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Fish knife

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Four kinds of fish knife (two left ones are for serving) and a fish fork for Lloyd Triestino First Class dining (1931)

The fish knife together with fish fork represent a set of utensils specialized for eating fish. A fish knife is a strange-looking, purposely blunt implement.[1]

History

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Fish serving cutlery (end of 19th century)

Fish knives, like most highly specialized utensils, date back to Victorian era. The fish knife was preceded in the 18th century by a silver fish slice (also known as fish trowel, fish carver, and fish knife[2]),[1] a broad tool used for serving fish (thus yet another name, fish server), pudding,[3] and other soft desserts. At the turn of the 19th century, the originally symmetric and broad blade of the fish slice evolved into a scimitar-like shape, with the knife often marketed as a matched set with a four-tine serving fork.[4]

Prior to the modern fish knife introduction in the 19th century, aristocracy ate fish with two dinner forks, one to separate a piece, another one to eat. The other approach used a single fork, with a slice of bread for assistance.[5] Use of the knife came from the rich commoners, with high society at first frowning upon it as a too specialized tool (and the one they were also missing in their hereditary silverware sets).[6] In the 21st century, Queen Camilla, according to The Times of London, "wouldn’t be seen dead using a fish knife," and, according to an etiquette expert William Hanson, the vast Buckingham Palace cutlery collection does not have a single fish knife, partly because it's "seen as down-market," and partly because "Buckingham Palace’s cutlery goes back to Georgian times and fish knives had not been invented then so they don’t have them by default."[7]

Use of silver as a material for the knife was the only available mean (before the arrival of the stainless steel) to enable pairing of lemon and fish without encountering a metallic taste.[8]

Construction

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Chromium plated fish knife with the distinctive notch

The knife has a distinct shape that evolved from a fish server. The modern knives are about 8 to 9 inches long, have a dull blade and frequently a notch close to the sharp tip that can be used to separate the bones from the flesh of the fish.[6]

Use

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The fish knife is not designed for cutting. Since for fish no force is required to separate the flesh from the bones, the knife is supposed to be held between the thumb and two first fingers (like a pencil[9]) and used to fillet the fish, lift the skeleton, and remove the small remaining bones.[10] If the fish is served already without bones, knife is either used to "flake" the pieces onto the fork, or its use can be avoided altogether ("American style").[9]

Symbol

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Fish knives and forks were originally very expensive silverware items, so having them, or, in case of aristocracy, consciously avoiding their use, became a class marker,[7] a status symbol used to indicate the user or owner's elite status.[8] After the invention of electroplating, knife and fork sets became more affordable by the 1860s, but the possession of them still indicated belonging to the "comfortable" middle class.[1] By the middle of the 20th century the nice fish knife and fork sets became a symbol for upper-class aspirations of a household. John Betjeman starts his poem "How to get on in society" (1958) with a pursuit of fish knives as a symbol of pretensions (Phone for the fish knives ... I must have things daintily served).[11] Anne Glenconner recalls that Queen Camilla, upon being offered a fish knife in a restaurant, recited the Betjeman poem and rejected the fish knife.[7]

In the 21st century use of the fish knives at a restaurant is also seen by some as a symbol of high aspirations (perhaps, for a Michelin star).[12]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Cool 2009, p. 12.
  2. ^ Worcester 1860, p. 559, fish knife, fish slice, fish trowel.
  3. ^ Wees 1997, p. 257, Fish Slice.
  4. ^ Von Drachenfels 2000, p. 212, Fish Servers.
  5. ^ A Member of the Aristocracy 1898, p. 115.
  6. ^ a b Von Drachenfels 2000, p. 184, Fish Knife.
  7. ^ a b c Alt, Charlotte (10 October 2024). "Why Queen Camilla wouldn't be seen dead using a fish knife". The Times. Retrieved 10 October 2024.
  8. ^ a b Hudson 2023, p. 100.
  9. ^ a b Moore 1998, p. 143.
  10. ^ Von Drachenfels 2000, p. 235, Fish Knife and Fish Fork.
  11. ^ Cool 2009, p. 13.
  12. ^ Cool 2009, p. 14.

Sources

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