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1、dining culture 晚餐文化Chinese people love to eat and China boasts one of the worlds greatest cuisines. During the long development of Chinese eating culture, many practices have evolved that foreign visitors may find quite different from what they are used to and even consider weird. These pages have b
2、een written to help those from other parts of the world to understand Chinese eating culture. China is a country with a long history of ritual and etiquette, and eating is highly important feature of Chinas culture, so naturally dining etiquette has developed to a high degree. Dining etiquette is sa
3、id to have its beginnings in the Zhou Dynasty (1045-256 BC). Through thousands of years of evolution it has developed into a set of generally accepted dining rituals and practices. However, there is still variation in table etiquette according to the character and purpose of a banquet and great diff
4、erences regionally. Eating Ambience (环境) Being surrounded by much loud talking and laughing is a typical ambience at a Chinese restaurant. (This goes against what you will see on the dining etiquette page about talking little and quietly and laughing reservedly, as will many other things you see in
5、restaurants.) Chinese people like a noisy and upbeat atmosphere when having a gathering and meals are no exception. People regard it as a rule of thumb that if the dishes of a restaurant are good and tasty then the restaurant will be noisy and busy. The crowds at a restaurant indicate the deliciousn
6、ess of the dishes. If you want a quiet place to enjoy your meal, some restaurants provide private rooms with one or more tables. Dining Etiquette Chinese Dining Etiquette As a guest at a meal, one should be particular about ones appearance and determine whether to bring small gifts or good wine, acc
7、ording the degree of relationship with the master of the banquet. It is important to attend and be punctual. On arrival one should first introduce oneself, or let the master of the banquet do the introduction if unknown to others, and then take a seat in accordance with the master of the banquets ar
8、rangement. The seating arrangement is probably the most important part of Chinese dining etiquette. This is actually this part of a larger difference between Chinese and US dining culture, namely, in China the guest and host roles are much more significant and traditionally engrained. In the US, eac
9、h person gets their own menu, because each person orders for him or herself. If you go out to eat in China, often (and traditionally) one person orders for the whole table, because that person, the host, will be picking up the check. Treating someone to a meal is a form of social currency in China,
10、acknowledged and redeemable within the moral economy of interpersonal relationships. Another difference about ordering food in China that catches many Westerners off-guard is the timing. In the US, a waiter usually gives you a few minutes alone with the menu before you order, but in China waiters us
11、ually expect you to start ordering as soon as you receive the menu. When I was a newly arrived foreigner in China, on unsure footing with the language, it was always anxiety inducing when a waiter would hand me a long, all-Chinese menu and then stand there expectantly, with pen poised, waiting to ta
12、ke my order. I felt rude making the waiter stand for a long time while I contemplated my order, so after a few moments of fruitlessly scanning the menu, I would often just stab wildly at any dish featuring a recognizable character for meat, hoping for the best. This strategy produced mixed results.
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