East Bay Times

The proper way to eat a salad

- EiPP EaNNerP Judith Martin Please send your questions to missmanner­s.com.

DEAR MISS MANNERS

>> It seems that Cobb and chopped salads are now on menus everywhere, and are as beautiful to look at as they are delicious to eat. My dilemma is how to eat them. Does one toss it in one’s plate, so each bite contains a sample of a few ingredient­s? There usually isn’t a lot of room on the plate to do this neatly.

I drizzle a bit of dressing and eat a little from each section, working my way around the plate, adding dressing as needed once I reach the lower layers. But what is the preferred method?

GENTLE READER >> When it comes to giant salads fitted in small bowls, one’s life — and dry-cleaning bill — is in one’s own hands. Your method is as good as any.

Miss Manners suggests you approach it like an archaeolog­ical dig, skillfully swirling and consolidat­ing the further you approach the bottom. If it is any consolatio­n, at least chopped and Cobb salads have the courtesy of coming in bitesized pieces. Their cruel sibling, the wedge salad, is not so generous.

DEAR MISS MANNERS >> For 50 years, I have enjoyed working with yarn. I gave complete baby sets (a sweater set, blanket and toy) to friends when their children came along. These were well received, with many compliment­s; pictures of them in use were shared with me, and I was frequently told these items would be saved as heirlooms for the baby’s own children.

Twelve or 15 years would go by, and the friend would tell me out of the blue, “I had to discard your beautiful baby set. We just don’t have room to keep EVERYTHING from Terrence’s childhood. I felt so terrible when I threw it in the dumpster.” (This is a mental image I do not enjoy, either!) Then in another 10 or 12 years, they announce their excitement to be welcoming a grandchild, and ask me to make another baby set.

While I understand the need to downsize, and that the gift is theirs to do with as they wish, I’m at a loss as to how to answer these requests. It feels as though they’re asking me to negate their guilt, while knowing they’ve discarded a symbol of our friendship.

Items are discarded for various reasons over time, but I would NEVER announce that I discarded someone’s gift, no matter the circumstan­ces or amount of time passed!

Can you suggest how I can politely respond to the announceme­nt that my gift has been discarded? In the past I have simply said, “I understand.” I now find great satisfacti­on in donating my creations to charities — and not knowing their fate!

GENTLE READER >> You cannot chastise them, but you can politely express disappoint­ment.

Miss Manners suggests something like: “Oh, that is too bad. If you no longer had use for it, I am sure that someone else might have. Perhaps even Terrence’s children someday, knowing that he enjoyed it so. Well, if you find yourself in the same position again, I would happily keep it for you or donate it, rather than have it go to waste.”

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