Skip to content
Subscribe to our newsletter
Cuisine Noir logo
Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
    • Recipe Corner
    • Recipe Roundup Ideas
View saved recipes

Saved Recipes

Search
Cuisine Noir logo
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipe Corner
    • Recipes
    • Recipe Roundup Ideas
View saved recipes

Saved Recipes

Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
    • Recipe Corner
    • Recipe Roundup Ideas
View saved recipes

Saved Recipes

Search
Cuisine Noir logo
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipe Corner
    • Recipes
    • Recipe Roundup Ideas
View saved recipes

Saved Recipes

Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
Lifestyle

Soup Etiquette – The Rules of Enjoying Soup

By Tina Hayes
/
January 26, 2024
       
Soup Etiquette
Photo credit: DragonImages (iStock)
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

“Just like ships go out to sea, I spoon my soup away from me.” This is one of those sayings that grandmothers used to teach youngsters on the correct way to eat soup.

Rarely should one exert energy watching people eat, however for experimental purposes only; observe other’s soup decorum while dining out.

You’ll probably notice that the casual diner improperly drops their head toward the soup bowl, blows the soup: slurps the soup; spoons inward toward the body and leaves the spoon in the bowl when finished.

Now, if the aforementioned practices seem normal, I would invite you to carefully review the following soup etiquette tips I have provided for consuming soup properly.

Soup Etiquette
  • Don’t bend your head toward the soup bowl; rather slightly bend inward from the base of your spine without slumping. Keep your back straight and raise the spoon all the way up to your mouth.
  • When eating soup, spoon away from your body. Enter from the front and move to the back of the bowl, allowing the spoon to wipe the back rim of the dish. (There are a few exceptions, one being french onion soup which should be spooned inward.)
  • Soups are not to be blown. If the soup is hot, patiently wait 1-2 minutes, and then fill the spoon, skimming from the top of the soup.
  • Clear soups, broths and heartier soups are eaten by placing the spoon point first in the mouth. No slurping allowed.
  • Crackers are not to be crumbled into soups. However, oyster crackers can be enjoyed in chowders.
  • Soups should be served with the soup bowl on a service plate underneath. When you finish your soup, leave the spoon on the service plate, not in the soup bowl or on the tablecloth.
  • Soups served in a cup with two handles (lug soup bowl) can be picked up to drink, after you use your spoon to eat the croutons or chanterelle on top.

RELATED: Tea Party Etiquette

Soup Spoons
  • Small round spoon for clear soups
  • Large oval spoon for cream soups and broths with vegetables
  • Porcelain spoon for Chinese soups

No matter what the season, as you’re enjoying a warm, hearty bowl of corn chowder, split pea, minestrone, consommé, lobster bisque, vichyssoise, or traditional chicken noodle soup, exhibit proper soup decorum. You never know who’s watching.

Trending Stories

  • Biscuits by Chef Melvin "Boots" Johnson of the Harlem Biscuit Company
    CookingRevealing the Winning Secrets For Biscuits and Gravy
  • Digital creator Sonja Norwood - Lost Black American Recipes
    Food & DrinkSonja Norwood Finds and Recreates Lost Black American Recipes in Digital Series
  • Oxtail with hominy. Typical dish of Brazilian cuisine
    CultureFor the Love of Oxtails: African American and Caribbean Communities’ Ode to an Ancestral Legacy
  • '57 Chocolate founders Kimberly and Priscilla Addison
    Food & DrinkTwo Sisters in Ghana Raise the Bar with ’57 Chocolate’s Pan-African Vision

Subscribe

Subscribe to The Weekly Dish and get the week’s top food stories delivered to our inbox each Thursday.


    Whimstay Same stays Better rates

    Diaspora Food Stories Podcast

    Listen to global chefs, winemakers, farmers and more tell their stories in their own words.
    Listen to the Podcast

    Support Award-Winning Journalism

    Cuisine Noir is published by the nonprofit, The Global Food and Drink Initiative, and dedicated to connecting and preserving Black food history and culture through culturally-rich and factually-reported stories.

    Please support our work to ensure these stories— past, present and future— continue to be told and remain accessible to all.

    Donate
    Donate on Paypal

    Related Articles

    Loading...
    Little girl going on Halloween for trick or treat
    Lifestyle

    Halloween Etiquette

    Fan sportsmanship
    Lifestyle

    Etiquette for Fan Sportsmanship

    Family gathering for a reunion or cookout
    Lifestyle

    6 Family Reunion Etiquette Tips for Spending Quality Time with Relatives

    Cuisine Noir is an award-winning lifestyle media outlet dedicated to providing culturally-rich and factually reported stories that connect the African diaspora through food, drink and travel and celebrate Black food cultures.

    Facebook Instagram Pinterest Youtube

    About

    Our History
    Our Team
    Content Integrity
    Advertise with Us
    Photography Use
    Affiliate Links
    Donate to Our Work
    Privacy

    COMMUNITY

    Our Community Experts
    Calendar of Events
    Submit Your Event
    Submit Your Recipe

    Subscribe

    Subscribe to The Weekly Dish to have award-winning food journalism delivered to your inbox each Thursday.


      Copyright© 2026 Cuisine Noir and The Global Food and Drink Initiative.
      Site by ACS Digital