It is located in the house where the history professor Ion Țugui lived,[2] at no.
The museum houses wooden spoons which were studied and cataloged by Țugui from many regions of Romania[2] (most of them being from Bukovina)[3] but also from other parts of the world.
Some of the foreign spoons come from countries such as Japan, Madagascar, Pakistan, Tanzania, the United States and several others.
The museum also has ladles, a collection of more than 500 erasers, ceramic objects and coins.
[4] Estimates about the number of spoons collected by Țugui and displayed in the museum vary from 3,500[5] to 4,200,[4] 5,000[6] or over 6,000.