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I just bought an old fork + knife set at a flea market. The kind of big cutlery that is used to cut and serve chicken, roasted meat, whatever.

The strange thing is that the fork has a moving part on the top of it. I don't know how to describe it, so here are the photos. This thing can be put up or down, and it doesn't have any spring, but it can stay in position (for both positions).

enter image description here enter image description here

What is the purpose of this? I have never seen such a thing before.

For information, this was found in France, and the set is probably 50 years old or so.

dim
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    If photo #1 was flipped, would the carving fork stand by itself? Or would it be wobbly and fall sideways ? – Criggie Feb 07 '22 at 08:51
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    @Criggie I don't have the fork at hand here, but I believe it would stand by itself. The lever holds its position very well. – dim Feb 07 '22 at 09:01

4 Answers4

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I found the answer with a good illustration (from https://www.925-1000.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=36&t=41243):

enter image description here

The idea is that when you have a large piece of meat (such as a large prime rib or so), it's difficult to balance the meat to be able to cut it vertically. Instead, you cut it horizontally from the right with your carving knife (assuming you are right-handed).

To keep the meat from slipping away, you stick the fork in from the left, using your left hand. That puts the fork (and your left hand holding the fork) directly into the path of the knife when it exits the roast. The sudden lack of resistance could cause the knife to "jump" towards your hand.

With this guard, the knife hits the guard rather than the hand.

dim
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Kevin Keane
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    In other words, you use when when you are cutting TOWARDS the fork (and therefore your hand). – longneck Feb 07 '22 at 15:02
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    You might want to add the actual illustration. That way if the link goes dead, this answer will still work; http://www.925-1000.com/td/f/Trash/Carve.jpg – Richard Feb 07 '22 at 18:44
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    It actually has **two** uses. Notice the notch at the top of the guard. With the guard raised, you can rest the knife blade in the notch in the guard. Reading my comment, I expect it seems very unlikely, especially with the guard pictured. But my father has a knife and fork set where there is a notch in the guard and the guard doubles as a stand for the fork and when you put the blade in the notch the set stands very stable and neat. And neither the tines of the fork nor the blade are touching a surface where they might pick up anything. – Todd Wilcox Feb 08 '22 at 01:50
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    @Richard I know this is customary here, but I wasn't sure about copyright implications for images like this. – Kevin Keane Feb 08 '22 at 07:14
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    @ToddWilcox I hadn't noticed that notch, thanks for pointing it out. I'm curious about that use, because I can't quite picture how the knife would sit with respect to the fork, and which parts of the fork and of the knife would touch the surface? – Kevin Keane Feb 08 '22 at 07:17
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    Mmmmm. Pancakes. – Laconic Droid Feb 08 '22 at 14:04
  • @KevinKeane: Two words - "fair use". – Vikki Feb 08 '22 at 21:56
  • @Vikki Is this fair use? I can't think of any fair use exemptions it might fall under, unless "educational purposes" is sufficient? – wizzwizz4 Feb 09 '22 at 11:19
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    @wizzwizz4: Given the purpose of this site, I would have trouble seeing how "educational purposes" _wouldn't_ be sufficient. – Vikki Feb 09 '22 at 16:09
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It is a hand guard.

You can find these on new carving forks too. Example from amazon:

fork w guard

A thing I do not understand, though, is what sort of carving motion would put you in need of a hand guard. Something that entailed cutting towards yourself, I imagine.

Willk
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    I've seen this technique at old-style carverys on very large joints - a horizontal cut 'n' serve motion. – Tetsujin Feb 06 '22 at 18:30
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    It would be useful if you're in a scuffle with a swordsman, armed with this carving fork (and hopefully something else in your other hand). – Kaz Feb 08 '22 at 16:31
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That is (also) a lobster pick.

It seems to also serve as a hand guard, but the tiny prongs are exactly like on the forks used for coaxing lobster or other delicious sea food out of their garments. If it was only a hand guard, those would not be there.

Stian
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    I doubt this would be practical enough. The lever will keep moving as you use it, the tines part of the fork will just get cumbersome, and having the handle perpendicular to the pick will certainly be impractical. Contrary to what the picture seems to show, the prongs aren't really pointy, and when the lever is closed, they fit nicely on each side of the middle tine, so I would think they are simply there to avoid the lever being bent when pushed laterally. – dim Feb 07 '22 at 15:55
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We used to have one of these at home.

One use is to stop the fork going all the way into the joint if it is very big. We are a big family and the Sunday roast was huge.

edit: if it's a big roast and maybe a bit overdone, you fork will go all the way through. Also the prong keeps the mass in one place while you cut it, if the knife is not very sharp.

RedSonja
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