I like having knives, forks, spoons left to right as that is how I say it "grab a knife and fork".
I am staying in an Airbnb and they have the spoons separating the knives and forks and wonder if this is in insane or maybe I am the minority/insane one?
I'm working with , left to right, big fork, little fork, little spoon, big spoon, butter knives, then perpendicular above them are a clutter of baby sized versions, and above that reusable straws
Bonus points, you just use the utensil you pull out. Buttering bread and get a spoon, doable. Go for a soup spoon and end up with a fork, hard mode activated.
I place them in the same order the table should be made (clockwise order): forks, spoons, knives.
Moving the spoons one step sounds reasonable I guess but I'd never switch places of the forks and the knives. If the order was knives, forks I'd have to switch hands to grab them and that thought bothers me more than I thought it would. TIL this is a pet peeve of mine
Do people really put so much thought into it? I added a separator to my drawer and the cutlery got whatever slot they were randomly thrown into, so I've got forks, knives, spoons, more spoons, and teaspoons (I have a lot of spoons for some reason). I'm not attached to that layout and if it changed I wouldn't really care.
Probably not, I was curious. It's a pretty petty thing to be annoyed about.
The internet is full of people that may like to share some idiosyncrasies for the entertainment. These things are unique and at the end of the day is truly unimportant.
Except I'm right and that person that has no divider at all is possibly on watch lists.
Well, since I have a prefab divided organizer, I use what it came with: knives, forks, teaspoons, tablespoons, smaller forks. Now, in our case, we have table and salad forks, though the salad forks we have lack the dedicated "cutting" edge.
There's also two other sections that aren't shaped for specific utensils. One is on the left of the table knives, and is used for our steak knives and a couple of paring and utility knives. The other is smaller and is under the forks & spoons. That's used for crap like corn cob holders and such that is rarely used.
Now, I'm used to that layout because we've had that organizer since I was a kid, so I wouldn't change now. But, ideally, I would have the two types of forks next to each other, effectively swapping the teaspoons and salad forks in placement.
And that drawer doesn't contain the "fancy" utensils like dedicated fish forks and such, we keep those in a bag in another drawer because the truth is that they're never more useful than a regular fork for casual home dining. They serve a purpose when you're having a fairly narrow range of dishes that you just aren't going to fuck with often.
In my parents' house similar to what you said, knifes and forks adjacent and spoons to one side (I don't remember the exact order). When I moved in with my now husband he said it made more sense to him to have spoons in the middle and I didn't care that much about it, so we have it like that. I have to say though, I do see an advantage to having the fork, spoon, knife order: when grabbing several pairs (fork and knife) it's easy to just take each with one with different hands and count them out. And it's easier once you have knives on the right hand and forks on the left to set a big table with one on each side of the plate.
I have them arranged in the order the little plastic tray has for them. I've honestly never thought of the order of cutlery in my friends houses and find your level of obsession with it slightly eccentric, but in an endearing and humorous way.
Knives, forks, table spoons and tea spoons separately, that's eating cutlery, cooking cutlery like bigger knives, ladles etc is bunched up in the biggest compartment
I am the exact opposite of you, mainly because my utensil organizer has the largest compartments on the right, so that's where butter knives and chopsticks go. Also forks are in the middle because I use them less frequently than spoons.
Edit: apparently I can't remember left from right.
Knife+Fork makes sense if you're eating thigns like pork-shops, chicken, or other large peices of meat.
Since I don't eat meat, I don't really use knives or forks; Chopsticks and spoons are my workhorses.
I think these things are a matter of personal preference but only really strikes me when I go to get something out when I'm not at home. (At home you can only open the drawer halfway to grab something.)
This was one of the earliest discussions I had when I moved in with my partner. She had the utensils spoon - fork - knife and I had knife-fork-spoon. (She won btw)
Where did you land on the dishwasher debate, utensils up or down in the cutlery basket? Our friends went with one of those top tray dishwashers to avoid that debate.
Up, since I fill the dishwasher 😅. I have been trying to convince her to get a top tray dishwasher, but for now I've not won the battle. Personally I prefer the convenience of not accedentially having a utensil outside the basket and messing with the rotor.
now I have anxiety because I know for a fact that if somebody switched to them I'd be annoyed but I have no idea what order they're in so I have to go look
oh wait. I have a ADHD and I live alone so I don't use a drawer organizer, I opened the drawer and remembered that all of my cutlery is just scattered randomly in there.
Your knife goes on the right on your place setting next to your spoon. Your fork goes on the left. If you want to set a place settling with all 3, it's easiest to put spoons in the middle.
I have the arranged in the order I use them most. Spoons are on the left, then forks, then knives. I rarely need knives while eating, just for cooking.