The history of chopsticks

Everyone knows that chopsticks are the traditional food eating implement of most Asian cuisines, but do you know where they started and why they became popular? That’s a question posed by the Chinese Food & History blog of the University of Michigan’s Chinese studies program. There, Q. Edward Yang explores the origin and function of chopsticks in Asian cuisine.

Right off the bat we learn that chopsticks were not the primary eating tool of ancient Asian people. Instead, the spoon was the most important utensil, because porridge was the main food source centuries ago. Small grains like millet dominated mealtime, and spoons were the only practical porridge-to-mouth delivery vehicle.

The introduction of wheat into the diet was one factor accelerating the use of chopsticks, says Yang. “Wheat-flour foods, such as noodles and dumplings, combined grain and non-grain ingredients in one form, and to eat noodles, chopsticks evidently was the better tool, because the spoon could not easily transport such foodstuffs,” he explains. But that isn’t the only reason for the rise in chopstick use.

As the types of foods changed in the culture, so too did the primary utensil used to eat the food. The advent of new ways to cook food gradually led to changes in how the food was eaten, with some countries adopting chopsticks as the utensil for almost every meal. While we now can’t imagine Asian food without chopsticks, for centuries they were not the primary tool, even though they have been around for thousands of years.

Photo of Hoisin stir-fried duck with pomegranate sauce from The Washington Post by Ching-He Huang

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