Ohashi etiquette

General discussion (non-Usagi Yojimbo related) about all things Japan -- Feudal Japan, Samurai, Ninjas, Anime & Manga, Chambara films, Japanese Pop Culture, Otaku, martial arts, history, sushi, giant robots, Godzilla... anything Japan-related!

Moderators: Mayhem, Steve Hubbell, Moderators

Post Reply
User avatar
Stan Sakai
Sensei
Posts: 4896
Joined: Wed Sep 18, 2002 12:21 -0700

Ohashi etiquette

Post by Stan Sakai »

A friend recently sent me interesting customs about hashi (chopsticks), not hashi (bridge).



Are you pointing your chopsticks at me? and other no-nos by Kaoru Shoji


It's that time of year again when family meals become alarmingly frequent and our table manners get dusted down and put on display.

For the Japanese, this brings the realization that the things we do unconsciously in the privacy of our apartments can cause mortal offense and/or internal hemorrhage to grandparents and other elders on the premises.

My own relatives are real sticklers when it comes to the proper deployment of o-hashi (chopsticks). "O-sato ga shireru (You know where a person comes from)" is what my grandmother says whenever she witnesses an o-hashi taboo happening between fingers of anyone within 1 meter radius. It is useless to argue that, genetically, you come from her, because she'll stare you down and say: "Jodan ja naiyo (Don't kid me)." Then she'll take her chopsticks and demonstrate exactly the right way to do things. By the time she's finished, your appetite has gone and your cousins have drunk all the sake.

O-hashi reached the Japanese some 1,800 years ago. In the beginning only gods and the emperor could eat with o-hashi; the rest of the populace - mere mortals - ate with their hands. Perhaps because of this o-hashi retained their hallowed reputation and came with all sorts of subtexts that later morphed into a list of do's and don'ts.

Here are just a few:

MAYOBASHI (wandering chopsticks) is to allow one's chopsticks to hover over the food. This isn't just an indication of finickiness and indecision; it's an insult to the cook.

NIGIRIBASHI (chopsticks in the fist) is a sign of aggression and hostility toward one's fellow diners.

SAGURIBASHI (poking chopsticks) is to use the chopsticks to ferret out the choicest morsels in your bowl and is considered the height of gross acts.

UJEBASHI (to ask for seconds while still holding the chopsticks) is inadvisable unless you're one of the leads in "The Seven Samurai."

SASHIBASHI (piercing chopsticks) is a sign of barbarism.

NAMIDABASHI (weeping chopsticks) is to allow one's chopsticks to drip with sauce or other liquids. Yuck.

NAMEBASHI (licking chopsticks) is something you don't do once you get past age of 9.

YOKOBASHI (sideways chopsticks) is an act often sighted at izakaya pub parties. You know how people put their chopsticks together to scrape food off the plate? A big no-no.

Even simple o-hashi acts that have practically become second nature are often permissible. KOMEBASHI (to push food into one's mouth with the ends of the chopstick) is something that we all do, especially with things like potatoes and takoyaki (octopus balls), but which can be very unpopular with our elders. The there are the more obvious gaucheries like YOSEBASHI (to pull plates of food closer with one's chopsticks) and SASHIBASHI (to point at other people with one's chopsticks).

The absolute taboos, drummed into us from childhood, have religious connotations: TATEBASHI (to stick chopsticks upright into a bowl of rice) done only when putting the bowl on the Buddhist home altar for the dead. These meals for the spirits are called
MAKURAMESHI (pillow food) and will spell an early end for anyone who dare at them. And HASHIWATASHI (to pass or receive items from someone else's chopsticks) is an act permitted only inside crematoriu! ms, wher e bones of loved ones are passed from one family member to the other using o-hashi.

It is said that the Japanese are the only Asian people to value chopsticks so highly that they have designated, personal sets at home. Maybe so, but when I was in high school, my friend and I forgot our o-bent (lunchbox) chopsticks and had to resort to two Hello Kitty pencils turned upside down. Personally, I would like to include this in the list of o-hashi taboos since (1) they don't really work and (2) your boyfriend would be like, so disgusted.
User avatar
Ben
Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
Posts: 441
Joined: Wed Dec 07, 2005 22:30 -0700

Post by Ben »

Holy cow. :shock:

I had no idea eating a bowl of rice could be so dangerous.
User avatar
SHAMSKI
Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
Posts: 154
Joined: Thu May 24, 2007 13:22 -0700
Location: Maryland

Post by SHAMSKI »

Jeeezz and I cant even get my kids to master spork etiquette !!! :lol: I didn't see any rules about catching flies alla Daniel-son in The Karate Kid , Bonsai!!! Bonsai!!! :wink:
User avatar
Steve Hubbell
Taisho
Posts: 6051
Joined: Thu Sep 19, 2002 15:25 -0700
Location: Kalamazoo, MI

Post by Steve Hubbell »

I probably managed to commit most of those indescretions trying to eat with chopsticks at the Dojo Dinner at the Cherry Blossom Restaurant in Novi, MI last May during the Motor City Comic Con. :oops:
User avatar
estee
Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
Posts: 1467
Joined: Sun Jun 12, 2005 11:39 -0700
Location: Canada

Post by estee »

All I know about chopsticks is that when I use them more food ends up on the floor than in my mouth and I get a wicked cramp in my hand at the end of the meal. :wink:
Image
User avatar
morna-san
Shinobi<Special Ninja Agent>
Posts: 475
Joined: Sun Feb 25, 2007 21:10 -0700
Location: bc canada
Contact:

Post by morna-san »

fascinating!

I have used chopsticks since I was about 13 and amazingly I don't think I'm guilty of too many of these indiscretions. I know I have committed HASHIWATASHI in my ignorance of the deeper connotations of the act. I have also occasionally committed SASHIBASHI on big round slippery things like a wonton - sometimes it's the only way to get those bad boys out of the bowl! I wonder if there's a word for dropping a hot wonton covered in chili oil on your lap.
Is the greater sin SASHIBASHI or WONTON/LAPBASHI ?
.
I love him when he's pissed off

.
User avatar
Mayhem
Daimyo <High-Ranking Lord>
Posts: 2955
Joined: Wed Sep 18, 2002 3:54 -0700
Location: London, England

Post by Mayhem »

Likewise actually... I think I'd get off pretty lightly transgression wise if I was eating in their presence!
With a breeze comes a storm, but then you'll all be washed away...
User avatar
sschroeder
Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
Posts: 107
Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2006 18:28 -0700
Contact:

Re: Ohashi etiquette

Post by sschroeder »

Stan Sakai wrote:A friend recently sent me interesting customs about hashi (chopsticks), not hashi (bridge).

YOKOBASHI (sideways chopsticks) is an act often sighted at izakaya pub parties. You know how people put their chopsticks together to scrape food off the plate? A big no-no.
Are you allowed to put them together to gather dispersed food on a plate into a big enough mass to pick up properly, like with rice kernals?


Do they have a big foreboding name for it when you give up trying to pick up individual rice kernals, and grab a knife and fork to help finish the job?
User avatar
Thomas Froehling
Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
Posts: 895
Joined: Fri Sep 29, 2006 4:38 -0700
Location: Berlin, Germany

Post by Thomas Froehling »

:shock: Oh, boy, I think I'd rather ask for a spoon and show everybody I'm a stupid barbarian....
:wink:
Greetings from overseas
_______________________________________
* Everybody is an alien.... in almost all parts of the universe !*
_______________________________________
Post Reply