      @trentonnewman9683 Před 4 lety +65

      Lost in the Pond also I have heard the origin of the hand switching is to slow down the length of time it takes to eat instead of shoveling food straight into your face.

    • @Sailor376also
      @Sailor376also Před 4 lety +97

      No. No,no , no,, the classic American use of utensils,,, Is to firmly grasp the over stacked, over condementized burger,, not too firmly or it will all squirt out the edges, with two hands and all your fingers on deck,,, and try not to dollop it down the shirt front as you tuck into the other side. French fries,, which the French call American fries, are finger food as well. And then noisily lick and suck your fingers clean all the way to the third knuckle afterward. Now you've got it.

    • @LymeStealsGodHeals
      @LymeStealsGodHeals Před 4 lety +19

      Lost in the Pond A roller-coaster, indeed! Another great video! 👍🏼

    • @sharonsmith583
      @sharonsmith583 Před 4 lety +53

      well, American way is much neater when we're eating all that sauce covered food. Diane Jennings did a video when she visited America and food kept falling off her fork

    • @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay
      @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay Před 4 lety +61

      What I and apparently many others witnessed on Diane Jennings channel (former Irish TRY Channel participant) when she came to America to a Denny's restaurant and tried eating hashbrowns with her fork upside down (tines facing downward) she got a lot of American commenters talking about how cringe worthy that method was. Myself self included. We all were like, "WHAT ARE you doing?" These critiques stuck with her so much that she references back to that incident quite often in current videos.
      That said, I don't know why any sensible human being would try to eat loose food by scooting it on the bottom of the fork (convex side) with their knife. It just doesn't make physical sense. I mean you wouldn't use a post hole shovel that way.

  • @annetteglass2006
    @annetteglass2006 Před 4 lety +6354

    When my son was eight, he was asked to say grace at a special dinner. He bowed his head and started talking. A lady at the table interrupted him saying, "Stop mumbling. I can't understand you!" He looked up at her and replied, "That's okay. I'm not talking to you." Then he continued with no further interruptions.

  • @scottgrohs5940
    @scottgrohs5940 Před 3 lety +1761

    Perhaps Americans could have quieter dinner conversations if the restaurant turned down the damn background music so that we can hear each other at standard indoor conversation volume.

    • @TheVleckChannel
      @TheVleckChannel Před 3 lety +122

      This, at every fucking night venue.

    • @Good_Hot_Chocolate
      @Good_Hot_Chocolate Před 3 lety +26

      I have never encountered what you are talking about. Are you sure that it wasn't just the region you visited? I live on the east coast and have been up and down it. Never has there been loud music, if there even is music.

    • @scottgrohs5940
      @scottgrohs5940 Před 3 lety +75

      @@Good_Hot_Chocolate It's a syndrome out west, that three quarters of every restaurant - pub or not - has background music up about a quarter too loud. I attempt to speak with an indoor voice only to be met with "what?" after everything I try to say.

    • @mattiedoa4070
      @mattiedoa4070 Před 3 lety +12

      Have you ever been in a Wetherspoons in the UK no music at all but the noise is deafening with everyone just talking give me music any day .

    • @my2cents49
      @my2cents49 Před 3 lety +5

      Seriously!

  • @angelachouinard4581
    @angelachouinard4581 Před 2 lety +418

    One of my Korean teachers did an exchange year at university in the US. He lived with a host family. The mom of this family was like my own mom and a lot of others back then At the family dinner mom peppers you with questions about your day. My teacher said he struggled with this. He didn't want to talk with a mouth full of food but he didn't want to stop eating in case his hostess would think he didn't like the food. Also, his food was getting cold and he grew up with chopsticks and so was learning how to deal with cutlery etiquette. Koreans have a lot of respect for elders, plus they had taken him into their home. He told me he finally he got up the courage to ask one of the sons in the family for help and I guess the kid spoke with the mom, because mom waited until dessert for the questions after that. She wasn't trying to be mean she was just excited and curious to have him there.

    • @phillipleblanc7823
      @phillipleblanc7823 Před 11 měsíci +14

      I lived in Korea for years. I find it incredulous that there's a Korean who is uncomfortable talking with their mouth full.

    • @feraltaco4783
      @feraltaco4783 Před 11 měsíci +15

      I feel like exchange students should have some kind of "crash course" before they get dropped into a culture they know nothing about. My mom's family had a South African exchange student when she was a teenager. Thank God my grandmother wanted him to experience America and, since she was a teacher, she was supportive and explained so much to him. My mom is in her 60s and she still keeps up with him and his family.

    • @angelachouinard4581
      @angelachouinard4581 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@feraltaco4783 Yeah I think so. It works both ways too. My brother was wrapped around the axle about the exchange student from Argentina at our high school kind of chasing him. I had to point out he was captain of the soccer team. We were a small town, all around us it was American football. PS trying to get back here to answer you I clicked your channel. I loved your pet pictures and you have good taste.

    • @feraltaco4783
      @feraltaco4783 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@angelachouinard4581 thanks. That's kind of you. 😊

    • @erickoontz6835
      @erickoontz6835 Před 5 měsíci

      @@phillipleblanc7823🤣😆😂

  • @pcalger1163
    @pcalger1163 Před rokem +12

    In States often hold fork in left hand, cut with knife in right hand. Then put down knife, switch fork to right hand and eat.

    • @user-bm8cl6mc9o
      @user-bm8cl6mc9o Před 5 dny +1

      Yes! It’s so natural to change to the right hand, I don’t even notice that we do this!
      Also, keeping your hand in your lap over your napkin, and no elbows on the table, completely freak out those who use continental manners!

  • @micheledeetlefs6041
    @micheledeetlefs6041 Před 4 lety +2302

    Instead of a European experience with saying grace, how about a South African's experience? My husband, like you, came to the US for the first time around Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving was, therefore, the first big family meal he shared with us. We had a tradition where my Grandmother would start the prayer, then we would go around the table adding something for which we were personally grateful. Now my husband is a native Afrikaans speaker and learned English as a child from cartoons. So he wasn't too up on the lingo, so to speak. As a result, he said he was grateful for the hospitality he received on this the day when Americans celebrated eating the Indians.
    Yep, that's right. He forgot the "with."
    My mother, an amateur historian, without missing a beat, said "oh, no, honey. That's the Donner party, not the Pilgrims." So my husband believed, at least for the first few years he lived here, that we had an annual holiday to celebrate cannibalism.
    And he still agreed to become a US citizen.

    • @toyloss
      @toyloss Před 4 lety +48

      Michele Deetlefs oh no! 😂😂😂

    • @micheledeetlefs6041
      @micheledeetlefs6041 Před 4 lety +204

      @Tango Jones He'd been raised in a fiercely evangelical area of SA. That, combined with the high crime rate of SA means all my SA relatives can't understand why I unlock my doors to potential robbers once a year to hand out candy in some vaguely satanic ritual. But, I just tell them "it's Irish" and they nod sagely, having obtained the notion that the Scots and the Irish are all professional drunks from international rugby matches.

    • @terriehumphries6028
      @terriehumphries6028 Před 4 lety +79

      I probably laughed harder than I should have at this, but then I have been in quarantine for a week now. Somehow it seems much longer. Lol

    • @sh230968
      @sh230968 Před 4 lety +38

      Send this to Reader's Digest too. I read many jokes like yours on RD. Yes, I do read RD sometimes.

    • @RoseNZieg
      @RoseNZieg Před 4 lety +36

      who says prepositions aren't important!

  • @rebeccaimmel4160
    @rebeccaimmel4160 Před 3 lety +802

    Having worked as a server and bartender in my younger years, I’ve got to tell you ... we don’t LOVE checking every 5 minutes. We realize that it’s disruptive. However, especially in large restaurant chains, our supervisors force us to do this. A server can be disciplined if she/ he doesn’t not do the 2-minute/2-bite check in. Secret shoppers and corporate inspectors are specifically asked to look for this. Every customer hates it. Every server hates it. It’s the upper management who missed that memo.

    • @jacobvardy
      @jacobvardy Před 3 lety +119

      The more i learn about the US, the more it sounds like a police state. Except with employers running peoples' lives rather than the secret police.

    • @rebeccaimmel4160
      @rebeccaimmel4160 Před 3 lety +67

      @@jacobvardy Big corporations have strict expectations, for sure. But I wouldn’t say they run our lives ... they just enforce uniformity in the workplace. You’ll get much more personalized service at family owned establishments.

    • @Yali_
      @Yali_ Před 3 lety +45

      Ah, I wasn’t aware of that! My only visit to the States was a few years ago, a holiday to Florida with some friends. We knew about the tipping etiquette and followed that accordingly; and we were generally very impressed by the waiting staff and their friendliness. But a couple of times it felt too overbearing. I remember on those occasions we had to stop the servers and point out that we were in the middle of a conversation or say to them "we'll let you know if we need anything". One waiter in particular looked a bit 'stuck' at that. None of us had any idea that the constant checking up/chatting was compulsory though (or could result in disciplinary action if not followed); to us, their behaviour came across as too desperate, a bit rude, even. We weren’t trying to be mean or rude ourselves (never-mind land someone in trouble!), and in hindsight, I feel quite bad now. I just hope in our instances it wasn’t picked up by the supervisors!

    • @EKGrant
      @EKGrant Před 3 lety +23

      They do this in the UK as well so I don't understand why folk are saying we don't. It's called a "check back" so the server will come back 5 minutes into your meal and check your enjoying your food or need more drinks. But they don't do it constantly 👍 I just politely say you don't need to check back just watch for an empty glass 😁

    • @orangeziggy348
      @orangeziggy348 Před 3 lety +9

      What are the servers expecting to help by returning after only 2 bites? I require at least 15 bites before I know if the meal tastes good. What would happened if I told the server to go away or he wont get a tip?

  • @lordofthemound3890
    @lordofthemound3890 Před 2 lety +497

    I’m American, and I’ve always cut meat the “correct” way you showed, but I also use a fork every other way you illustrated, too. It depends on the food. Very versatile weapon, uh tool, the fork.

    • @zerstorer335
      @zerstorer335 Před rokem +31

      Same, here. I find it tends to depend on how much I'm relying on gravity to secure the food. Something like mashed potatoes, rice, pies, or peas would be scooped. But a firmly skewered piece of meat, slice of potato, or stalk of asparagus will usually see the tines remain downward.

    • @urphakeandgey6308
      @urphakeandgey6308 Před rokem +10

      Same, but I must admit I tend to use the European way even though I'm American.
      The only time I really switch to the American grip is to scoop things, like rice or mashed potatoes.
      Even when I use the fork alone, like when eating cake, I almost always hold it the European way.

    • @toketsupuurin
      @toketsupuurin Před rokem +22

      I use both American and European styles, as well as swapping hands multiple times per meal.

    • @Neo-hw7nu
      @Neo-hw7nu Před rokem +1

      @@toketsupuurin I do the same as an American

    • @kodidane5824
      @kodidane5824 Před rokem +8

      There is no overarching "correct way" to hold silverware. It just depends on what you were taught.

  • @EVP5309
    @EVP5309 Před 6 měsíci +14

    One of the best parts about this series is Lawrence’s impressions of American accents.

  • @DarcOfTheShadows
    @DarcOfTheShadows Před 4 lety +405

    9:33 There's nothing I love more than hearing British people's imitation of American accents, they always end up sounding like either a caricature of a New Yorker or a cowboy who's recently suffered a stroke.

    • @carlcushmanhybels8159
      @carlcushmanhybels8159 Před 4 lety +22

      good description.

    • @marinazagrai1623
      @marinazagrai1623 Před 4 lety +6

      Cassitastrophe...wow! At work, we once had a visitor from NY, who told me I almost have a Southern drawl...now even though I came here when I was 16 (EEurope but not Russia) I haven't lost my English accent! It just goes to show how people interpret your accent!

    • @matthewlewis2072
      @matthewlewis2072 Před 4 lety +22

      Whereas Yanks ALWAYS nail British accents...🙄

    • @JessicaVanderhoff
      @JessicaVanderhoff Před 4 lety +24

      His American accent is terrible, but my British accent is much, much worse.

    • @sm1else
      @sm1else Před 4 lety +12

      @Planet of the grapes If I try a generic British accent I generally sound like Stewie from Family Guy or Patsy from Absolutely Fabulous.

  • @cherylann9781
    @cherylann9781 Před 4 lety +657

    In the US, the more expensive the restaurant, the quieter we are. We expect cheaper family restaurants to be loud.

    • @JeanieD
      @JeanieD Před 4 lety +57

      Cheryl Bailey , I have tried to have romantic dinners at expensive restaurants with my husband, and still have a better than average chance of having a family with small children seated nearby, and Not the quiet, polite kind of children- the ones who get up from the table and run around, or squeal loudly, or bang their utensils on the table, etc. There are a lot of people these days (years) who feel that they are “entitled” to bring their kids anywhere.

    • @cherylann9781
      @cherylann9781 Před 4 lety +28

      GingerJeanie if the children were misbehaving, that would make me truly angry. You would think parents would have more sense.

    • @jessicaely2521
      @jessicaely2521 Před 4 lety +31

      @@JeanieD there are a lot and I mean a lot of expensive restaurants that don't allow children in. You gotta call ahead and ask. One expensive restaurant that my parents would sometimes go with my brother and I when we were little had a separate area with a door for people with children. I have no idea how my dad pulled this off, but we always ate in the main dining area. My brother and I were extremely good kids though.

    • @JeanieD
      @JeanieD Před 4 lety +7

      Jessica Ely , that may be the case where you live. It doesn’t negate my experiences where I have lived.

    • @jessicaely2521
      @jessicaely2521 Před 4 lety +3

      @@JeanieD no this has been all over the US. Where I live there isn't a single expensive restaurant. We had to 2.5 hours to go to our expensive restaurant. We only did it when we were in town visiting friends and family.

  • @p.w.352
    @p.w.352 Před 2 lety +164

    My husband spent some time in The Netherlands and adopted the continental style of using utensils. I use mine the American way. Our kids picked up a mixture of both as a result, though they mostly use the continental method. It's much more efficient. One of my daughters-in-law commented on it once, and told us how confused she was when she first started coming to family dinners.
    ETA: I don't care how others hold their cutlery, just chew with your mouth closed.

    • @lisaphares2286
      @lisaphares2286 Před rokem +5

      Estimated Time of Arrival?🤔

    • @Ragnarra
      @Ragnarra Před rokem

      Agreed.

    • @edgaraquino2324
      @edgaraquino2324 Před rokem +1

      At PW...Agreed....sound advice...😊

    • @barbaro4evr135
      @barbaro4evr135 Před rokem +3

      How’s it more efficient? If you hold it upside down food can slide off the fork, I can’t even imagine eating spaghetti that way!

    • @kateh6549
      @kateh6549 Před 11 měsíci

      @@barbaro4evr135 you switch from the tines down to up.

  • @Algorithmicgeneratedwordsalad
    @Algorithmicgeneratedwordsalad Před 11 měsíci +44

    I was working at McDonald's and I had a British person and try to tip me it was very funny conversation we had I basically explained that if the waiter comes to your table then it's generally accepted to tip if you have to order at a counter with exception of bars you don't

    • @delimitnc
      @delimitnc Před měsícem

      I never understood the bar bit either. I understand tipping for a well made cocktail or something, but if the extent of service is handing me a bottle from a refrigerator 2 feet away...

    • @pcalger1163
      @pcalger1163 Před 5 dny

      I actually know people who regularly tip fast food workers since they get paid so badly and put up with so many hassles

  • @cyberjackal774
    @cyberjackal774 Před 3 lety +215

    My stepdad used to say "If you don't bless the food before you eat it, it goes to hell."
    I once finally replied "I don't care where it winds up as long as it goes through my digestive system first."

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 Před 3 lety +7

      Maybe spicy food hell is just a bit closer after it is leaving your digestive tract

    • @marymaxine4887
      @marymaxine4887 Před 3 lety +5

      Ask if there is really a worse fate than being eaten by stomach acid and crapped out.

    • @brianm2881
      @brianm2881 Před 2 lety

      "...And then he beat me with jumper cables."

    • @SaguaroBlossom
      @SaguaroBlossom Před 2 lety +1

      I love when they bless the food to "nourish and strengthen us" when its donuts, etc.

    • @globalheart
      @globalheart Před 2 lety

      🤣

  • @620john620
    @620john620 Před 3 lety +377

    On those rare occasions when I’m asked to say grace, i say this: “ Some people have an appetite, but no food. Some people have food, but no appetite. We have both, and for that, we give thanks.”

    • @JulsLittleBeirutAnarchy
      @JulsLittleBeirutAnarchy Před 3 lety +19

      It’s better than, 🎥 Catch Me If You Can: “Two little mice fell into a bucket of cream. The first mouse quickly gave up and drowned, but the second mouse, he struggled so hard that he eventually churned that cream into butter and he walked out. Amen”

    • @Good_Hot_Chocolate
      @Good_Hot_Chocolate Před 3 lety +9

      @Shirley Bailey He's a G

    • @makelikeatree1696
      @makelikeatree1696 Před 3 lety +14

      Nice. I am a non believer, but I can get behind that one.

    • @marybutler9581
      @marybutler9581 Před 3 lety +35

      Robert Burns! "Some hae meat that canna eat, and some can eat that ha'n't it. But we have meat, and we can eat, so let the Lord be thankit."

    • @VivienOge
      @VivienOge Před 3 lety +2

      🙏😍

  • @danielleking262
    @danielleking262 Před rokem +15

    I think nowadays saying "grace" in America is only for super religious families or definitely in the south. It's more of an older tradition that most American families don't really do, at least not for every meal. Yes, maybe just Thanksgiving or Christmas, as the two biggest family / meal holidays.
    I remember when I was little and we went to someone else's house for Thanksgiving (long-time friend of the family's, not related) there were like 20 other people there. Everyone got a plate of food, sat down, and the host gave a speech / said grace, then we all started eating. You are very correct that it's like a moment of silence to pay your respects, and then it's time to celebrate (eat and chat).
    Also, the chatting part was amusing to me because at any large table with more than 8+ people, most divide up conversations between just the people next to them or across from them. There could be four or five different conversations going on at the same table if it's a large party. If you're in the middle, you might go back and forth looking at one person talking, then a different person talking, and you feel awkward trying to decide whose conversation to listen to, lol

    • @lynnebattaglia-triggs1042
      @lynnebattaglia-triggs1042 Před měsícem +1

      I never cared for saying Grace, but I especially hate being told to hold the germy hands of the people on either side of me at the table, while someone says some prayer that they prefer. Ick!

    • @danielleking262
      @danielleking262 Před měsícem

      @@lynnebattaglia-triggs1042 oh gosh, I hope people don't make you do that anymore! Usually you just bow your head slightly and close your eyes, and if need be, put your hands in the praying position 🙏

  • @wisewoman7906
    @wisewoman7906 Před 10 měsíci +7

    "My wife says I still eat like a toddler" 😂😂😂😂😂😂 I am so dead. 😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @jaekn
      @jaekn Před 26 dny

      You don't get out much do you?

  • @raeperonneau4941
    @raeperonneau4941 Před 3 lety +289

    My American, Irish Catholic, Grandfather’s meal time prayer was “Thank God it’s here.” Lol

    • @paulm3952
      @paulm3952 Před 3 lety +16

      I can't remember any of my Catholic family saying grace, though I did learn the standard Catholic one at Sunday school ("Bless us oh Lord....") When I was in Scouts, we were expected to say Grace, so people just tended to go with the "God is great. God is good. And we thank him for this food. By his hand, we are fed. We thank you Lord for our daily bread." Or if people felt a bit less reverent: "Good food, good meat. Good God, let's eat."

    • @StevenBanks123
      @StevenBanks123 Před 3 lety +3

      Short and sweet!

    • @patriciapreston9710
      @patriciapreston9710 Před 3 lety +10

      My grandfather had two. One was " father, son, holy ghost, whoever eats fastest gets the most" and the other was " Bless the meat and damn the skin, open your mouth and shove it in"

    • @thesuitshow9944
      @thesuitshow9944 Před 3 lety +2

      My school one In England is ‘bless us o lord as we sit together bless the hands that eat the food bless us o lord Amen’ but we say are- men not amen

    • @ronnie-being-ronnie
      @ronnie-being-ronnie Před 3 lety +11

      Rub a dub dub, thanks for the grub...Yay God!
      A house guest said this one, lol! My parents were SHOCKED!

  • @mr-vet
    @mr-vet Před 3 lety +530

    Having traveled a bit when I was in the US military, I've realized that tipping in the US is essentially subsidizing the restaurant owner by paying their servers for them.

    • @chelseawatson3429
      @chelseawatson3429 Před 3 lety +46

      Exactly. it is infuriating to have to pay the wages of their staff. Especially when it is a large corporate conglomerate. I always tip very well regardless of anything but I do think it is terrible that servers get paid $3.50/hour and the restaurant expects the diners to make up for it. Especially here where I live because most of the business comes from tourists who may not know the tipping culture or may not care (especially rich Americans who are the cheapest people I have ever met). I am sure many people get stiffed. We were out to dinner the other night and the tip alone was $85 for four regularly priced meals and some wine.

    • @cynhwon
      @cynhwon Před 3 lety +72

      And I still don’t understand why some people can possibly deem it as merely cultural difference when it is an actual employee welfare issue.

    • @nonyabusiness8731
      @nonyabusiness8731 Před 3 lety +11

      Is really not true - as having worked in the restaurant business you can make really good money ie much higher than the minimum wage and do quite well .

    • @slcRN1971
      @slcRN1971 Před 3 lety +20

      My USN husband was serving overseas and went to a German restaurant that had a reputation for exceptionally good food. His waitress was very nice so he left a great tip. She actually chased him down to give most of it back.

    • @annielane1843
      @annielane1843 Před 3 lety +3

      It also may ensure good customer service and less turnover. And servers know they can make more money .

  • @MileHighGrowler
    @MileHighGrowler Před rokem +17

    Utensil "etiquette" has always been funny to me. But I've actually realized in recent years how much I appreciate the general American style of only picking up the knife to make a few cuts, then going back to the fork only. It slows the meal deal, and allows it to be more of a social experience. The time I've spent in Europe (Germany, in particular), I always felt the meal was rushed with both utensils constantly in-hand and not taking a break. The one big exception to this in my European travel/living has been the French countryside, where multiple courses, multiple drink pairings (even a meal at someone's house - I'm not talking about going out to eat), where the pacing slows things down and promotes that communal element that I so love about food and drink.

    • @nancykilbourn836
      @nancykilbourn836 Před 6 měsíci +2

      My family...both sides, supper or Sunday dinner (2pm) was always an hour minimum, holidays even longer. Lots of talking and laughing as well as eating. Very relaxing and enjoyable.

  • @susanb3525
    @susanb3525 Před 11 měsíci +21

    We watch a lot of British tv shows and have noticed the differences in the way characters hold their forks in particular. Thanks for explaining this as we wondered if that person in the story just had bad manners or the tines down fork was really a thing. It looks so unusual to this American.

    • @smorrow
      @smorrow Před 9 měsíci +2

      It looks unusual to me, Northern Irish. Like, how else would you do it. Predominant utensil in dominant hand. "You cut with your strong hand" is the justification I've heard, but even eating that person's food I don't find I need that much knife...

    • @user-bm8cl6mc9o
      @user-bm8cl6mc9o Před 5 dny +1

      Also, they keep their hands on the table, whereas US is whatever hand we’re not using is on our lap over the napkin.

  • @teampendragon8406
    @teampendragon8406 Před 3 lety +82

    The worst is when servers bug you every five minutes, and then suddenly disappear for an hour after giving you your check and you just want to pay and get out of there...

    • @TheSchuyler75
      @TheSchuyler75 Před 2 lety +2

      give the bill to the hostess or bartender or manager and no server disappears for an hour ever unless they have no tables or ask another server to watch their section or they would be fired

    • @bryanbrett8943
      @bryanbrett8943 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheSchuyler75 there is at least 51 people who beg to differ

    • @maryisabell8760
      @maryisabell8760 Před 2 lety

      How right you are .

  • @iksarguards
    @iksarguards Před 4 lety +532

    I remember restaurants...In the before times.
    I just eat with my hands now, after I’ve properly bleach-bathed them.

    • @kdcridlpaw4852
      @kdcridlpaw4852 Před 4 lety +4

      Guy Incognito oh god it’s only been 5 days

    • @_Piers_
      @_Piers_ Před 4 lety +11

      After Brexit, they said we might be forced to import bleachy (chlorinated) chicken. We all thought that sounded awful...I miss the before times.

    • @YolandaEasiley
      @YolandaEasiley Před 4 lety

      Lol

    • @randomcommenterfromdownund8949
      @randomcommenterfromdownund8949 Před 4 lety

      If I could give multiple thumbs up, you'd get a few for that comment.

    • @jeanvignes
      @jeanvignes Před 4 lety +3

      I caught myself eating yogurt with a serving spoon the other day. I realized that I'm so tired of WASHING THINGS that I just grabbed whatever clean spoon was close to hand.

  • @abigailbaldwin4224
    @abigailbaldwin4224 Před 11 měsíci +19

    For context, I was raised Baptist but concerted to Catholicism in high school with my parents. I've found that my baptist family say grace much more regularly than the Catholic friends my parents invited over. Baptist grace tended to be very free form, based on whatever is going on for the people at the meal at that time, while Catholic grace is usually a specific prayer with maybe a short specific thanks given at the end. I also didn't often run into hand holding; that tends to be a special gathering thing for both but slightly more common with Catholics

    • @rwilson7197
      @rwilson7197 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Yes, I also noticed over the years that my Baptist friends and family say Grace more consistently and frequently than my Catholic friends. And yes it is more freeform. I include what is currently happening at that time as well as the moment.❤

    • @Tom_Losh
      @Tom_Losh Před 9 měsíci +1

      Coming from a mixed Ctholic/Protestant family, the Catholic side did seem much more wed to rote ritual ...

    • @reliantncc1864
      @reliantncc1864 Před 7 měsíci +2

      As a Catholic: "Bless us O Lord, and these Thy gifts, which we are about to receive from Thy bounty, through Christ our Lord, Amen." It's basically mandatory. Although we do often offer specific causes the prayer is intended to serve, generally before the prayer.

    • @nancykilbourn836
      @nancykilbourn836 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Holding hands during prayer is very Southern no matter which Christian sect you belong to.

    • @PlastoJoe
      @PlastoJoe Před 5 měsíci

      I always call the Baptist/Protestant type of prayer the "we just" prayer.

  • @SadisticSenpai61
    @SadisticSenpai61 Před rokem +21

    My friend and I went to England in 2011. I didn't notice that much difference at restaurants from back home in terms of noise and service quality. And now that I think about it, I think we tipped what we normally do (20%). It never occurred to us not to tip. My friend's first job was as a waitress making $1.60 an hour, so tipping is something we've always been conscious of.

    • @marycarver1542
      @marycarver1542 Před rokem +10

      The UK has a minimum wage, by law! It is a decent living wage, and we do tip
      for extra good or pleasant staff, but usually around 10% but it is never expected.

  • @littlebirdlife2389
    @littlebirdlife2389 Před 4 lety +352

    Sitting though Grace as a guest when it's not something you do in your own home is the most awkward thing ever.

    • @Platypi007
      @Platypi007 Před 4 lety +40

      More awkward is when you come from an extremely devout family but have become an atheist and then your father asks you to say grace.

    • @arribaficationwineho32
      @arribaficationwineho32 Před 4 lety +22

      Little Bird Life just bow your head and be reverential. It does not mean you embrace their religion but is respectful and I would do the same for any religion

    • @PotterSpurn1
      @PotterSpurn1 Před 4 lety +17

      @@Platypi007 Just remember the standard prayer: "for what we are about to receive, may the Lord make us truly thankful....Amen." I am a Christian, but even I find it hard to see a point to asking non Christians to momentarily behave as though they are.

    • @lilbatz
      @lilbatz Před 4 lety +18

      You haven't lived until you sit through a 5 minute grace, THEN everyone around the table has to say out loud a special intention or acknowledge a prayer answered, or a request. This was done at a restaurant with 25 people in the party. Took us 30 minutes to finish, and our food was cold by them.
      Americans only want to talk about money/job, children and religion. Heaven help you if you're don't believe in "God"/Jesus.

    • @lilbatz
      @lilbatz Před 4 lety +33

      @@PotterSpurn1 I use the standard Jewish prayer over food, and it will be another 8 years before my Christian relatives ask me to say grace. If they really aggravating me I say it in Hebrew.

  • @rikuk3
    @rikuk3 Před 3 lety +46

    When I lived in the States I soon found out that if you want an undisturbed meal tell the server "we have everything we need and I'll give you a nod when we want the bill thank you".

    • @marthab.higgins149
      @marthab.higgins149 Před 3 lety +8

      The reasonable way to deal with this issue!

    • @mariac.5021
      @mariac.5021 Před 3 lety +2

      Brilliant advice!

    • @Terminal_Boneitis
      @Terminal_Boneitis Před 3 lety +6

      If you have everything you need, and don't intend on ordering more drinks or dessert, then just ask for the bill when they come back to check on your meal. Then, whenever you're ready to pay, put your credit card or cash on/in it in a way that is clearly visible to the server and place it at the edge of your table and they will see it when next they pass your way. If you've decided in the meantime that you'd like that slice of cake after all, just ask them to add it to your bill before they run your card. Your way requires them to keep eyeing you for an hour, hoping to look at you at just the right moment to catch the nod. It's not a terrible method by any means, just less practical, and does require quite a bit more lurking on your server's part.

  • @haph2087
    @haph2087 Před rokem +3

    The bit about sitting through some family member saying grace while impatiently waiting and only thinking about the turkey is actually the sole purpose of the American holiday of "Thanksgiving".
    The name is a misnomer, the holiday all about awkward interactions with in-laws/cousins/extended family/random people that showed up but nobody noticed doesn't belong. The reason the holiday remains popular is a combination of people who like that type of thing, and sane people who just want to eat the food.

  • @aborch7
    @aborch7 Před rokem +56

    I’m an American, from the Midwest (MN) - my family isn’t religious & growing up, we never said “grace”. My first time experiencing it was with my ex’s extended family in Pennsylvania & they all held hands. He didn’t tell me about it prior to dinner, so it was quite awkward & surprising for me. He was equally as surprised when I asked him about it afterwards & told him I’d never seen/done that before 🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @lenalyles2712
    @lenalyles2712 Před 2 lety +201

    The diffrence in eating brought me a chuckle. My youngest had to move back to the USA from Germany because I went to Iraq. My mother took him and my little brother to pizza hut and he requested a knife and fork. A elderly couple was at the next table and asked My son where he moved from and he told them. The gentleman was a veteran and told him never let anyone tease him about his table manners.

    • @glenn6583
      @glenn6583 Před rokem +5

      How you use your eating utensils is not really a matter of manners. At least not to polite people

    • @REALfish1552
      @REALfish1552 Před rokem +11

      @@glenn6583 He didn't really mean table manner per se. If you read the context of the post, he meant more like eating "preferences" or something. I fully understood what he meant.

    • @suewolf3279
      @suewolf3279 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Well, I'm an American and I start off eating my Pizza with a knife and fork until I get quite close to the end crust area. When I was in Australia and went to Pizza Hut I requested a knife and fork. The girl behind the counter said but you ordered pizza and I replied yes I did

    • @markvincent522
      @markvincent522 Před 9 měsíci +2

      ​@@suewolf3279Me too. It's because we're not feral.

    • @nancykilbourn836
      @nancykilbourn836 Před 6 měsíci +1

      My husband and I use a knife and fork to eat pizza. Eating with your hands is messy and gross.

  • @doulbledee9758
    @doulbledee9758 Před 2 lety +90

    I'm an American, we went to church every Sunday, but only said Grace on holiday meals. My husband's family day Grace before every meal, all the time.😊. So even American families differ from each other.😊

  • @HSDclover
    @HSDclover Před rokem +7

    I had an amusing story from my tweenaged years where a friend who's family was all about using the proper eating etiquette got annoyed at me for the way I eat. See, I'm ambidextrous, and with my upbringing being almost literally in a barn, I had essentially no concept of which hand is supposed to hold the knife, etc etc.
    I was just this weird little girl who would constantly swap which hand the knife or fork is in, sometimes swapping mid bite or cutting or whatever. It was really really funny at the time, and honestly even funnier to me now that this kid cared so much about his friend eating "wrong."

  • @ngw1976
    @ngw1976 Před 2 lety +27

    @Lost in the Pond My granny was adamant that you NEVER EVER use a knife in order to cut potatoes.
    I think this stems back to the times when cutlery was indeed silverware and when knifes were made entirely out of some sort of silver-alloy, or were at least silver-plated. Cutting potatoes with a silver knife would expose the blade to the starch and proteins of the potato which could lead to the blade becoming tarnished.
    She also taught me that you should not use your fork to scoop up food like it was a spoon.

    • @larkatdawn
      @larkatdawn Před rokem

      We were only allowed solid silver tableware...ie cutlery...

    • @janetmackinnon3411
      @janetmackinnon3411 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Did she also use a horn spoon to eat a boiled egg? The egg tarnishes silver.

    • @ngw1976
      @ngw1976 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@janetmackinnon3411 For this purpose she had an extensive collection of porcelain and mother-of-pearl spoons. 🙂

    • @ethanheyne
      @ethanheyne Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@ngw1976So that's the reason for non-metal spoons. I always assumed they were collector items, just for looking at, not using! But I grew up with stainless steel "silverware."

    • @alsaunders7805
      @alsaunders7805 Před 3 měsíci

      I might be a barbarian, I eat almost everything with a spoon, even use the edge to cut with. 🤔🤓🍻

  • @pp-nx1ck
    @pp-nx1ck Před 4 lety +132

    The guy who told you 85% was definitely a server.

    • @natalieflores6714
      @natalieflores6714 Před 4 lety +9

      😂😂😂

    • @TheEggplantThatAteChicago
      @TheEggplantThatAteChicago Před 4 lety +19

      I think "bastard" is the operative word here.

    • @slcRN1971
      @slcRN1971 Před 3 lety +1

      [pǝʇɔɐpǝɹ] : I thought that maybe he was at that bar waiting for his partner (your server) to get off work. That much of a tip is unreal, so large that he could brag and laugh about it later.

    • @DouceVipere
      @DouceVipere Před 3 lety

      I think you didn’t get he was only exaggerating what happened, to give some more drama to the story.

  • @GrahamS67
    @GrahamS67 Před 4 lety +1838

    Parents who allow their kids to wander around in a restaurant should be asked to leave.

    • @giabarrone7422
      @giabarrone7422 Před 4 lety +112

      Simon Templar Agreed. I have had kids come sit at my table with me, and take food from my plate. No parents in sight. I have considered carrying pre-printed notes to pin onto unsupervised children. I love businesses that post signs saying "unattended children will be given espresso and a free puppy". My notes wouldn't be so kind.

    • @GrahamS67
      @GrahamS67 Před 4 lety +119

      @@giabarrone7422 😂😂I witnessed s brat recently beg to have a starter and a main meal after being told he wouldn't eat it all. Parents indulged him of course. Not only did he not eat his food he ran all round the restaurant and then was given a dessert. There should be an exam to pass before you're allowed to be a parent.

    • @paikeahigurashi7575
      @paikeahigurashi7575 Před 4 lety +24

      Agreed.

    • @annseabolt6645
      @annseabolt6645 Před 4 lety +61

      Agree. I think they should have a separate section for children. On one particular occasion my husband and I had our nice meal disrupted by children running around the restaurant yelling. Irritated me that I spent my money to be disturbed

    • @Essex626
      @Essex626 Před 4 lety +51

      @@annseabolt6645 it all depends on the restaurant. If you're eating at Applebee's or Dennys, families with children are just part of the deal. Fine dining? Nice restaurants? I agree. Generally, just don't take kids under 5 or so, and only ones who know how to act.

  • @troyhackman6407
    @troyhackman6407 Před rokem +6

    Saying grace isn't a thing only in the United States. My wife is from Colombia and they also say grace there. Also, in her family as in my own family, everyone at the table joins hands during grace. The point of the whole thing is to take a moment to be grateful that you have a meal in front of you when not everyone in the world is so fortunate.

  • @Grobohalic
    @Grobohalic Před 2 lety +27

    Re Grace: I’m an American Catholic, and instead of one person at the table spontaneously coming up with a prayer and everyone else saying “amen,” we have a mealtime prayer that everyone say’s together (Bless us O Lord and these thy gifts which we are about to receive from thy bounty through Christ our Lord, Amen). This was the prayer I said at home, at relatives’ houses, and at Catholic school before meals growing up.
    Now, I was once at my piano teacher’s house - she used to throw a Christmas pizza party for her students every year. Before we went down to eat, she asked that we sat grace, “It’s the prayer that most of you know, I’m sure.”
    So I launched into my normal grace, but everyone around me started saying what I learned later was the Lutheran table prayer. It felt like I entered the twilight zone! Everyone was sideways glancing at me like I was the weirdo.
    tldr: I said Catholic grace in the middle of Lutheran country

    • @SWalkerTTU
      @SWalkerTTU Před rokem +3

      Sometimes folks need to take a step back. It’s not like you were selling indulgences.

    • @geealion
      @geealion Před rokem +3

      By any chance are you from Minnesota or thereabouts? That’s almost exactly the prayer my dad’s Catholic family says. And if there’s any place with a Catholics v. Lutherans vibe…

    • @Grobohalic
      @Grobohalic Před rokem +4

      @@geealion This is hilarious. Yes, I’m from Minnesota!

    • @kallykat5993
      @kallykat5993 Před rokem +2

      My Texas Catholic family says the same mealtime prayer all together, although someone often adds a spontaneous, short prayer before or after. We also commonly hold hands while praying, as mentioned in the video. At extended family gatherings, we stand in a circle holding hands (often outside where there's more room) during the pre-meal prayer and then get in line "buffet style" for food.

    • @darkstarr984
      @darkstarr984 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Oh wow, that sounds embarrassing of them to just assume it’s all the same on you. Then again I’m from Eastern Pennsylvania and have never learned any before meal prayers but the Catholic one from my grandmother, and a handful of humorous ones my Methodist dad learned in the Army.

  • @kieransawdust
    @kieransawdust Před 4 lety +119

    Server based in Cardiff, Wales here! Typically when it comes to serving tables, there's a reason that we keep away, we don't want to annoy people or get in their way. To people over here, it's seen as really rude and interruptive if they're checked on usually more than once, if they want your attention they'll make it known. That's not to say we don't check in on them regularly, we just do so silently just by glancing at their tables, drinks and faces to see if it's all looking good mood wise. One time my supervisor checked on my table for me and forgot to tell me, so when I went to check on the table the customer exploded in my face demanding privacy, wanted to see the manager and everything.
    On the flip side, being in the Welsh capital we get American tourists a lot and some of them say that it seems like we're unenthusiastic to engage with them (because of this etiquette), most of the time when I explain the cultural difference and that we just want to let them have their time how they want it without being interrupted they're fine with it, as a matter of fact only one table didn't understand and was still angry (but they also complained at the start that Welsh was on the first page and English was on the second so I really didn't care what they thought from the get go, don't go for the language in Wales it's an easy way to not be liked lmao)

    • @rtsharlotte
      @rtsharlotte Před 4 lety +16

      I'm in Ireland and I get the impression that Americans want to keep you at their table and are oblivious to the other table under your watch. I hope you reminded the customers that complained about Welsh been in the menu what country they were in that's just ignorance.

    • @slcRN1971
      @slcRN1971 Před 3 lety +9

      My husband told me that when he went overseas, he looked for the restaurants where the locals ate, because the food was good and the service was fine. I’m not able to travel but if I was, I sure would be polite to whoever lived in that country. I travel now by viewing different countries on line.

    • @catgirl6803
      @catgirl6803 Před 3 lety +14

      I’m American and I hate the constant checking in. There’s been times they’d come over every 5 minutes. Another time it was so often I actually told her to stay away because she was so disruptive. I told her- watch our glasses, if they’re not empty, don’t stop by. It’s so aggravating because you can’t even have a conversation.

    • @padraig5335
      @padraig5335 Před 3 lety +2

      @@rtsharlotte I'm a server in the US, and people make feel me like they don't think about the other tables I could have. Very true.

    • @donttalkcrap
      @donttalkcrap Před 3 lety +1

      @@rtsharlotte I so want to say that it is typical of many Americans

  • @mindyg7364
    @mindyg7364 Před 3 lety +100

    When we'd say grace when I was a kid we'd always hold hands. My grandpa would always be next to me. After "Amen" he'd say "Squeeze!!" and squeeze my hand. It was the best.

  • @lizzroth8134
    @lizzroth8134 Před 8 měsíci +5

    You are cracking me up! This is great!
    1. My mom wished we were British growing up in the early 80s - 90s. I was literally taught how to use cutlery the European way. So much so, that it was hard for me to learn the American way. But, let's be honest, American forks and knives are far less efficient. And my mom taught us to do it with "elegance".
    2. I've seen praying in a number of ways. Mine was fairly subdued. German paternal background, mom wanting us to be British.
    3. The restaurants are wild! I understand that there will be a variety of people and interactions at a restaurant. It's a trip sometimes! It's sometimes comparable to attempting to control the volume of students in a school cafeteria. Yikes, cafeteria duty is exhausting!
    3. I've been a server. The biggest bummer was getting business men at lunch, the "Suits" or Europeans. Lol! Not sure about the suits, but we always knew people from other countries have a different culture around tipping. We never served them differently. We understood the cultural difference. The hourly rate for servers is still approximately $2.33/hr in my home city and state, in 2023.
    Same as it was in 1993. Wow! That is why I teach my students to completely understand percentage. Lol!
    Seriously though, my 25 year old daughter makes BANK as a server and bartender. She will have a hard time when she has to take jobs entry level in mental health because she's studying to become a licensed therapist at the University. Thus far she's paid for all of her classes and lives on her own.
    4. I think your content is great. Furthermore I really appreciate that you state disclaimers of sorts before you share information. It is a very responsible way to share what you've experienced, despite being married into a US family. Sound data from a diverse and large sample with a specific hypothesis and experimental design is the "best" way we can examine differences or test a question. So, I legitimately appreciate your comments and appreciation of regional, personal, etc., differences. You don't broad stroke purposely in the least, yet you hit the nail on the head often. Well done!

  • @leecarlson9713
    @leecarlson9713 Před 5 měsíci +3

    My paternal grandparents emigrated from Sweden. It was a given that a meal at FarMor and FarFar’s ( Father’s mother and Father’s father) included the Swedish table grace, in Swedish. If I am asked to give the grace, I usually say it in Swedish, and then again in English. Needless to say, I am very proud of my Swedish heritage! I also have UK roots, back to the Domesday Book, with English, Scottish, Welsh and Irish ancestors. I found it very easy to adopt the continental method of holding the fork in the left hand all the time. Do you know why we Americans switch hands when using our forks? It came about during the Revolutionary War. The Patriots wanted to break ties with all things British, and that included how we hold our fork to insert food into our mouths. Just a little trivia😁

  • @duchess_of_petty9323
    @duchess_of_petty9323 Před 3 lety +259

    in london last year i was having lunch at a pub, i got on very well with the bartender and asked about tipping. His response was perfect. It’s not expected, but we don’t mind it.

    • @moonmaiden71
      @moonmaiden71 Před 3 lety +9

      Same here in Australia. 😁
      Because the wage is good and that incentivises us enough to serve well and cheerfully.

    • @mariac.5021
      @mariac.5021 Před 3 lety +11

      When we were in Spain, I loved how servers would not hover over you at restaurants or cafes. They just leave you alone to enjoy the meal. It was so refreshing to not feel rushed. We ate our meal, drank our wine, took our time and when we were ready, we gestured for the check. I miss that here.

    • @mcd08
      @mcd08 Před 3 lety +5

      Idk how it is in other parts of the US but where I live, no one expects a tip. Will we look at you a little funny if you leave no tip on a $70+ bill? Sure. But its not like we're gonna chase you down after you pay and tell you off lmao

    • @gemoftheocean
      @gemoftheocean Před 3 lety +3

      @@mcd08 where in the heck do you live? Do you not know that uncle sucker assumes waiters/waitresses get a minimum 8% in tips?

    • @mcd08
      @mcd08 Před 3 lety

      @@gemoftheocean what are you talking about?

  • @goredongoredon
    @goredongoredon Před rokem +113

    I didn't realize that is video is older so you may have already figured this out, but during the dinner prayer it's totally acceptable to look around the table to see who else doesn't have their eyes closed. It's kind of a family bonding moment/tradition.

    • @e.l.wagner9766
      @e.l.wagner9766 Před rokem +11

      I just found this older video too, and it's so funny. I thought it was only people in my family who did the looking around thing! FWIW, my family never said grace growing up, and very few of our friends' families did either. Only "very religious" people seem to say grace on the West Coast, or at least that was the case during my growing-up years. At some point, this norm seems to have shifted a bit, as public displays of religiosity became a form of virtue signalling (okay, this is my cynical, and admittedly agnostic take on it, YMMV). My brother started doing grace at holiday meals some years back, after he had kids and after our dad (and my brother's wife's dad) had both passed away unexpectedly. One time he really got over the top with it, and went on about how the two "grandfathers" were up in heaven looking down on us. My SIL's mom leaned over and whispered to me, "He'd better hope they're not, or they'd be yelling at him over this crap!"

    • @bradseeker
      @bradseeker Před 11 měsíci +11

      aka the "which cousins are chill" glance

    • @goredongoredon
      @goredongoredon Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@bradseeker or uncle/aunt

    • @diamondlou1
      @diamondlou1 Před 9 měsíci +3

      My wife and I grew up in different regions of the US, even different religions, and our families "said grace" before meals (although we just called it praying). All my extended family still does. 🙏

    • @nancykilbourn836
      @nancykilbourn836 Před 6 měsíci +1

      My brother always had his fork in a piece of food during prayer. We had a lazy susan and he would position it for a quick stab immediately at the end of the prayer.

  • @suegeorge998
    @suegeorge998 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Growing up in Northern Illinois in the United States, we prayed during dinner, which we called supper. Back then, we had breakfast, dinner and supper. Now, because I'm so cosmopolitan 😂I eat breakfast, lunch and dinner.

  • @cgamejewels
    @cgamejewels Před 3 lety +147

    I laughed throughout the whole thing, especially the accent. "How's the tenderloin working out for you." LOL

  • @valerieshepherd6823
    @valerieshepherd6823 Před 3 lety +128

    I'm from Paisley in Scotland and we said grace at every meal for the first 14 years of my life til my Gran died. Gran insisted upon it as well as impeccable table manners and etiquette. Please may I leave the table was the only way you were allowed get down from her massive dining chairs when I was a child.

    • @theropesofrenovation9352
      @theropesofrenovation9352 Před 3 lety +13

      lol. or "May I be excused?"

    • @miaschu8175
      @miaschu8175 Před 3 lety +3

      That's still the way that any child should get down from the table. We used to say grace in primary school. I'd forgotten, until reading this.

    • @Christine-777
      @Christine-777 Před 3 lety +2

      My family, and all my extended family, still say "grace" before meals. I never knew it was universally frowned upon.. lol 🙏❤
      If a child finishes early, they ask (as well as we did as children), "May I please be excused?" 🥰
      I remember decades ago, at a large family gathering, the television had been left on with Nintendo(?) paused. The boys finished early, and asked to leave the table in order to return to their game.
      Dessert was served a while later. A small trick was played on them telling them they couldn't have dessert because they had already left the table. Their poor faces and body posture!! 😳😫 Of course, they were invited back and served a few helpings of dessert! Such as growing boys! 😂🥰💙

    • @EricHunt
      @EricHunt Před 3 lety +9

      A lot of Scots emigrated to the mountains of south-eastern USA in the 19th century - I see many many echoes of 'Southern' USA culture in Scottish folks today.

    • @anna-mae.c
      @anna-mae.c Před 3 lety +7

      I guess I can thank my Scottish heritage, had the same upbringing here in Canada.

  • @barryobrien7935
    @barryobrien7935 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Off subject but here’s a shoutout for your glasses. The shape is great. I swore I wouldn’t wear large glasses again (I was there for an earlier iteration 40 years ago) but now I’m thinking maybe I could wear these now.

  • @Blondie42
    @Blondie42 Před 2 lety +24

    I know it's just a British saying, and I love hearing it.
    But, yes. Bob is my uncle. I have two in fact. One is my dad's brother and the other is married to my dad's younger sister. 🙃😉
    Saying a kind of grace before eating is very common in Japan:
    itadakimasu いただきます
    I will enjoy this (loose translation)
    Followed by, after finishing the meal:
    Gochisosamadeshita ごちそうさまでした
    'Thank you for this meal'

    • @davidh.4944
      @davidh.4944 Před rokem +1

      More literally, _itadakimasu_ means "I receive", and _gochisōsama_ is "that was a treat", both said in a humble-polite form. They are not really a "grace" in a religious sense, but just traditional stock phrases acknowledging the work undertaken to get the food in front of you.
      Interestingly, _gochisōsama_ derives from the root word「馳走」(chisō). It literally means "rushing around", and by extension "banquet, feast, treat"-the idea being that someone expended a lot of effort to prepare it for you.

  • @ktfitz4604
    @ktfitz4604 Před 4 lety +224

    I don't mind saying Grace, but what I do detest is when it is used to lay out all sorts of prayers and petitions. Grace is to thank God for the food, not to ask Him to heal your kidney stones or help in a job search. Everyone is hungry, let them eat and save those prayers for a more appropriate time. I know this sounds rude, but I think it is even more rude to use mealtime prayers in that way.

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay Před 4 lety +26

      What about the horror when you are at some family's dinner and they all HOLD HANDS THE WHOLE TIME and each person is forced to say something, particularly at Thanksgiving, and you have to come up with the particular acceptable bullshit?!!!

    • @glenncordova4027
      @glenncordova4027 Před 4 lety +8

      I thought the whole purpose of saying Grace was to make every one at the table feel awkward so to limit conversation.

    • @mangaanimefan3089
      @mangaanimefan3089 Před 4 lety +8

      @@emjayay My introverted, personal-space-loving self is twisting in horror at the very idea!
      I barely tolerate having to hold hands with family for the Thanksgiving and Christmas grace, and that's only 20 seconds tops.

    • @luna38
      @luna38 Před 4 lety +6

      i’m a Christian and I agree, thank the food and let’s eat!!

    • @TheJimtanker
      @TheJimtanker Před 4 lety +16

      I prefer to thank the farmers, trucker, producers, and the cook for the food. You know, the people who actually had something to do with the meal.

  • @michaelacrawley8756
    @michaelacrawley8756 Před 4 lety +385

    I’m a waitress in the restaurant of an Irish 4 star hotel, during our peak tour season (roughly April-October) we get a lot of tour buses full of Americans, from my experience they are usually the kindest but definitely the loudest groups that we serve! It’s quite comical the increase in decibel level in the restaurant once the Americans arrive! Wishing I was chatting to and serving 60 Americans some hearty Irish stew instead of being quarantined at home right now😢

    • @melissadurante1450
      @melissadurante1450 Před 4 lety +12

      And we tip..

    • @jenn1730
      @jenn1730 Před 4 lety +24

      You are so sweet.
      My husband and I were in Ireland in 2018 and we absolutely adored every moment.
      He and I are both relatively quiet people and we get a little annoyed by the decibel that sometimes occurs in a restaurant as well.
      But thank you for saying such sweet things about our countrymen ❤

    • @lucylulusuperguru3487
      @lucylulusuperguru3487 Před 4 lety

      @@melissadurante1450 especially well when on a trip too.

    • @lucylulusuperguru3487
      @lucylulusuperguru3487 Před 4 lety +7

      You made me hungry for some good Irish stew...if we weren't under quarantine and I had the extra money I'd be a loud American for you lol.

    • @saiga12forme88
      @saiga12forme88 Před 4 lety +3

      Right before this all started some friends and I found a nice little Irish pub (in the US) and I just told my friend today I hope they are able to weather this shutdown and will be open when its all over.

  • @franticranter
    @franticranter Před rokem +2

    As a Brit, I find that cutlery usage depends on what the found is. If it's something hard like potato or meat, I'll use the fork to pierce the food and hold it still whilst I cut/saw it into a more manageable size, and then put it into my mouth with the bend going up. But if it's something like curry with rice, you can't pierce it, and so I place the fork to the food, use the knife to scoop it onto the fork, and then scoop it into my mouth with the bend of the fork facing down. The difficulty then comes with something in between, like with pasta, cus that can be feasibly either scooped or pierced depending on the type of pasta (and how it's cooked with the rest of the food). I will note that spaghetti (as with noodles) is done completely differently, in that you have to scoop the fork into to get it stuck around the prongs of the fork, but then use the knife to wrap it round the fork so that you can put it in your mouth without it hanging on.
    I'd be interested if there's a difference in custom as to what you do with the knife and fork when you're not using it. In the UK I find that if it's during the meal, you hang it of the side of the plate (with the handle part leaning on the table, and the put in your food part leaning on the side of the plate), but then at the end of the meal, you put both pieces of cutlery on the middle of the plate facing the same way

  • @laurenschlicht7031
    @laurenschlicht7031 Před 2 lety +2

    When we were kids, we said Grace for big extended family meals. Our Uncle Leo lived on the other side of the country, but came back for Thansgiving and Christmas. We always wanted him to say grace - but my Grandmother hated it. Leo' s prayer - For all we eat , for ll we wear, we thank GOD for our underwear

  • @violetskies14
    @violetskies14 Před 4 lety +133

    I know Americans must think servers here are terribly rude but I would much prefer to be left alone and flag someone down if I need them than have to talk to them every 5 minutes. I'm not a social creature and having to constantly interact with strangers over the course of a whole meal sounds like literal hell to me.

    • @mistypierce2200
      @mistypierce2200 Před 4 lety +9

      I'm American and I agree with you.

    • @cheers4life100
      @cheers4life100 Před 4 lety +7

      see, to americans, because they come up so often, it would actually seem kinda rude to flag down a waiter. or it would seem as if the waiter isn't doing a good enough job. (or if you're in a rush, it's usually fine for that.) it's not a nuisance, really, it's a nice thing to have people fill up your water right when you need it. you don't need to have a full conversation with them every single time, it's just a nice thing.

    • @JesusManera
      @JesusManera Před 4 lety +9

      I agree. I hate being bothered in restaurants. I travel to the USA quite a bit and get really annoyed at being asked if everything is ok every 5 minutes. If I have a problem, I'll ask for you. Leave me alone! What's worse though is that in non-tipping jobs the customer service is terrible there which makes it more obviously fake.

    • @emilysundquist270
      @emilysundquist270 Před 4 lety +1

      It's more like every 8 minutes, not quite that often

    • @xavierpibb7414
      @xavierpibb7414 Před 4 lety +9

      My wife and I went to a place in Eastern San Diego County that had little flags you ran up at your table if you wanted service or to be left alone. Simple yet effective.

  • @HistoryInPractice
    @HistoryInPractice Před 3 lety +512

    Grace is how the irreverent cousins find each other at Thanksgiving - you look around to see who else has their eyes open and bond with them.

  • @darrellfarley1869
    @darrellfarley1869 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Being a member of the LDS (Mormon) Church, we have always said a blessing on the food. My wife is from the Philippines, but I met her in the UK in Norwich ( she also is an LDS member), I met her at church there. Every time we went to dinner with other Filipinos (LDS or other beliefs) we always said a blessing. It’s cultural I guess.

  • @rileyblack5621
    @rileyblack5621 Před rokem +1

    9:30 That accent genuinely shocked me it was so accurate 😂

  • @patriciagodfrey6345
    @patriciagodfrey6345 Před 2 lety +78

    Ah, fond memories of the trauma of dinners with my American Step-mom and British-To-The-Bone Grandmother. No matter which way I did it I had to hear all about it afterward. And everyone wonders why I got such a passion for Asian foods. Chopsticks. So simple.

    • @Neo-hw7nu
      @Neo-hw7nu Před rokem +3

      I could never eat with chopsticks. Very difficult for me.

    • @JasonCarney.
      @JasonCarney. Před rokem +4

      But then you have Thailand which uses spoons

    • @davidh.4944
      @davidh.4944 Před rokem +4

      @@Neo-hw7nu The secret to chopsticks is to apply a light touch. They aren't a gripping tool, but a maneuvering one. You hold them like pencils, and only use as much force as necessary to pinch off a bite-sized bit of food and lift it gently from point A to B. If you try to squeeze, it will just pop out and wing itself across the table.
      With the right technique and a bit of practice you can get very good at it, and possibly even come to prefer them.

    • @AdmiralStoicRum
      @AdmiralStoicRum Před rokem +5

      Until you get a vietnamese, korean and chinese person in the same room correcting your grip
      Edit: and each grip is different from the other

    • @davidh.4944
      @davidh.4944 Před rokem +4

      @@AdmiralStoicRum On that note, there's a fun video I recently came across by a channel called World friends, "Chinese, Japanese, Korean Chopsticks difference", where women from those three countries discuss the differences in their shapes and use. Dunno about Vietnam, though.

  • @nancyhamer949
    @nancyhamer949 Před 2 lety +79

    My mother was a Swedish immigrant. I used my fork and knife "European style" growing up, did not really know that it was referred to as that particular style, until eating with others and hearing remarks as -"Oh, you eat European style". Why people are bothered by these things is a mystery. As long as one is not messy or obnoxious while eating, any technique should be acceptable. Love your channel.

    • @stockinettestitch
      @stockinettestitch Před rokem +17

      I agree - but people love to bash Americans for seemingly anything. They think it makes them sophisticated.

    • @SomeInfamousGuy
      @SomeInfamousGuy Před rokem +2

      @@stockinettestitch I've seen many comments here bashing the British, which is far more prevalent than bashing Americans. Comments like "The British way of using utensils is atrocious".

    • @msjkramey
      @msjkramey Před rokem +1

      Who's bothered? Lol

  • @MissPeachCobbler
    @MissPeachCobbler Před 11 měsíci +1

    😂the holding the silverware used to get me everytime watching Downton Abbey.
    😂 I'd think, how are they holding rice with their forks upside down? Everything is spot on

  • @caiolinnertel8777
    @caiolinnertel8777 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I’m a U.S. Citizen. I dislike being called “American”. I know it’s common to assume that refers to a U.S. Citizen, but we have a lot of Americas, Canada, U.S.A., Mexico, Guatemala, Brazil, Chile, Panama, Argentina….to name a few. North, Central, South Americans. Right, now on to eating. My grandmother was from England, and she was very adamant about certain pronunciations and spellings. I still want to write Tyre etc…. So I am a mix, but we always ate continental style as you do. I say things like “car park”, “pavement”, “toilet” or “loo”….and other things that seem weird a lot of the times if I slip up. My son hates when I say “mum”, being raised in Pennsylvania I understand. Love your videos.

  • @nebulakosmic4997
    @nebulakosmic4997 Před 4 lety +82

    "In my wife's words I still eat like a toddler"
    Me: welcome to the club

    • @c0ronariu5
      @c0ronariu5 Před 3 lety

      D. Price ikr

    • @gj8683
      @gj8683 Před 3 lety +1

      I'd hope none of that food would be thrown and sticking to the walls.

  • @sophiemitchell5423
    @sophiemitchell5423 Před 4 lety +178

    Whenever i talk with American people my English accent/politeness gets stronger and stronger until i start sounding like i'm in a Jane Austin novel.

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay Před 4 lety +2

      Ha!

    • @amandawolfe1054
      @amandawolfe1054 Před 4 lety +2

      Hahaha!!

    • @annesmith2259
      @annesmith2259 Před 4 lety +1

      😂

    • @Mettazoan
      @Mettazoan Před 4 lety +7

      If someone started speaking to me as if I were in an Austen novel, I'd probably offer to buy them a meal. I'm a sucker for well-spoken language in a lovely accent. Either that or it's because I'm currently living in Florida and desperate for culture.

    • @10rcoleman
      @10rcoleman Před 4 lety +2

      Your proud to be english that's a good thing everyone should take pride on where there from and the way they talk.

  • @pn8535
    @pn8535 Před 12 dny

    Kind of relevant, I remember I (with three others) was in a lodge in Italy and there was a large group of Italians loudly engaged in conversation. When the hostess announced the 'antipasti' or communal dishes that everyone gets beyond the personal choices, they all instantly became quiet and paid attention. After that, quiet conference on what to get, then loud conversation. AS SOON as one table got their first antipasti, it was back to quiet eating. Kind of wished I understood Italian but an absolutely fascinating and delicious experience.

  • @andreah.5962
    @andreah.5962 Před 5 měsíci +1

    At my table, we held hands and said grace for every meal. When the kids brought their friends over, we still did it. I was surprised that their friends enjoyed it, too. It was never mandatory, but rather grateful and joyful for being together with God and the food we had.

  • @orangeziggy348
    @orangeziggy348 Před 3 lety +49

    The reason the sound level of each table keeps going up when youre at a restaurant is because each table has to fight to hear itself speak amongst the nearby tables, so it forms an escalating noise. Some Americans, not all, consider eating at a restaurant to be the same thing as attending a party.

    • @d.s.3551
      @d.s.3551 Před 3 lety +5

      Because there is blaring music people have to speak over. I think if they would just turn down the music it would be so much nicer.

    • @Peacefrogg
      @Peacefrogg Před 3 lety +1

      I think (most) americans speak louder than (most) europeans. I think it is a culture thing.

    • @orangeziggy348
      @orangeziggy348 Před 3 lety

      @@d.s.3551 I agree

    • @orangeziggy348
      @orangeziggy348 Před 3 lety

      @@Peacefrogg Maybe they see it as 'freedom' and independence.

    • @Peacefrogg
      @Peacefrogg Před 3 lety

      Orange Ziggy that kind of makes sense. Looking at history, i get how the us as a young country may have had the need to prove itself and that would reflect itself in the culture. Maybe that also explains why ‘bigger is better’ over there. And why advertising yourself is seen as a virtue, while in most cultures it can be considered as arrogant.

  • @lightdeathguy9266
    @lightdeathguy9266 Před 3 lety +200

    Tipping in the UK is more like “keep the change”

    • @nariter
      @nariter Před 3 lety +7

      When I was younger I thought that’s what tipping was in the USA as well.

    • @stevearno100
      @stevearno100 Před 3 lety +5

      not really - its 10-30 % of the bill .... but unlike America you don't have to tip in the uk And MOST places don't carry a service charge like America . In America - some places pay shitty wages far below our minimum wage which is LAW for all industries here . EGO and social status is derived in huge amounts in the USA ( culture ) via tipping but not so much in the UK

    • @Anakinuk007
      @Anakinuk007 Před 3 lety +4

      Worth noting that generally, the price of food in your typical restaurant in America is X cheaper than in comparison to the UK. A meal out in the UK is more of a treat, a special occasion. Once a month maybe? In America it’s often just what you do multiple times a week. Unless your wealthy, nobody in the UK could afford to eat out especially as a whole family to replace the normal evening meal. So tipping in America makes more sense aside from the staff wages, but in the UK you are already paying a high price for the food and drink. So the concept of tipping, adding even more to a bill seems to us Brits pretty crazy. It is polite to leave a tip of course, more often than not the service isn’t great, and if it is you’ve likely paid a lot for what you had. Hence reach for the change!

    • @aussiejohn5835
      @aussiejohn5835 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Anakinuk007 Everything that you have said applies to Australia as well.

    • @TheFlowerGirl13
      @TheFlowerGirl13 Před 3 lety

      @@nariter some Americans think that too. -_-

  • @analoren4745
    @analoren4745 Před 4 měsíci +1

    For bars, my go-to is usually $1/drink for tips, maybe more if it's a complicated drink

  • @Istandby666
    @Istandby666 Před rokem +2

    If a wait staff keeps bothering me, they get a less tip.
    I'm here to eat the food, but my conversations and me eating my food, is my time. If I want something, I'll raise my hand.

  • @TimothyRCrowe
    @TimothyRCrowe Před 3 lety +118

    My favorite British trait, which I call 'The Prompt'. You likely do it and are completely unaware of it. As you stated the British are by and large a bit more private and stand-offish than Americans. Thus you've perfected the pacifying small talk in interactions with acquaintances or a stranger you are forced to encounter that allows you to be polite but not very engaging.. However, Ive found that when a British person wants to have a more in depth and engaging conversation, they will ask you a question and give this very particular look and motion. Its hard to describe, but essentially they widen their eyes, look directly at you and move their head forward as though they are trying to hear you better, or like they are gesturing for an expected answer ( like wen interrogating a shy child and you ask a question and this same notion lets them know you demand an answer). Its very subtle body language, but says volumes. It says, " Yes, I want to have a REAL conversation with you beyond polite platitudes." I got used to seeing it in England, but recently a British co-worker here in the states, who usually just say hello and moves on came up to me and ask a question and gave 'the prompt'. I almost laughed but instead launched into a nice chat with him.

    • @moonshoes8931
      @moonshoes8931 Před 2 lety +12

      that's very interesting. I want this that sounds hilarious

    • @JohnkyTonkbadonkadonk
      @JohnkyTonkbadonkadonk Před 2 lety +7

      I know that look.. The less subtle, the movement and eye movement is, the more trouble you're in and likely to have your mom smack you across the face.
      I heard the best way to end a conversation is Britain is to slap your legs and just say in a somewhat louder voice "Well.." and whatever you wish to follow up with. "I gotta go" is my go-to as an American.

    • @lulumoon6942
      @lulumoon6942 Před 2 lety +4

      Thanks for sharing, that sounds like an incredibly useful cue to give and receive socially, I'm jealous! 👍

    • @SocieteRoyale
      @SocieteRoyale Před 2 lety +5

      what? that look and nod isn't universal!? I had no idea it was a British trait!

    • @marycarver1542
      @marycarver1542 Před rokem +3

      We British are NOT "private and stand offish " at all ! We are more reserved
      than Americans, and dont leap in with new acquaintances in answering what
      WE regard as very personal questions! It is common to be asked by an American
      you have just met " and WHAT do you do " as if they are judging whether bothering with you is worth it !

  • @lynn2574
    @lynn2574 Před 3 lety +109

    We are Christian, but my husband and I never said Grace or a prayer at meals (I’ve always found it such an arbitrary time to pray). My parents came for Thanksgiving when our daughter was about 3, and asked her to ‘say Grace’. Poor kid was very confused about why Grandma and Grandpa wanted her to say her middle name out loud at the table. 😂

    • @tejaswoman
      @tejaswoman Před 2 lety +9

      Tried to teach the swimming game Marco Polo to a new family member from El Salvador. I demonstrated saying "Marco" and explained the ins-and-outs of the rules about having to reply "Polo" so long as your head is above water, while if you're underwater, you can always pretend you don't hear. After we played a couple rounds, I told him it was his turn. He called out my first name, at which point I explained that it isn't "[Your Name Here] Polo" if the other person *isn't* named Marco.

    • @TheRagingPlatypus
      @TheRagingPlatypus Před 2 lety +5

      Extremely not arbitrary time to pray...in fact the most poignant time to do so. What better time than to thank for sustenance and survival. Furthermore, in our modern lives, the time when we're all together.

    • @SolaScriptura-n-cats
      @SolaScriptura-n-cats Před 2 lety

      What kind of “Christian” are you? Not thankful for God’s provisions? Wow. 😕

    • @lynn2574
      @lynn2574 Před 2 lety +8

      @@SolaScriptura-n-cats The kind that has a personal relationship with my savior, talks with and thanks Him when I am in connection with Him, and the kind that doesn’t judge people on the internet for thinking differently than me. ☺️

    • @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609
      @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609 Před 2 lety

      @@SolaScriptura-n-cats
      Saying something does not equate feeling it.
      Not saying something does not equate NOT feeling it.
      I am in the process of teaching my 11 year old daughter to distinguish between good religion(s) and bad religion(s), genuine religious sentiment and secterist thinking. As the bad examples, I am using certain murderous psychopathic hordes (no need to name them more specifically) but also the far less numerous but equally deluded and psychopathic people in the U.S. who a couple of decades ago murdered doctors that performed abortions.

  • @ImYourOverlord
    @ImYourOverlord Před 9 měsíci +1

    Saying grace before a meal is common in families throughout the States.

  • @kellystokes4810
    @kellystokes4810 Před 11 měsíci +1

    🙋🏼‍♀️ I grew up saying grace at every family sit down dinner. (Which was probably about 5 nights a week.)

  • @mikeincalifornia
    @mikeincalifornia Před 4 lety +140

    The fact that you have half of your mind on the turkey during grace indicates that you're not yet a real American. If you were, you would be 100% focused on the turkey.

    • @cynthiaweathers6979
      @cynthiaweathers6979 Před 4 lety +6

      Oh my, that's hysterical.

    • @jessicawatson7360
      @jessicawatson7360 Před 4 lety +3

      Most Brits have turkey for Xmas Dinner.

    • @randomcommenterfromdownund8949
      @randomcommenterfromdownund8949 Před 4 lety +4

      Yes. The mad rush after grace is to make up for time lost to the process of saying grace! It occurred to me that despite not having used them for 20+ years (if not more), I can still recite quickly from memory the two standard formats for grace: "God is great, God is good, Let us thank him for our food, Amen." (for generic gatherings with lots of kids) and "Bless us oh Lord, and these Thy gifts, which we are about to receive from Thy bounty, through Christ our Lord, Amen." (for Catholic family gatherings) The more serious Christians actually improvise when saying grace. MANY of us use the formulas. :-)

    • @tamaragonzalez2227
      @tamaragonzalez2227 Před 4 lety

      YOU DO NOT SPEAK FOR ANY AMERICANS EXCEPT YOUR SELF HERE.

    • @klyvemurray
      @klyvemurray Před 4 lety +4

      @@randomcommenterfromdownund8949 "Bless us oh Lord, and these Thy gifts, which we are about to receive from Thy bounty, through Christ our Lord, Amen." 3 x per day x 5 years @Catholic boarding school '66 to '70 - Perth WA...Later in life, just for fun it became...2 4 6 8 Bog in don't wait!! :D

  • @borninmassteaparty3132
    @borninmassteaparty3132 Před 3 lety +76

    I'm an American and yes we are loud, I dislike to talk when I'm eating and people's annoying kids running around.

    • @slcRN1971
      @slcRN1971 Před 3 lety +1

      Born in MASS Tea Party : my husband usually has his mouth full when they ask, so he just nods now. Much worse are those parents who let their unmannered children raise havoc (running around screaming, grabbing food off other people’s plates, and/or having a tantrum). Our (now grown) children knew that they better behave and so do their own children.

  • @Emily-the_funny_guys
    @Emily-the_funny_guys Před rokem +1

    Tipping is weird here in Australia too. Usually only in more posh restaurants. My daughter was a waitress in a high class restaurant and did get tips often but any average restaurants do not tip. They might have a tip jar at the register but that's it

  • @BlankCanvas88
    @BlankCanvas88 Před 2 lety +12

    My family says grace over every formal meal/meal we have together. Personally I’m glad bc it reminds me of my blessings (when I’m usually in the habit of forgetting them) and to be thankful to God for them.

  • @Tokahfang
    @Tokahfang Před 2 lety +219

    Oh man, I had the opposite prayer cross-continental issue! The first meal I ate with my Kiwi/Aussie in-laws, they didn't initiate any kind of prayer at dinner. Struck me odd, as most of them are members of christian churches, but no big deal to me. I made the sign of the cross and quickly blessed my own food (I'm orthodox) and got to eating. Suddenly, they are freaked out that they've been rude to ME, and my dear mum in law assures me that we can say grace if it'd make me more comfortable. I'm then trying to assure her that I'm always going to bless my food, but have no need for other people to pray about their food if that isn't what they'd normally do. Awkward 5 minutes!

    • @stellamortis4088
      @stellamortis4088 Před 2 lety +16

      LOL I'm an Irish-Catholic Australian, and we grew up in the 80s saying grace, usually only the Sunday dinner (roast, always a roast), Christmas and Good Friday, but that devolved into "2, 4, 6, 8, bog in don't wait" by the 90s, and then we just stopped. Haven't said grace in well over 20 years. Actually, that's a bit of a fib, went to a work Christmas party in 2017 and the General Manager was a devout Christian from South Africa, he got up and said grace at the start of the meal and it was deathly awkward, because no one in Australia ever said grace publicly outside of a church function, even when I was a kid, it was just not something that was done.

    • @pourattitude4206
      @pourattitude4206 Před 2 lety +16

      Good for you. As an nonreligious American I am still quite happy to see people observing their traditions but happier still to see them satisfied with performing them without imposing them on others.
      Your mother-in-law sounds like a sweetheart and a very gracious hostess.

    • @pourattitude4206
      @pourattitude4206 Před 2 lety +2

      @Bernard Morey haha! I found myself doing a mental impression of an Aussie accent to try and make that rhyme. I think I got it? 😄

    • @matthewhall1062
      @matthewhall1062 Před 2 lety

      I've never prayed before a meal in the U.S. I've lived in Ohio, Virginia, and Illinois my whole life.

    • @MrTopcat3333
      @MrTopcat3333 Před 2 lety +15

      As a Catholic kid, I once said "Rub a dub-dub, thanks for the grub. Yeah God." Unfortunately, my cousin (Sister Mary Michelle) was at the table. She called me a heathen and insisted I go to confession on the next Saturday and repent.

  • @impresarioe6824
    @impresarioe6824 Před 4 lety +152

    Most people who go on quiet dates or want quiet conversation here in the States rarely go to family restaurants. Here, the more expensive or high end usually means the less noisey.

    • @dianawest3976
      @dianawest3976 Před 4 lety +3

      Edward James You must not live in the NY area Edward....I would love to find a restaurant around here that had table cloths, good food, and a quiet atmosphere where you could enjoy a romantic evening. ☺️💕

    • @user-jy3zl2vp4b
      @user-jy3zl2vp4b Před 4 lety +1

      @@dianawest3976 I am NOT in a huge city like NY and I still would love to find a quiet restaurant in which to dine and have a quiet conversations that are reasonably priced. I don't understand where those restaurants went. As a child I couldn't wait to be an adult and go to the nice restaurants (in rural towns) with large curved booths to sit in, low lighting, mellow music, a dance floor for romantic dancing, and where you could hold calm conversations over a bottle of wine. My parents used to go to them 2-3 nights a week (so they weren't killer prices). NOW THEY ARE GONE....."who moved my cheese?!?!" How do we get them back?!?

    • @holger_p
      @holger_p Před 3 lety

      The classification of these restaurants is already strange. We just divide in with service, or without service. Of course nobody has a date at McDonalds.

    • @museumgirl9
      @museumgirl9 Před 3 lety +4

      My general rule of thumb: If there’s a kids menu, don’t expect a quiet time.

    • @nicholasneyhart396
      @nicholasneyhart396 Před 3 lety

      @Holger P. As a broke teenager, I can definitively say you are wrong, also I went out with my girlfriend and her father to the shooting range as a date so... Needless to say she is better shot than I am. But yes people go to McDonald's on dates if they are poor.

  • @jacqualinepagani4457
    @jacqualinepagani4457 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Good American cutlery etiquette says to hold the fork in the left and knife in the right hand for cutting, and then lay the knife down, switch the fork to the right and proceed to shovel the food in. Legend has it that this switching was a devised as a signal among the revolutionary colonists to identify themselves to each other in public eating places.

    • @rwilson7197
      @rwilson7197 Před 10 měsíci

      Thats interesting- would be a good silent communication signal if true indeed!

  • @ambrsanford3703
    @ambrsanford3703 Před 2 lety +1

    My family not only doesn't say 'grace', but this reminded me of the mom from the British sitcom Bread commanding, "prayers!!".

  • @TheVagaday
    @TheVagaday Před 3 lety +307

    Been to the US multiple times, tipped everytime, but I do not like it. Tipping in Europe is a way how to appreciete exceptional service and not obligation, I feel that is right way.

    • @lr6844
      @lr6844 Před 3 lety +28

      I tip even when the food is bad; it is generally not the servers fault for the nasty food. However, if the service is practically non existence, I do not tip.

    • @UnusAnnusislifelol
      @UnusAnnusislifelol Před 3 lety +40

      Tipping in America is more important than what other countries might think I feel. Our servers don't get paid much (depending on region) and sometimes they get accused for things that didn't happen (mostly from elders) just so the customers could get free food or something. Tipping in America is very appreciated and it helps out a lot. So when foreign people say they don't like it, at least know you're making someone's shitty day better

    • @kimhaas7586
      @kimhaas7586 Před 3 lety +30

      In the US, employers pay their service staff much less than minimum wage. It’s something like $2.00/hour. The government expects you to make up the difference with tips. Tips must be declared and are taxed accordingly. The IRS spot checks restaurants to make sure everyone is reporting tips accurately. Servers in turn tip their busboys and bar tenders. That’s why they ask so many questions. In Europe, serving food is a profession. It’s a different mental space. I have found in France that servers want you to appreciate the food. They act as liaisons between the kitchen and your mouth. It’s a gustatory experience. In the US, it’s strictly transactional. If we want you to pay us with 25% tips, we make sure that you lack for nothing and the food is somewhat secondary.
      Sometimes being an American is weird.

    • @marthab.higgins149
      @marthab.higgins149 Před 3 lety +27

      It may very well be "the right way" but it is not the way it is in the U.S.. Since a server in the U.S. is dependent on tips for his or her wages, please adhere to the protocol of the place you find yourself.

    • @adesewaiwalewa7621
      @adesewaiwalewa7621 Před 3 lety +8

      That is how it started out in America. Now people expect it without the exceptional service. Waitress go along with it because they can get away with not reporting it as taxable income. The restaurants do it because they are allowed to pay them much less than the average worker.

  • @erikagehm2805
    @erikagehm2805 Před 4 lety +43

    I always equated the dinner table with food, talking, and laughing.

    • @bchapman1234
      @bchapman1234 Před 3 lety +1

      The dinner table was for eating socializing and entertainment . It was expected to that you contribute to the conversation and provide amusing anecdotes To sit quietly and just listen is considered rude.

  • @cocosdad
    @cocosdad Před rokem

    From TX, when I was a kid on any feast holiday we would stand in a circle and someone would say a prayer.

  • @sandradring6265
    @sandradring6265 Před rokem

    This was great . I often wondered about the American way of eating and those “saying grace” before a meal...love your glasses btw 😉👍

  • @maryriley6163
    @maryriley6163 Před 3 lety +101

    I really enjoy hearing about the customs of people outside of America.

    • @ZLM88
      @ZLM88 Před 3 lety +4

      Agreed 👍🏾

    • @SweetandFitting
      @SweetandFitting Před 3 lety

      Yeah, they do exist.

    • @riku2609
      @riku2609 Před 2 lety

      seach on all the accents of britain: like I have a have posh and half roadman accent.

  • @lopezmarlon
    @lopezmarlon Před 3 lety +40

    My grandmother remarried to an Englishmen when my mother and her siblings where very young. They were taught the "English" way to use their utinsils. All the grandchildren where taught the same way. It wasn't uncommon to hear other families say how well mannered we all where at the dinner table. We were just doing what we were taught.

    • @TheRagingPlatypus
      @TheRagingPlatypus Před 2 lety +1

      That's because the Continental way of holding utensils is much more basic and requires less hand eye coordination to master. Give a kid a fork and he will grab it. Holding it delicately balanced as we do is harder for kids to master.

    • @bethyngalw
      @bethyngalw Před 2 lety

      @@TheRagingPlatypus I am surprised by your comment, unless you missed out a word and so I misunderstood it. The Continental way of holding utensils appears far more elegant to me, more delicate and careful and considered. It requires quite a lot of skill, and takes years to learn to do properly. For example it's entirely counter-intuitive and requires a lot more care and planning to transport loose items into your mouth via the tines of a fork than it does simply scooping them. There is also a lot less clatter, if you're not having to constantly put down your knife.

  • @joannekaiser1380
    @joannekaiser1380 Před rokem +2

    Just found Lost in the Pond. Super funny. Enjoy this style of humor.

  • @user-bt5rl3rh3b
    @user-bt5rl3rh3b Před 10 měsíci +1

    My dad was raised until age 11 in Glasgow, Scotland and then in Chicago. I learned both ways to hold utensils for eating and I still use them interchangeably

  • @RexTenomous
    @RexTenomous Před 3 lety +66

    I can't even tell you how many times the waitress has asked how everything tastes when I'm clearly still chewing my first bite. XD I mean I love the enthusiasm but let me chew!

    • @tejaswoman
      @tejaswoman Před 2 lety +6

      The other fun one is when they come by and see three fourths of your plate is uneaten then ask, "Are you done? Can I take that for you?" If I *am* done after eating only 1/4 of my meal, that would say something pretty crappy about your food, wouldn't it?

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL Před 2 lety +1

      You do know that literally everything in an American restaurant is reliant on you not ordering the third drink or desert, right? Seriously prohibition plagues the US to this day.

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL Před 2 lety

      @@tejaswoman Like I said the restaurant industry is still stuck in the prohibition era because they don't have to pay their employees and make a few dollars extra.

    • @BroonParker
      @BroonParker Před 2 lety

      Been to a British Wetherspoons? Company driven here as well.

    • @evilbob840
      @evilbob840 Před 2 lety +4

      I bet the "how's everything?" when you've just taken a bite is not an accident. They can be seen as attentive, but you are almost guaranteed to just give a thumbs up and not ask for anything, and they can move on quickly.

  • @marymaryquitecontrary9765
    @marymaryquitecontrary9765 Před 3 lety +34

    I'm American & remember a time when restaurants weren't so noisy... I find it very annoying myself. Higher end restaurants seem to be quieter for the most part, but honestly I almost never go out to eat anymore...

    • @courtneyj1856
      @courtneyj1856 Před 3 lety +2

      I looove when restaurants have a piano player

    • @nekoali2
      @nekoali2 Před 3 lety +1

      It has a lot to do with the style and construction of a restaurant, really. Consider a fast food restaurant or diner. Typically one large open space and everything is hard surfaces. So when people talk noise tends to bounce around. Add in a lot of people there at the time, each trying to be heard, and slowly ratcheting up the volume so their table mates can understand them over the babble and it gets pretty loud. Also it's culturally expected so people tend not to bat much of an eye.
      In slower dining restaurants there is going to be a lot more noise-deadening fabric. Carpets on the floor, tablecloths, curtains and plants all around. It's fairly common such places to include other noise-dampening ideas too, like tall dividers between sections or deliberate noise-cancelling designs and materials. With less echoing and a culture that has people more keep their voices down they are a lot quieter.

  • @valdar1978
    @valdar1978 Před 6 měsíci +1

    The way you showed the utensil etiquette for Britain is the way I learned how to properly use them when I was growing up, and I'm from Texas, so at least some of us Americans are on the same page. Of course, I have eaten the other way when eating alone at times I'm not concerned with proper etiquette, but whenever I go to a Dining In (I'm in the military) or any other formal dining event, I make sure to use proper etiquette, and I hold the fork and knife in the exact way you demonstrated as the "British" way.

  • @danwolfe7665
    @danwolfe7665 Před 10 měsíci

    We usually say grace before each meal but yes on big family holidays everyone stands and holds hands during the prayer.

  • @kyotocrossley8103
    @kyotocrossley8103 Před 3 lety +33

    “I just sat there because I didn’t know what to do” yep you did the correct thing

    • @khayanaeva8174
      @khayanaeva8174 Před 3 lety

      Yep. Just sit there feeling awkward. That wasn't because you were British and new to it - it's like that for all of us.

  • @madalinadelia
    @madalinadelia Před 3 lety +9

    You see...... In Romania we say "grace" (thank you God for the meal) at the end, when we finished eating.

  • @mariejackson325
    @mariejackson325 Před rokem +1

    In America, for right handed people (and those lefties whose families force them to eat like a rightie) the fork is placed on the left side of the plate (same as British). It is usually picked up with the left hand and transferred to the right hand tines up for stabbing or scooping straight into your mouth. If you have to cut something you pick up the fork in the left hand and keep it there tines pointing down to hold the food still while cutting with the right hand. THEN you set the knife down on your plate, transfer the fork to the right hand with tines up to stab the piece just cut off. If you are already eating with the fork in the right hand, and you want to cut something, you still have to switch the fork to the left hand, tines down to use it to held the food still. The British way is much, much easier, but in America, you will look like a food gobbler to people who don’t know you are British.
    Also, in America, when served a triangular piece of pie, you turn the pointed end toward yourself and begin eating the pie from the point toward the crust. I’ve heard Europeans just dig right in from whichever part of the pie is closest to them. Probably need to research this, but it’s the way a world traveling speaker told us that he was able to spot Americans in the audience when he was in Europe.

  • @PamIAmChronicles
    @PamIAmChronicles Před 11 měsíci

    I know these videos are a few years old, but I just found them and I am enjoying the information so much! Thanks for your videos

  • @rebeccakessner7118
    @rebeccakessner7118 Před 3 lety +55

    I. Find it funny that they always ask about the meal when your mouth is full lol

    • @129jasper1
      @129jasper1 Před 3 lety +3

      Yes, the same school of humour as the darn dentists. Mouth full of their fingers and implements and they want to get chatty.

    • @misspepper56174
      @misspepper56174 Před 3 lety +2

      Lol to be fair, some servers do that because they don’t want you to be able to answer 😆

    • @rahb1
      @rahb1 Před 3 lety +1

      NOT funny; bloody annoying!

    • @courtneyj1856
      @courtneyj1856 Před 3 lety +1

      👍👍

  • @clairey9035
    @clairey9035 Před 4 lety +551

    Southerners in America are a whole different breed than the north

    • @DeeVioletSkye
      @DeeVioletSkye Před 4 lety +9

      Claire Y are they? I wonder how so...I’m honestly curious.

    • @Jakaleel
      @Jakaleel Před 4 lety +38

      @@DeeVioletSkye - The Bible Belt.

    • @lucylulusuperguru3487
      @lucylulusuperguru3487 Před 4 lety +18

      Curious exactly how you mean? I'm born and raised Southern, but half my family is from up North, and I am likely to agree same as disagree lol.

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay Před 4 lety +20

      @@rylian21 But how does that impact the behaviors being discussed? A friend moved back to Kentucky after decades in SF to help his elderly parents. He said everyone there was very courteous, very helpful, and dumb as a box of rocks.

    • @lucylulusuperguru3487
      @lucylulusuperguru3487 Před 4 lety +68

      @@rylian21 Lol...you just showed how ignorant you are. Yes, there are SOME Southerners who "stoopid" at a level that defies explanation...but I have met ample ppl in many other places all over the U.S. that could just as well apply to. There will always be those "shining examples" in virtually any area.

  • @doloresfinney8185
    @doloresfinney8185 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I live in southside Virginia. Pretty much everyone here says grace before each meal as I live in the Bible belt. It's a nice way to begin a meal and to show gratitude.

  • @KbB-kz9qp
    @KbB-kz9qp Před 8 měsíci

    As a Roman Catholic raised in South Dakota, we always said Grace on Thanksgiving dinner , and Christmas feast (more casual), because Christmas was always less organized. Always we had lots of Kosher red wine, and (Dakota), lots of cold beer. “The beer is starting to freeze, bring the cooler in from porch into the kitchen!”
    Tips are ten percent minimum, twenty percent max!