Caviar in your Cavern
If caviar is passed to you in a bowl or crock with
its own spoon, serve a teaspoonful onto your plate. Take
small amounts of minced onion and sieved egg whites and
yolks, as well as a few lemon slices from the small
bowls of accompaniments that are going round. Assemble a
canapé ( put what you have picked on a cracker or a
small, thin piece of bread )to your taste with a knife,
then use your fingers to lift it to your mouth.
If you're at a reception where already prepared
caviar canapés are being passed around to the guests on
trays, simply lift one off (via the toothpicks that
accompany each, if any) and pop it into your mouth.
Just Cheese
As an hors d'oeuvre, cheese is spread on a cracker
with the knife that accompanies each kind.
When cheese is served with a salad, you can spread it
on a cracker or a small bit of bread with a knife. A
piece of cheese may be broken off and put on your plate
with a fork and eaten with the served lettuce, if any.
Soft, runny cheeses, such as Brie and Camembert, are
always spread with a salad knife or butter knife.
Dessert cheeses served with fruit are easy to handle.
Just cut the ripe apples or pears to a comfortable size,
and then eat the cheese with a fork and the fruit with
either a fork or your fingers. Take alternate bites of
fruit and cheese at intervals.
Sipping Soups
Soup may be served either in a soup plate or in a
cup, depending on the soup type and the degree of
formality of the meal.
Clear soups are often served in small,
doubled-handled consommé cups. A two-handled cream-soup
bowl is larger than a consommé cup. You can test the
heat of the soup with a spoon, then lift the cup to
drink it. In any case, cooks and waiters for such formal
dinners usually make sure that the temperature is
suitable before releasing the soup to the table.
You can spoon and any vegetables or noodles left at
the bottom and eat them. In both cases, when you are
finished, place the spoon on the plate underneath and to
the right of the cup; a signal that the waiter can carry
it away. NEVER leave it standing in the cup.
When a soup plate is used, always spoon away from the
table's edge, lest you make a mess on the napkin. When
you reach the bottom, you can tilt the plate slightly
away from you and spoon as usual. Always sip from the
side of the bowl of the spoon, and never put the whole
of the latter into your mouth.
Tiny crackers or croutons (small crisp pieces of
toasted or fried bread) may be added to your soup,
whole, a few at a time. Larger crackers should be eaten
separately unless you are having a hearty soup such as
chowder, where you can add a few pieces at a time.
At all times, drink soups quietly.