Japanese Tea Ceremony Etiquette for Guests3

Cut the sweets into bite-size pieces with the ‘kuromoji’ (a small pick or fork).

・You may eat the sweets by hand if a ‘kuromoji’ has not been provided.

・Usually, all the sweets are eaten first, then tea is served. ( It is not acceptable ettiquette to eat the sweets and drink the tea with each other).

Japanese Tea Ceremony Etiquette for Guests2

When the host serving the ‘wagashi’ bows to the guest, the guest should bow in return, receive the ‘wagashi’ and then eat it. The host will say ”okashi o douzo” (“please eat the sweets”). When you bow in return, say ”okashi o choudai itashimasu” (“I’m receiving the sweets”), then you may start eating.

Yesterday’s dinner was oden.

Yesterday’s dinner was oden.
I picked a pot and had plenty of juice, and I got to put it in a pot in order from a thing that is hard to boil, relaxingly and hard to soak in the taste. Pick up a fish saucepad, a penis, a streak, and a blotch.
#Japan
#healthy food
#Japanese food
#Japanese culture

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