Posts Tagged ‘USA’

Pudding people in their place

Sunday, July 17th, 2011

One of my biggest bugbears is the word ‘dessert’ (when people mean ‘pudding’). It’s not a class issue, it’s not a preference, it’s simply incorrect. It’s a mistake. It’s WRONG! Pudding is not dessert, and dessert is not pudding.

This is not going to be a long blog post as, quite frankly, there is very little to say on the matter as in this instant it is an open/shut case. I just had to get this off my chest and into the ether for the poor, misguided souls who are going about thinking they are being sophisticated by using the term ‘dessert’.

Dessert was/is the fruit course. It came after pudding and was often eaten (if available) with dessert cutlery. These would be a very small, kind of fiddly, fork and knife that would aid in removing the skin from an apple, a plum and the like.

Apple

This is a 'dessert'

Pudding is the pudding. It’s the rhubarb crumble, it’s the lemon meringue pie, the chocolate cheesecake. That is pudding.

Pudding

This is a 'pudding'.

Desserts were so called as it came once the table had been ‘deserted’ of the other accoutrements. This course began to vanish after the Edwardian times (probably due to the wars, I would guess) and the term ‘dessert’ kind of hung around like an unwanted guest at a party, before it unashamedly assaulted the sweet course and beguiled everyone into calling said sweet course ‘dessert’.

Restaurants, cafés, books, people who should know better, all over the world persist in calling my favourite course by the wrong name and it really, really winds me up as they (especially restaurants) think they are being more sophisticated by using a word of French derivation, rather than an admittedly clumpy Middle English one.

So please from now on can we all go about calling fruit ‘dessert’ and the course that we eat after the main, ‘pudding’.

Obama’s Breach of Royal Protocol

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

Thank Heavens they didn't clink glasses!

At last night’s state dinner held at Buckingham Palace, President Obama inadvertently broke Royal Protocol whilst he made the loyal toast to Her Majesty The Queen.

Click to watch the video from BBC News.

So, what went wrong? After calling for the guests to stand, Mr Obama said “To Her Majesty The Queen”. If he had stopped here, this would be correct(ish). In Britain, the loyal toast is just ‘The Queen’. There is no ‘to’ preposition. This is what set off the orchestra from the Scotch Guards into playing the British national anthem, as they would be used to loyal toasts ending there. However, Mr. Obama chose to extend the toast and say a few more words, which (however well intentioned) is breaking Royal protocol.

It was quite nice to have the national anthem underscoring the rest of his toast, but normally one stands in respectful silence whilst it plays. Her Majesty, being polite and worldly, thanked Mr. Obama for his kind words and did not say anything. It would have been rude to do so.

Another slip-up was that he raised his glass too early. Protocol dictates that ones does not lift the glass until after the anthem has finished playing.

What Mr. Obama needs to learn from this hiccough is that a toast is not a speech.

LATEST: See William discussing this for CNN News.