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Buy Yourself One Fancy Little Plate to Make Any Meal Feel Special

Buy Yourself One Fancy Little Plate to Make Any Meal Feel Special
Buy Yourself One Fancy Little Plate to Make Any Meal Feel Special


No matter how much I cook, no matter how much I post pictures of my food online, I cannot will myself to spend a lot on dinnerware. My dishes are cheap, durable, and basic — almost all from Marshalls or TJ Maxx.

I peruse pricier ones, sure: I love the whimsical prints of Bitossi Home, the luxurious colors of East Fork, the vintage appeal of Ginori, and the trompe l’oeil absurdity of Gohar World. But then I do the math on what it might cost to outfit my apartment with a set when a single plate costs upwards of $40. Though I don’t have dinner parties often, I’ve internalized my mother’s old-school guidance that a good home cook should always be ready to host a crowd. By this point of view, special dishware sets largely exists for being shown off to others; it is why newlyweds load up their registries with collections of nice china that’ll collect dust outside of the rare special occasion.

The affordable alternative: Buy yourself just one fancy little plate. The fancy little plate does not even have to be, as mentioned above, expensive. It just has to be a piece that represents a break from the monotony of everyday life. One of my fancy little plates — a rustic, speckled ceramic number — came out of a seconds bin at a holiday market: maybe $10. The artist clearly wasn’t proud of it since they didn’t sign the bottom, but I love its rough imperfection regardless. That it’s a one-off makes it feel even more special; anyone with money can buy Ginori.

My other fancy little plate is, in fact, even cheaper: a stainless steel platter that I got at a restaurant supply store for, if my memory serves me right, under $5. When I eat my buttered toast on it, I imagine a cool and timeless L’Appartement 4F vibe. My five-minute plate of grapes, sliced cheese, a nectarine, and olives goes from evoking Lunchables to feeling right out of a Dutch still life, like I’ve puckishly snuck a platter out of a Dionysian feast and then returned to my desk to work. Even when the meal gets messy — the platter smeared with mayo or drizzled with oil — it looks chic.

The fancy little plate is ultimately not about the price of the thing but about the feeling of worth that you confer to it: Fancy is a state of mind. I use mine only every so often, primarily when I want my meal to feel a little more intentional, or a little more special in some way. To use the fancy little plate daily would be to decrease its perspective-shifting power. Today I put a sandwich on it, just because.

If you cook for a partner, maybe buy two. Or don’t: Let the fancy little plate be your quiet, solo treat, or use it without any prompting to show them a little extra love on occasion.

Fancy plates to buy



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