You just don't get it Paul. I'm trying to tell you that at the last supper it was not a feast of food as we know it. All are welcome at Jesus' table and the food and drink are teachings. Jesus was explaining to them what he was doing and the dish, bowl,cup are what he had to go threw. The bread he was speaking of was the understanding while the teachings were as water turned to wine or the joy of the teachings. Spiritual teachings are the blood of the new testament. This is what took place and Judas ate no more than modules. He had very little understanding as like a dog or beast. Judas was there for what he could get out of it for himself. Trying to get part of Jesus' glory.
It was written in different ways but means the same thing and they were all there at that meal, at the Lord's table but chose to write it in their own parables that mean the same if you understood it.
I think this is reading into the Scripture things that are not there. It is a bad habit of some to over-spiritualise what is essentially just narrative. The supper in the upper room was a shared evening meal. Nothing more. There was bread, wine, and other food there. Don't believe the art works depicting the supper. They are over-religious and have no connection with reality. While Jesus was saying all the things He was saying, they were all having a good feed. When Judas left the room, the others thought they were running out of food, and he was sent to buy more.
At one stage during the meal, Jesus lifts up his cup of wine and says that this stands for His shed blood of the New Testament. Then He breaks a bit of bread off the round load and says that this is His body which is broken for them. Then they finish their meal, sing a song, and then go their way to the garden of Gethsemone.
When people get so heavenly minded and no earthly use, they read stuff into Scriptural narratives that aren't there, and they fantasize what they image what is happening rather than just accepting the text as it is.
In the early church, they didn't hand around a little cup of wine and a small square of bread - this comes out of the formalised Roman Catholic church that formed much later. As part of their meetings, early church believers had a fellowship meal in remembrance of Jesus' death until He comes again. It was the later church that turned something natural and meaningful into a dry, formalised ritual.