I cut like five pieces or whatever (who's counting?) then dig in as I cut more.
But see, to me it only makes sense, because I also trim any remaining fat and/or gristle from the edges and, since I've already gone that far, may as well just carve out all my slices.
Because as etiquette also suggests, if you are right handed, you hold fork with left hand while cutting, but then transfer fork to right hand to transfer food to mouth.
And, the way I figure it, may as well cut up everything at once, grabbing a bite or two while I do that, so that I may then keep my fork in right hand the whole time and not have to constantly shuffle the utensils.
Thoughts, ATOT?
Semi-ambidextrous FTsemiW.

...and, really? Is that another etiquette rule, to pass the utensils back and forth to the "correct" hands? Who comes up with this stuff?
The only reason to cut something like in multiple pieces is to cool it down to feed a kid and doing it as a adult is a crime as you are letting it become cold cut up like that and drain extra juices.
It's just fascinating though how big a deal it is.
Like if you walk into a bar and say that you like warm beer, some people in there might feel compelled to punch you a few times.
Or a reaction like the twitching at the start of this scene:
"
No! No, no, not 6! I said 7! Nobody's coming up with 6! Who works out in 6 minutes? You won't even get your heart goin, not even a mouse on a wheel.
7's the key number here. Think about it. 7-Elevens. 7 dwarves. 7, man, that's the number. 7 chipmunks twirlin' on a branch, eatin' lots of sunflowers on my uncle's ranch."
(Heck, my grandmother was left-handed, and teachers would whack her hand with a ruler if she wrote left-handed. Just another example of a "No! I said 7!" type of reaction.)
Do you use a sippy cup and bib also op?
....
No.
I'm almost certain of it.
...unless you're offering.
:sneaky: