Chop sticks/Chop stick | How to use chopsticks | Chopsticks History | Chinese Chopsticks | Japanese Chopsticks

 
 
Various oriental chopsticks. Including chinese chopsticks, cloisonne chopsticks, jintailan chopsticks, japanese chopsticks for great gift idea.
About US Wholesale Buy Chopsticks SiteMap Home

About Echopsticks.org

 

EChopsticks.org is a place to provide all the information you need to find about chopsticks. Such as history of chopsticks, how the chopsticks evolved, how to use chopsticks correctly. Some introduction of chinese chopsticks and japanese chopsticks. We also provide resource for online purchase of various chopsticks.

CHOPSTICKS
Chopsticks were developed about 5,000 years ago in China. It is likely that people cooked their food in large pots which held heat for a long time, and hasty eaters then broke twigs off trees to retrieve the food. By 400 B.C., because of a large population and dwindling resources, food was chopped into small pieces so it could be cooked rapidly to conserve fuel. #389-1935: Japanese chopstick/ knife set

The pieces of food were small enough that they negated the need for knives at the dinner table, and thus, chopsticks became staple utensils. It is also thought that Confucius, a vegetarian, advised people not to use knives at the table because knives would remind them of the slaughterhouse. Chinese chopsticks, called kuai-zi (quick little fellows), are usually 9 to 10 inches long and rectangular with a blunt end. By A.D. 500, chopstick use had spread from China to present day Vietnam, Korea, and Japan. The chopsticks to the left, while Japanese, are rectangular in the style of Chinese chopsticks.


In Japan, chopsticks were originally considered precious and were used exclusively for religious ceremonies. The earliest chopsticks used for eating looked like tweezers; they were made from one piece of bamboo that was joined at the top. By the 10th Century, chopsticks were being made into two separate pieces.

Japanese chopsticks differed in design from Chinese chopsticks in that they were rounded and came to a point; they were also shorter (7 inches long for females and 8 inches long for males) than Chinese chopsticks.

The Japanese tended to make their chopsticks from a variety of woods. To the right are chopsticks with a characteristic Japanese style. Starting in the 17th Century, they were the first to lacquer these wooden chopsticks, making them slippery but quite durable. The Japanese were also the first to create disposable wooden chopsticks (called wari-bashi) in 1878.

Traditionally, chopsticks have been made from a variety of materials. Bamboo has been the most popular material because it is inexpensive, readily available, easy to split, resistant to heat, and has no perceptible odor or taste. Cedar, sandalwood, teak, pine, and bone have also been used to make chopsticks for the greater population. The wealthy, however, often had chopsticks made from jade, gold, bronze, brass, agate, coral, ivory, and silver. In fact, during dynastic times it was thought that silver chopsticks would turn black if they came into contact with poisoned food. It is now known that silver had no reaction to arsenic or cyanide, but if rotten eggs, onions, or garlic were used, the hydrogen sulfide they released might cause the chopsticks to change color.

 


 

 




 


echopsticks.org, providing all information about chopsticks, such as chopsticks history, how to use chopsticks or hold chop sticks, difference between chinese chopsticks and japanese chop sticks, chopsticks picture. Offer bulk chopstick, chopstick wholesale, buy chop sticks, chopstick set, fancy chop sticks for kid, japan chop stick, golden chop stick.
Feature Category
ADVERTISEMENT