The Kitchen

Early medieval European longhouses had an open fire under the highest point of the building. The “kitchen area” was between the entrance and the fireplace. … Read wiki Medieval Kitchens.
Read wiki Medieval Cooking

The kitchen remained largely unaffected by architectural advances throughout the Middle Ages; open fire remained the only method of heating food. European medieval kitchens were dark, smoky, and sooty places, whence their name “smoke kitchen”. In European medieval cities around the 10th to 12th centuries, the kitchen still used an open fire hearth in the middle of the room. In wealthy homes, the ground floor was often used as a stable while the kitchen was located on the floor above, like the bedroom and the hall. In castles and monasteries, the living and working areas were separated; the kitchen was sometimes moved to a separate building, and thus could not serve anymore to heat the living rooms. In some castles the kitchen was retained in the same structure, but servants were strictly separated from nobles, by constructing separate spiral stone staircases for use of servants to bring food to upper levels. An extant example of such a medieval kitchen with servants’ staircase is at Muchalls Castle in Scotland.

With the advent of the chimney, the hearth moved from the center of the room to one wall, and the first brick-and-mortar hearths were built. The fire was lit on top of the construction; a vault underneath served to store wood. Pots made of iron, bronze, or copper started to replace the pottery used earlier. The temperature was controlled by hanging the pot higher or lower over the fire, or placing it on a trivet or directly on the hot ashes. Using open fire for cooking (and heating) was risky; fires devastating whole cities occurred frequently.

Leonardo da Vinci invented an automated system for a rotating spit for spit-roasting: a propeller in the chimney made the spit turn all by itself. This kind of system was widely used in wealthier homes. Beginning in the late Middle Ages, kitchens in Europe lost their home-heating function even more and were increasingly moved from the living area into a separate room. The living room was now heated by tiled stoves, operated from the kitchen, which offered the huge advantage of not filling the room with smoke.

Freed from smoke and dirt, the living room thus began to serve as an area for social functions and increasingly became a showcase for the owner’s wealth. In the upper classes, cooking and the kitchen were the domain of the servants, and the kitchen was set apart from the living rooms, sometimes even far from the dining room. Poorer homes often did not have a separate kitchen yet; they kept the one-room arrangement where all activities took place, or at the most had the kitchen in the entrance hall.

The medieval smoke kitchen (or Farmhouse kitchen) remained common, especially in rural farmhouses and generally in poorer homes, until much later. In a few European farmhouses, the smoke kitchen was in regular use until the middle of the 20th century. These houses often had no chimney, but only a smoke hood above the fireplace, made of wood and covered with clay, used to smoke meat. The smoke rose more or less freely, warming the upstairs rooms and protecting the woodwork from vermin.

* Thompson, Theodor, Medieval Homes, Sampson Lowel House 1992

In the Roman Empire, common folk in cities often had no kitchen of their own; they did their cooking in large public kitchens. Some had small mobile bronze stoves, on which a fire could be lit for cooking. Wealthy Romans had relatively well-equipped kitchens. In a Roman villa, the kitchen was typically integrated into the main building as a separate room, set apart for practical reasons of smoke and sociological reasons of the kitchen being operated by slaves. The fireplace was typically on the floor, placed at a wall—sometimes raised a little bit—such that one had to kneel to cook. There were no chimneys.

The houses in Ancient Greece were commonly of the atrium-type: the rooms were arranged around a central courtyard. In many such homes, a covered but otherwise open patio served as the kitchen. Homes of the wealthy had the kitchen as a separate room, usually next to a bathroom (so that both rooms could be heated by the kitchen fire), both rooms being accessible from the court. In such houses, there was often a separate small storage room in the back of the kitchen used for storing food and kitchen utensils.

Nearly 80% of the Ancient Greeks were involved with agriculture. They didn’t ignore the pleasures of eating, but valued simplicity.

Ancient Greek Breakfast: Undiluted wine (their wine was often sweet and fruity) mixed with bread / bread crumbs.

Ancient Greek Foods (partial list): Fish; pig; roe deer; lamb; wild fowl; stews, stock; stuffing; cheese; beans and lentils, eggs; shellfish; diluted wine; grains were barley, wheat, spelt, rye; vegetables such as asparagus, artichokes; cabbage, carrots, cucumbers, leeks, onion, yellow and white turnips, kale, lettuce, pumpkins, winter squash; hors d’oeuvres-sized foods such as meatballs, sausages, forcemeats, fish croquettes, and galantines (de-boned stuff meat); olives and olive oil; vinegar; honey; spices including pepper, lovage, rue seed, oregano, mint, wild celery, pennyroyal, cinnamon, cumin, parsley, curry, dill, coriander; roses; garum (in place of salt); fruits and nuts such as figs, dates, raisins, pomegranates, bayberries, pine nuts, almonds.

Ice Box

by Rena

Ice boxes were available in the 1860s but it was the traditional root cellars, ice houses, and winter storage that stayed the most popular forms of refrigeration in the US until the 1880s. (Ice houses were introduced to the UK, probably from Italy, circa 1660.) In 1900 the average family purchased 2.5 tons of ice per year for the ice box at 30 cents/100 pounds. The price doubled to 60 cents/100 pounds in the same year after “The Ice King” Charles W. Morse, American Ice Company, established a monopoly in ice.

Blocks of ice were often kept in sawdust while being delivered by the iceman, and the frugal housekeeper wrapped the ice block in newspaper to prolong its life.[1]

6.25 gallons of water make a 50 pound block of ice.

Visit Knowlton Ice Museum in Port Huron for more discoveries about the ice industry, and Rentschler Farm Museum in Saline, Michigan and Caroga Museum in Caroga, New York for examples of family-farm ice houses. Here is a list of estates in England with ice houses that may be open to the public:

And here is an ice house museum to visit in the United States:

Video: 1892 Refrigerator Catalog





Seventh Annual Catalogue, Revised Edition, 1892, Challenge Iceburg Refrigerators

The term “refrigerator” was coined by a Maryland engineer, Thomas Moore, in 1800. Moore’s device would now be called an “ice box” — a cedar tub, insulated with rabbit fur, filled with ice, surrounding a sheet metal container. Moore designed it as as a means for transporting butter from rural Maryland to Washington, DC. Its operating principle was the latent heat of fusion associated with melting ice.[2] Like

[1] Memories of Morse 1904-1979, “Charles Wyman Morse” by John Paul Heffernan, Brunswick Publishing Co., Brunswick, Maine. [2] Refrigerators, by Glenn Elert.


Michigan’s Colonial Michilimackinac on Mackinac Island is a preserved fur-trading village representing 1770s life. There is much to see, including demonstrations of open hearth cooking.

Navarre-Anderson Trading Post is another 1700s fur-trading post museum which contains the oldest surviving wooden residential building in Michigan — and an 1810 cookhouse!

Also, see the photo online of the 1700s open-hearth kitchen at Ponoma Hall in Camden, New Jersey, and the 1715 Griffth Morgan House kitchen in Pennsauken, New Jersey. Like

It is always 1932 at Wellington Farm, USA in Michigan. The Summer Kitchen is equipped for the housekeeper of the Great Depression, and is a working kitchen for demonstrations and special events. A Grist Mill is nearby milling corn for cornmeal, barley for flour, or shelling corn.

While you’re in Michigan, visit the authentic logging cook shack at the Tahquamenon Logging Museum in Newberry. Like

You will find an on-the-farm pork butchering display to the farm family kitchen and more at the Family Farm in Frederick, Maryland! The farm museum recreates the life of a family farm during the late-19th century and early-20th century. Like

Acadian 1950s kitchen from the Pelletier-Marquis House Museum in St. Agatha, near Canada in upstate Maine
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The Albert House in Madawaska, Maine property stayed in the Albert family from when it was granted to them by the King in 1786 until 1970. Now it is a museum and contains this later-1800s country kitchen.

Westwego Historical Society arranged a splendid early kitchen at the Westwego Historical Museum. See the kitchen picture on their website. Displays of 1920s-1930s kitchens abound in select historic house museums throughout the United States, and also in local history museums such as the Cole Camp Museum Cole Camp in Missouri, and The Warner Museum in Concord, New York. Like

You will find 3 kitchen displays and a moonshine still at The McCreary Museum in Kentucky representing different eras. One kitchen represents 1790, another circa 1900, and lastly, a 1920s Miner’s kitchen.

Another moonshine still is displayed in Kentucky at Barthell Coal Mining Camp.

Note the kitchen wallpaper at Granny’s house. Like

Kentucky Fried Chicken’s founder Colonel Sanders first pressure-cooked his famous fried chicken in a 6-seat lunchroom at a gas station in the 1930s. A replica of the kitchen is on display at the original lunchroom location at the Kentucky Fried Chicken® in Corbin Kentucky. Like

You want to get amazing ideas for your kitchen–besides creating a scrapbook or a desire wheel from tearing magazine pages, try a home-kitchen fundraising tour!

Alabama

  • Madison County, Huntsville: Annual Kitchens for CASA

  • California

  • San Mateo: Baywood Kitchen Tour

  • Belvedere-Hawthorne Annual Kitchen Tour
  • Lafayette Annual Kitchen Tour
  • Palo Alto Woman’s Club Spring Kitchen Tour
  • California, Pasadena: ASID Annual Home and Kitchen Tour
  • Rockridge: Annual Kitchen Tour
  • Yolo County Red Cross Heart of the Home Kitchen Tour

  • Connecticut

  • Falls Village: Housatonic Valley Kitchen Tour

  • Colorado

  • Denver: Annual Junior League of Denver Kitchen Tour

  • Delaware

  • New Castle County, Wilmington: Residents of Old Wilmington Back Door Kitchen Tour
  • New Castle County, Wilmington: Junior League of Wilmington Heart of the Home® Kitchen Tours

  • Florida

  • Dade City: Dade City Woman’s Club Kitchen Tour
  • Wabasso: Environmental Studies Council Kitchen Tour

  • Georgia

  • Classic South, Augusta: Augusta Symphony Guild “Heart of the Home Kitchen Tour
  • Metro Atlanta, Atlanta: The Junior League of Atlanta Tour of Kitchens

  • Illinois

  • Chicago area, Oak Park: Annual Parenthesis Kitchen Walk
  • Southern, Mt. Vernon: Mt. Vernon Rotary Club’s Kitchen Tour

  • Kentucky

  • Henderson: Annual OVAL Kitchen Tour
  • Lexington: Kitchens of the Bluegrass Tour

  • Louisiana

  • New Orleans: Junior League of New Orleans Annual Kitchen Tour

  • Maine

  • Bangor: Eastern Maine Medical Center Auxiliary’s Annual Kitchen Tour
  • Kennebunk: Annual Coastal Kitchen Tour

  • Massachusetts


  • Greater Boston, Bedford: B.E.S.T Renovates Kitchen Tour
  • Greater Boston, Melrose: Annual Kitchens of Melrose
  • Greater Boston, Summerville: Scrumptious Summerville Kitchen Tour
  • Greater Boston, Wellesley: The Wellesley Kitchen Tour
  • North Shore, Wenham: Wenham Museum Annual Kitchen Tour
  • Merrimack Valley, Newburyport: Annual Newburyport Kitchen Tour

    Minnesota

  • Minnetonka: Heart of the Home: NCJW’s Progressive Kitchen Tour

  • Missouri

  • St. Louis: Dream Kitchen Tour

  • New Hampshire

  • Manchester: Annual Kitchen Tour
  • Portsmouth: Annual Kitchen Tour

  • New Jersey

  • Bay Head: Kitchen Tour
  • Glen Ridge: Annual Taste of Glen Ridge Kitchen Tour
  • Pennington: Taste of Toll House Kitchen Tour
  • Spring Lake: Kitchen Tour
  • Toms River: Annual White Pine Twig’s Kitchens Tour
  • Westfield: Hearth & Home Kitchen Tour

  • New York

  • Pittsford: Women’s Club of Pittsford Kitchen Tour
  • Syracuse: Westcott Community Center Annual Kitchen Tour

  • Oklahoma

  • Nichols Hill: Annual Kitchen Tour
  • Oklahoma City: Spicing It Up For a Cure Kitchen Tour

  • Oregon

  • Grants Pass: American Association of University Women [AAUM] Annual Kitchen Tour

  • Pennsylvania

  • Greensburg: Annual Art in the Kitchen Tasting Tour

  • Texas

  • Fort Worth: Annual Communities In Schools Kitchens Tour

  • Tennessee

  • Chattanooga: Tour du Jour Kitchen Tour

  • Virginia

  • Roanoke: Annual Virginia Amateur Sports Kitchen Tour
  • Winchester: Annual Kitchen Kapers Tour

  • More tours to be found at HouseTourist.com

  • Historic New England posted 9 historic New England kitchens ranging from 1765 to 1968 as part of their 2009 celebration of the Year of the Kitchen. Their traveling exhibition “America’s Kitchens” opens at the museum at New Hampshire Historical Society in Concord, NH.

    2011 Exhibit Update: The America’s Kitchens exhibit is now at the American History Museum in Sandwich, Massachusetts and ends on October 31, 2011.

    Visit the Amana Heritage Society’s 1863-1932 Communal Kitchen Museum in Iowa.

    Conveniently, Iowa’s Hart Dummermuth House Museum staff posted a picture of their 1890s-1900s kitchen on their website : ) Berkeley Historical Museum in Bayville, New Jersey doesn’t have a picture, but there is a 1900 kitchen there, if you’re in the neighborhood.

    What does this small Pioneer Kitchen building contain?

    More museum kitchens…

    Franklin County Historical Museum See the slide in the first column, last row.

    Soda Fountains

    by Rena

    Vintage Soda Fountains

    …and there’s a collection of more than 500 old soda pop bottles at Norton’s Indian Territory Museum in Marietta, Oklahoma.

    See link to Luncheonette and Soda Fountain Manual

    Early Mexican kitchen in the Avila Adobe, Los Angeles, California. Picture taken by Brenard Gagnon. Click picture for details.

    Another early-1800s Mexican kitchen to visit is at the Hacienda de los Martinez Museum in Taos, New Mexico

    Every Saturday
    9:00 am–4:30 pm
    at the Living History Farm at
    Morningside Nature Center

    The Living History Farm comes to life with staff interpreting day-to-day life on a rural Florida farm. Sample biscuits, fresh butter and a slice of life from 1870! FREE.
    Check their website to confirm information before travel.

    Gold Nugget Museum in California displays a living history kitchen from circa 1930–see their 2nd row-3rd column of photos.

    Would you like to visit an American diner, an early-American tavern, Victorian kitchens and a 1930s kitchen, and much more, all in one building? The Culinary Arts Museum in Providence Rhode Island is amazing–and has it all!

    The museum is part of Johnson & Wales University’s culinary arts program and hosts special events such as the Weekend of Fire featuring baking demonstrations in a wood-fired brick oven, tours of a Swiss Military Mobile bread-baking truck and blacksmithing demos of culinary tools. Check their website for events.

    Culinary Arts Museum



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    Check when the next amazing Annual Midwest Old Threshers Reunion will take place.

    Strawbery Banke in NH is literally digging up accurate kitchen details of an early 1900s kosher kitchen…read about it on their website…but, really, more pictures! : )

    The New York Times describes the reenactment… Worthy of note about the consumption of ice in an icebox:

    “I get 50 pounds of ice [for the icebox] for 25 cents every other day…”

    More about Ice Boxes…