How Filipinos Eat Meat with a Spoon and Fork
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Taking a Spoonful- Louise Fernandez of Greetings 2Go, having arranged the food to suit her needs, then takes a spoonful of food. The usual Western etiquette of not speaking with your mouth full or avoiding flying bits of food is then observed. |
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“Sarap (Delicious) to the Bones”- Just in case there are any doubts regarding the effective use of the spoon and fork, let the clean bones speak for themselves. |
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Max’s Restaurant- Max’s Restaurant, one of the favorite food chains in the Philippines, has popularized the phrase “Sarap (Delicious) to the Bones,” since it has been coined and used extensively in their advertising campaigns. |
If you wish to help out, you may email the principal of Ecole Lalande to add another demand for an apology for Luc Cagadoc. Please send an email addressed to Mr. Normand Bergeron at direction.lalande@csmb.qc.ca
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May 28th, 2006 at 9:59 pm
Robert, my son raised in the UK, will eat with knife and fork with any meal that we have EXCEPT when we have rice with the meal. I do it myself. I use the knife and fork most of the time but when I eat rice I revert back to spoon and fork. I just cannot imagine myself eating rice with a knife and fork.
I hope you are well and hopefully Robert and I will see you in August. Till then, take care.
May 28th, 2006 at 11:57 am
I think the lunch monitor should be the one isolated for treating a child totally w/o love. It’s things like that which can scar a child indefinitely.