Table of Contents
- 1 Is it an insult to ask for salt and pepper?
- 2 Is it offensive to ask for salt in Italy?
- 3 Why should you not ask for salt and pepper in Portuguese restaurants?
- 4 What foods do chefs hate?
- 5 Is it rude to ask for ketchup in France?
- 6 Should you pass salt and pepper at the same time?
- 7 Do you need to wear a mask to go to a restaurant?
Is it an insult to ask for salt and pepper?
Similar to asking for extra cheese in Italy, asking to pass the salt and pepper in Portugal is considered rude. The chef will take it as an insult that you feel the need to spice up their dish.
Is it offensive to ask for salt in Italy?
Don’t Ask for Cheese with a Seafood Pasta Dish, or Salt at Any Time. It’s not true that Italians never eat cheese with seafood. Even though asking for cheese is considered, quite literally, bad taste, asking for salt is worse, an insult to the chef and to be avoided if at all possible.
Is it rude to use salt and pepper?
If someone asks for the salt/pepper, is it considered rude to pick them up and use them yourself first, and then pass them on to the guest who requested them? In reference to your first question: Yes, the salt and pepper should always be passed together, even if only one is requested.
Why is it rude to ask for salt?
It is rude to ask for salt before tasting a dish, in a restaurant or in another setting (someone’s home, or even your own if someone else did the cooking). It is presumed that you don’t trust the cook to prepare a good meal.
Why should you not ask for salt and pepper in Portuguese restaurants?
If there are salt and pepper shakers on the table, by all means help yourself — just don’t request them. In Portugal this is offensive to the chef, who will think you don’t like the taste of your food without additional spices.
What foods do chefs hate?
Liver, sea urchin, tofu, eggplant and oysters, of all things, topped the list of foods chefs hate most. Only 15\% of chefs surveyed said they’d eat absolutely anything. Still, chefs hate picky eaters. More than 60\% said requests for substitutions are annoying.
What do you do when someone asks for the salt?
The etiquette is to pass both salt and pepper together. The person who passes both when only one has been requested has likely learned proper table manners which others may not have learned even as adults. It’s never too late to learn new things. The etiquette is to pass both salt and pepper together.
In which country is salting your food considered offensive?
Never salt your food in Egypt. Salting your food in Egypt is considered a huge insult, and when you think about it, it makes perfect sense.
Is it rude to ask for ketchup in France?
Basically no one in their right mind should ask for ketchup at a French dinner table or in a French restaurant unless you’re having French fries, but it still happens.
Should you pass salt and pepper at the same time?
Passing one at a time makes it easier to lose them on the table and means people will have to ask for them twice if they want both seasonings. “Always pass the salt and the pepper together, even if you are asked to pass just the salt,” she explains.
What to do when you have to wait in a restaurant?
While waiting, it’s important to spread out and not hover over the customers eating. This just makes people feel uncomfortable, especially when there is a greater health threat. Take a walk around the block or down the street and come back. Or you can also help the restaurant by just getting takeout.
How much do you tip a restaurant for bad service?
Stacking your dishes, passing the salt, using the wrong bread plate, and more: Avoid making rude mistakes while dining out. The old rule was to tip your server 10 percent for poor service, 15 percent for good service, and 20 percent or more for work that goes above and beyond.
Do you need to wear a mask to go to a restaurant?
Check out our restaurant tipping guide. Restaurant employees don’t have much of a choice when it comes to going into a restaurant so it would be unfair to put them at a greater risk of contracting COVID-19 because you aren’t wearing a mask or are wearing it improperly—cover your nose!