In Japanese dining culture, particularly in izakayas, the last piece of food on a shared plate is considered sacred and should never be taken without permission; instead, diners circle around the plate, offer it to others, and split it among the group, reflecting the cultural value of enryo (restraint) and consideration for others.
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Prérequis
- Pas de données disponibles.
Prochaines étapes
- Pas de données disponibles.
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Never Eat the Last Piece in JapanAjouté :
Wait. Never eat the last piece in Japan.
[music] There's a word for it, enryo no katamari.
The lump of restraint.
At an izakaya, the last carriage on the shared plate is sacred. [music] Take it without permission and three things happen at once.
Your boss [music] looks down at his beer for half a second.
The new hire whispers a tiny o.
The waiter [music] changes when he clears the table.
Locals do this dance.
They circle.
They offer it.
They split [music] it.
They never just take.
Drop a mind-blown if you've done this without [music] knowing.
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