AITA for telling my friend his gf isn’t welcome at our monthly dinners?

A longtime group tradition of shared home-cooked dinners took an unexpected turn when one guest’s actions overshadowed months of careful planning and mutual respect. The poster, part of a diverse friend group that rotates hosting duties to accommodate strict dietary requirements, spent days preparing an elaborate Pakistani meal meant to celebrate their return after illness.

What followed during the dinner sparked discomfort, hurt feelings, and eventually a rift that extended beyond the table. A friend’s girlfriend brought her own food addition, made dismissive remarks about the meal, and abruptly left the gathering. In the aftermath, apologies were exchanged, sides were taken, and one firm decision was made about future invitations. The situation raised questions about cultural sensitivity, guest etiquette, and whether it is reasonable to exclude someone after a single uncomfortable encounter.

‘AITA for telling my friend his gf isn’t welcome at our monthly dinners?’

It began as a long-standing monthly tradition centered on inclusion and shared responsibility.

Every month my friends and I will meet for dinner. We can never agree on a restaurant that is kosher/halal certified and is nut-free so we decided to cook for...

We don't depend on one person to eat the cost for the month and instead have a kitty we all put money in and then that is used to purchase...

We are a pretty diverse group (Ethiopian, Greek, Kurdish, Polish, and Pakistani), partners are more than welcome, last year a friend's partner wanted to make Chinese food for us so...

I've been with my boyfriend since university and he's always been a part of these dinners. There's never been any issues and we are very careful with dietary requirements.

The tension surfaced during a carefully prepared dinner meant to showcase cultural pride.

For the past five months another partner was introduced to the dinners and I liked her well enough. Last week it was my dinner and I made a full Pakistani...

I made vegetable and meat samosas for the starters and vegetable biryani with achari chicken, and palak aloo and tandoori naan as the main and carrot halwa with vanilla ice-cream...

I was very proud of it, it took two days of prep between work and other errands. My friend's girlfriend is Korean and when we sat down for dinner I...

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A brief exchange escalated into discomfort, offense, and lasting consequences.

She put it on the samosa and was about to add it to her biryani when I asked her if she would try the food without the kimchi.

I don't have anything against it, I love the stuff and I've made my own but it does have a very strong taste and I wanted her to try my...

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She said she needed to eat everything with kimchi and someone pointed out that she had never brought it to any previous dinners.

Then she said the kimchi was the only thing making my food taste good so I asked if she had eaten Pakistani food before and she sneered and said no.

This whole interaction was so weird and I felt this sense of superiority from her, I felt demeaned by her behaviour.

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I don't know if she was feeling ganged up or realised she was being a bad guest or something because she got up with her tub of kimchi and told...

He agreed and they both left and we finished our dinner. It kind of ruined the night for me after putting in so much effort.

The next day my friend texted me and apologised on his girlfriend's behalf and said she felt I was trying to embarrass her.

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I told him I had no such intentions and he was on my side about it and said he told her she was out of line and offensive. I told...

He obviously told her and then I got a long text message from her saying that I was holding a grudge for no reason and trying to come between her...

She said if I said it was fine she would be allowed back but I don't want her there. Was that unreasonable of me to ask? Would I be the...

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In this case, the central issue goes beyond personal taste preferences and focuses on guest etiquette and cultural sensitivity. Bringing outside food to a communal dinner without prior discussion, particularly when the event is centered on showcasing a specific cuisine, can reasonably be interpreted as dismissive. The remark that the added food was “the only thing making it taste good” further escalated the situation by devaluing the host’s effort and cultural expression.

From another perspective, some may argue that individuals should be free to eat food in ways that make them comfortable, especially if certain flavors feel unfamiliar. However, comfort does not excuse openly disparaging remarks or refusing to engage respectfully with a host’s effort. The fact that the guest had attended previous dinners without bringing additional food complicates this defense and raises questions about selective behavior.

Socially, the poster’s decision to exclude the guest from future dinners reflects a desire to preserve a respectful environment rather than punish. The agreement from the mutual friend reinforces that the behavior crossed a line. Ultimately, this situation highlights how small actions at shared tables can carry significant cultural and emotional weight, especially in diverse social groups.

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Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Many users strongly supported the poster, emphasizing respect, effort, and cultural awareness.

kittensmittenstitten − NTA - lot of white people here not realising she was being very very r__ist. She was r__ist dude.

She admitted she had never had your food, refused to stop eating the kimchi and had never brought it to anyone’s else’s house. She was an incredibly RUDE and inappropriate...

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Carosello − NTA. Why is everyone ignoring that she's never brought kimchi before and pointedly used it for your food? ??

Plus_Smoke2808 − NTA, her saying "it's the only thing that makes it taste good" is so condesending.

However, it's not up to you on other hosting parties to not have her there. At your door? For sure. Especially with how rude that interaction has come across.

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Tel_aran_rhiod − NTA why are y'all acting like this wasn't a racial microaggression when it clearly was. She didn't being it to other dinners.

Appropriate_Sky_6571 − NTA. This is extremely rude. I’m Korean American and wouldn’t dream of doing something so rude.

My Korean old fashioned mom does eat kimchi with every meal but she eats it after we get home to “aid digestion. ” But she would never, ever bring her...

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Others offered more balanced takes, acknowledging offense while stressing shared decision-making.

Such-Problem-4725 − She treated you rudely and the “sneering at Pakistani food” could be interpreted as r__ist (hopefully not). If you don’t want to entertain her again when you cook,...

Amandamargret − I was raised not to bring my own food to someone else’s dinner unless it was dietary and the host knew ahead of time.

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Kappybook916 − NTA. Her being unwilling to even taste your food without her fermented cabbage is rude AF. If she wasn’t willing to even try, you have every right to...

I’m impressed that your friend stood by your side. It was completely inappropriate of her to call and accuse you of creating problems between her and her boyfriend. Her s__tty...

A few commenters leaned into humor to lighten the mood.

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Flat-Tree-5214 − Kimchi with biryani? And samosa? And gajjar halwa? This is so insane I'm not even sure where to begin!

If ethnicities were changed, like for instance if a South Asian brought spicy chilli pickle to a feast made by an Italian or French friend and insisted on eating everything...

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would everyone here still be saying people can do what they like? The South Asian would be considered ignorant and the Westerner justified in being offended.

But suddenly, the rudeness is fine and you should deal? Nope, your friend agrees and this girl hasn't apologised to you, just complaining about being excluded. NTA

Disastrous-Nail-640 − NTA “This isn’t about holding a grudge. This is about the fact that you were rude and disrespectful to me in my own home.

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I will be polite and civil when we are at other dinners together, but I won’t have you in my home. This is what we call a boundary and the...

This situation illustrates how shared traditions can quickly unravel when respect and communication break down. The poster’s discomfort stemmed less from food preferences and more from feeling dismissed after investing time, effort, and cultural pride into the meal. The resulting decision to exclude the guest reflects an attempt to protect the atmosphere of the gathering.

At the same time, the conflict raises broader questions about how groups navigate boundaries, forgiveness, and inclusion when partners are involved. Should one incident permanently change invitations, or is there room for repair? How should cultural respect be balanced with individual comfort at shared tables?

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