I’m honestly a little unsettled that this discussion marched confidently forward and somehow **left out the sugar spoon**. Not overlooked. *Left out.* As if it hasn’t been quietly doing emotional labor at brunch tables for generations.
The sugar spoon isn’t just a spoon. It’s a **specialist. A precision instrument. It exists for one purpose and executes it flawlessly. Perfectly shallow. Slightly decorative. Often the fanciest utensil in the drawer, yet it lives in the shadows until someone needs exactly one and a half teaspoons of sweetness without committing to a full dessert spoon. Ignoring it feels… disrespectful.
And then there’s the serving fork. You know the one. Two prongs. Long handle. Always looks vaguely judgmental. It shows up unannounced at holidays, hovers over platters like it’s in charge, and then disappears for the rest of the year. It is neither fork nor trident, but something in between. A utensil that says, “I am here to move food, not eat it.” Leaving *that* out of the conversation feels like skipping middle management entirely.
But the real omission, the one that keeps me up at night, is the truly obscure stuff.
Where was the olive spoon? The one with the little slot so brine can escape, as if olives themselves aren’t already suspicious enough.
What about the grapefruit spoon, aggressively serrated, designed to say “good morning” in the most confrontational way possible?
And I refuse to accept a silverware debate that doesn’t even acknowledge the fish slice. Not a spatula. Not a knife. Not a fork. Just a thin, elegant mystery that exists solely to prove that at some point in history, people took fish extremely seriously.
So yes, I enjoyed the main argument. But I feel like we’ve focused too heavily on the celebrities of the drawer and ignored the character actors. The niche specialists. The ones that don’t get used often, but when they do, *nothing else will do*.
I’m not saying we need to rank them. I’m just saying… if we’re going to do this properly, the sugar spoon deserves a seat at the table. Preferably right next to the serving fork, quietly judging all of us.

