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hi sweetpea im not a chef but i am an avid cook…i personally would be confused by the term dessert spoon unless it is explained in parentheses after its used. what im used to seeing is tablespoon, teaspoon ect thats just my two cents however…;) i am glad to know what dessertspoon is, thanks!
1 Tablespoon = 3 teaspoons So on the US side there is a big difference between the two instead of only double the quantity as 2 dessertspoons = 1 dessertspoon full. When you do your book electronically, you could always do a “find and replace” all instances of dessertspoons and change the wording easily that way. I thought 1 dessertspoon = 1 Tablesoon…I would have been wrong I now see ;) I also do not know what dessertspoon is. Looking forward to your book :)
Honestly, I’ve never heard of a dessertspoon as a measuring tool before.
A conversion chart in the front of the book for US readers should suffice.
Thank you for all your help. It seems the dessertspoon is what you’re not familiar with. I will use teaspoon and tablespoon to keep it simple. They’re close enough for my recipes but I will mention about UK and US differences somewhere. Incidentally, what is the spoon size you use to eat your soup and take dessert with?
sweetpea wrote:
Incidentally, what is the spoon size you use to eat your soup and take dessert with?
It’s called a soup spoon and it’s not a set size but varies by silver pattern. If a spoon is needed for dessert, a teaspoon is used. I know, I know, we’re basically heathens ;^))
lol Greenie! it’s really interesting, thank you. Maybe it’s because Brits love their puddings so much they invented a spoon especially so they could eat big mouthfuls ie the dessertspoon!!