According to Amazon, the "med wt dominion superior 1-7" lightweight fork presented to me cost the restaurant a whopping 26 cents, and was no match for the $4.99 stones I had served for bisquits and gravy. The fork lost. I'm no expert but it seems like the cheap fork and the hard biscuits are juxtaposed in such a manner as to force an inverse relationship. (y=k/x) and in this context, failure is certain . A direct relationship must be achieved in order to succeed.(y=kx) (Please refer to attached chart) The harder the texture of the bisquits, the greater the strength of the 26 cent fork must be. You can't cut both corners just as you can't defy algabraic logic. Something had to give, and predictably the 26 cent fork yielded to the bending stress required to break off a piece of bisquit small enough to eat. They tasted OK so 3 stars. The real reason anyone comes here anyway is to buy fireworks so I'm happy.