Kitchen utensil

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a shelf with kitchen utensils of several kinds stacked upon it, with more utensils hanging from hooks below it, both above two work surfaces with yet further utensils laid out neatly upon them
An exhibit of a batterie de cuisine, from the beginning of the 20th century, at the Musée Cernuschi in Paris.
Biodegradable plastic utensils made from bioplastic

A kitchen utensil is a hand-held, typically small tool or utensil that is used in the kitchen, for food-related functions. A cooking utensil is a utensil used in the kitchen for cooking. Other names for the same thing, or subsets thereof, derive from the word "ware", and describe kitchen utensils from a merchandising (and functional) point of view: kitchenware, wares for the kitchen; ovenware and bakeware, kitchen utensils that are for use inside ovens and for baking; cookware, merchandise used for cooking; and so forth.

A partially overlapping category of tools is that of eating utensils, which are tools used for eating (c.f. the more general category of tableware). Some utensils are both kitchen utensils and eating utensils. Cutlery (i.e. knives and other cutting implements) can be used for both food preparation in a kitchen and as eating utensils when dining. Other cutlery such as forks and spoons are both kitchen and eating utensils.

Other names used for various types of kitchen utensils, although not strictly denoting a utensil that is specific to the kitchen, are according to the materials they are made of, again using the "-ware" suffix, rather than their functions: earthenware, utensils made of clay; silverware, utensils (both kitchen and dining) made of silver; glassware, utensils (both kitchen and dining) made of glass; and so forth. These latter categorizations include utensils — made of glass, silver, clay, and so forth — that are not necessarily kitchen utensils.

Materials science

Benjamin Thompson noted at the start of the 18th century that kitchen utensils were commonly made of copper, with various efforts made to prevent the copper from reacting with food (particularly its acidic contents) at the temperatures used for cooking, including tinning, enamelling, and varnishing. He observed that iron had been used as a substitute, and that some utensils were made of earthenware.[1] By the turn of the 20th century, Maria Parloa noted that kitchen utensils were made of (tinned or enamelled) iron and steel, copper, nickel, silver, tin, clay, earthenware, and aluminium.[2] The latter, aluminium, became a popular material for kitchen utensils in the 20th century.[3]

Copper

Copper has good thermal conductivity and copper utensils are both durable and attractive in appearance. However, they are also comparatively heavier than utensils made of other materials, require scrupulous cleaning to remove poisonous tarnish compounds, and are not suitable for acidic foods.[4]

Iron

Iron is more prone to rusting than (tinned) copper. Cast iron kitchen utensils, in particular, are however less prone to rust if, instead of being scoured to a shine after use, they are simply washed with detergent and water and wiped clean with a cloth, allowing the utensil to form a coat of (already corroded iron and other) material that then acts to prevent further corrosion (a process known as seasoning). Furthermore, if an iron utensil is solely used for frying or cooking with fat or oil, corrosion can be reduced by never heating water with it, never using it to cook with water, and when washing it with water to dry it immediately afterwards, removing all water. Since oil and water are immiscible, since oils and fats are more covalent compounds, and since it is ionic compounds such as water that promote corrosion, eliminating as much contact with water reduces corrosion.[5] For some iron kitchen utensils, water is a particular problem, since it is very difficult to dry them fully. In particular, iron egg-beaters or ice cream freezers are tricky to dry, and the consequent rust if left wet will roughen them and possibly clog them completely. When storing iron utensils for long periods, van Rensselaer recommended coating them in non-salted (since salt is also an ionic compound) fat or paraffin.[6]

Iron utensils have little problem with high cooking temperatures, are simple to clean as they become smooth with long use, are durable and comparatively strong (i.e. not as prone to breaking as, say, earthenware), and hold heat well. However, as noted, they rust comparatively easily.[6]

Earthenware and enamelware

Earthenware utensils suffer from brittleness when subjected to rapid large changes in temperature, as commonly occur in cooking, and the glazing of earthenware often contains lead, which is poisonous. Thompson noted that as a consequence of this the use of such glazed earthenware was prohibited by law in some countries from use in cooking, or even from use for storing acidic foods.[7] Van Rensselaer proposed in 1919 that one test for lead content in earthenware was to let a beaten egg stand in the utensil for a few minutes and watch to see whether it became discoloured, which is a sign that lead might be present.[8]

In addition to their problems with thermal shock, enamelware utensils require careful handling, as careful as for glassware, because they are prone to chipping. But enamel utensils are not affected by acidic foods, are durable, and are easily cleaned. However, they cannot be used with strong alkalis.[8]

Earthenware, porcelain, and pottery utensils can be used for both cooking and serving food, and so thereby save on washing-up of two separate sets of utensils. They are durable, and (van Rensselaer notes) "excellent for slow, even cooking in even heat, such as slow baking". However, they are comparatively unsuitable for cooking using a direct heat, such as a cooking over a flame.[9]

Aluminium

James Frank Breazeale in 1918 opined that aluminium "is without doubt the best material for kitchen utensils", noting that it is "as far superior to enamelled ware as enamelled ware is to the old-time iron or tin". He qualified his recommendation for replacing worn out tin or enamelled utensils with aluminium ones by noting that "old-fashioned black iron frying pans and muffin rings, polished on the inside or worn smooth by long usage, are, however, superior to aluminium ones".[10]

Aluminium's advantages over other materials for kitchen utensils is its good thermal conductivity (which is approximately an order of magnitude greater than that of steel), the fact that it is largely non-reactive with foodstuffs at low and high temperatures, its low toxicity, and the fact that its corrosion products are white and so (unlike the dark corrosion products of, say, iron) do not discolour food that they happen to be mixed into during cooking.[3] However, its disadvantages are that it is easily discoloured, can be dissolved by acidic foods (to a comparatively small extent), and reacts to alkaline soaps if they are used for cleaning a utensil.[11]

A museum mannequin standing in front of a table set with various kitchen utensils, with more kitchen utensils hanging from the wall behind
An exhibit of Israeli Defence Forces kitchen utensils at the Batey ha-Osef Museum in Tel Aviv.

In the European Union, the construction of kitchen utensils made of aluminium is determined by two European standards: EN 601 (Aluminium and aluminium alloys — Castings — Chemical composition of castings for use in contact with foodstuffs) and EN 602 (Aluminium and aluminium alloys — Wrought products — Chemical composition of semi-finished products used for the fabrication of articles for use in contact with foodstuffs). These define maxima for the percentages (by mass) of impurities or added elements present, other than aluminium, in such products, as follows:[12]

Unalloyed aluminium[12]
  • iron and silicon: less than 1%
  • chromium, manganese, nickel, zinc, titanium, tin: less than 0.1% each
  • copper: less than 0.1% (or less than 0.2% if the proportions of chromium and manganese both do not exceed 0.05%)
  • other elements: less than 0.05%
Alloyed aluminium[12]
  • silicon: less than 13.5%
  • iron: less than 2%
  • copper: less than 0.6%
  • manganese: less than 4%
  • magnesium: less than 11% (less than 5% in pressure cooking utensils)
  • chromium:less than 0.35%
  • nickel: less than 3%
  • zinc: less than 0.25%
  • antimony: less than 0.2%
  • tin: less than 0.1%
  • strontium: less than 0.3%
  • zirconium: less than 0.3%
  • titanium: less than 0.3%
  • other elements: less than 0.05% each, and less than 0.15% in total

Diversity and utility

alt=Various kitchen utensils. At top: a spice rack with jars of mint, caraway, thyme, and sage. Lower: hanging from hooks; a small pan, a meat fork, an icing spatula, a whole spoon, a slotted spoon, and a perforated spatula.

Before the 19th century

"Of the culinary utensils of the ancients", wrote Mrs Beeton, "our knowledge is very limited; but as the art of living, in every civilized country, is pretty much the same, the instruments for cooking must, in a great degree, bear a striking resemblance to one another".[13]

Archaeologists and historians have studied the kitchen utensils used in centuries past. For example: In the Middle Eastern villages and towns of the middle first millennium AD, historical and archaeological sources record that Jewish households generally had stone measuring cups, a meyḥam (an wide-necked vessel for heating water), a kederah (an unlidded pot-bellied cooking pot), a ilpas (a lidded stewpot/casserole pot type of vessel used for stewing and steaming), yorah and kumkum (pots for heating water), two types of teganon (frying pan) for deep and shallow frying, an iskutla (a glass serving platter), a tamḥui (ceramic serving bowl), a keara (a bowl for bread), a kiton (a canteen of cold water used to dilute wine), and a lagin (a wine decanter).[14]

Ownership and types of kitchen utensils varied from household to household. Records survive of inventories of kitchen utensils from London in the 14th century, in particular the records of possessions given in the coroner's rolls. Very few such people owned any kitchen utensils at all. In fact only seven convicted felons are recorded as having any. One such, a murderer from 1339, is recorded as possessing only the one kitchen utensil: a brass pot (one of the commonest such kitchen utensils listed in the records) valued at three shillings.[15] Similarly, in Minnesota in the second half of the 19th century, John North is recorded as having himself made "a real nice rolling pin, and a pudding stick" for his wife; one soldier is recorded as having a Civil War bayonet refashioned, by a blacksmith, into a bread knife; whereas an immigrant Swedish family is recorded as having brought with them "solid silver knives, forks, and spoons [...] Quantities of copper and brass utensils burnished until they were like mirrors hung in rows".[16]

19th century growth

The up-to-date kitchen fireproof ware in 1894

The 19th century, particularly in the United States, saw an explosion in the number of kitchen utensils available on the market, with many labour-saving devices being invented and patented throughout the century. Maria Parloa's Cook Book and Marketing Guide listed a minimum of 139 kitchen utensils without which a contemporary kitchen would not be considered properly furnished. Parloa wrote that "the homemaker will find [that] there is continually something new to be bought".[17]

A growth in the range of kitchen utensils available can be traced through the growth in the range of utensils recommended to the aspiring householder in cookbooks as the century progressed. Earlier in the century, in 1828, Frances Byerley Parkes (Parkes 1828) had recommended a smaller array of utensils. By 1858, Elizabeth H. Putnam, in Mrs Putnam's Receipt Book and Young Housekeeper's Assistant, wrote with the assumption that her readers would have the "usual quantity of utensils", to which she added a list of necessary items:[18]

Copper saucepans, well lined, with covers, from three to six different sizes; a flat-bottomed soup-pot; an upright gridiron; sheet-iron breadpans instead of tin; a griddle; a tin kitchen; Hector's double boiler; a tin coffee-pot for boiling coffee, or a filter — either being equally good; a tin canister to keep roasted and ground coffee in; a canister for tea; a covered tin box for bread; one likewise for cake, or a drawer in your store-closet, lined with zinc or tin; a bread-knife; a board to cut bread upon; a covered jar for pieces of bread, and one for fine crumbs; a knife-tray; a spoon-tray; — the yellow ware is much the stringest, or tin pans of different sizes are economical; — a stout tin pan for mixing bread; a large earthen bowl for beating cake; a stone jug for yeast; a stone jar for soup stock; a meat-saw; a cleaver; iron and wooden spoons; a wire sieve for sifting flour and meal; a small hair sieve; a bread-board; a meat-board; a lignum vitae mortar, and rolling-pin, &c.

— Putnam 1858, p. 318[19]

Mrs Beeton, in her Book of Household Management, wrote:

The following list, supplied by Messrs Richard & John Slack, 336, Strand, will show the articles required for the kitchen of a family in the middle class of life, although it does not contain all the things that may be deemed necessary for some families, and may contain more than are required for others. As Messrs Slack themselves, however, publish a useful illustrated catalogue, which may be had at their establishment gratis, and which it will be found advantageous to consult by those about to furnish, it supersedes the necessity of our enlarging that which we give:

1 Tea-kettle6s. 6d.1 Colander1s. 6d.1 Flour-box1s. 0d.
1 Toasting-fork1s. 0d.3 Block-tin saucepans3 Flat-irons3s. 6d.
1 Bread-grater1s. 0d.5s. 9d.2 Frying-pans4s. 0d.
1 Pair of Brass5 Iron Saucepans12s. 0d.1 Gridiron2s. 0d.
  Candlesticks3s. 6d.1 Ditto and Steamer1 Mustard-pot1s. 0d.
1 Teapot and Tray6s. 6d.6s. 6d.1 Salt-cellar8d.
1 Bottle-jack9s. 9d.1 Large Boiling-pot1 Pepper-box6d.
6 Spoons1s. 6d.10s. 0d.1 Pair of Bellows2s. 0d.
2 Candlesticks2s. 6d.4 Iron Stewpans8s. 9d.3 Jelly-moulds8s. 0d.
1 Candle-box1s. 4d.1 Dripping-pan and1 Plate-basket5s. 6d.
6 Knives & Forks5s. 3d.  Stand6s. 6d.1 Cheese-toaster1s. 10d.
2 Sets of Skewers1s. 0s.1 Dustpan1s. 0d.1 Coal-shovel2s. 6d.
1 Meat-chopper1s. 9d.1 Fish and Egg-slice1 Wood Meat-screen
1 Cinder-sifter1s. 3d.1s. 9d.30s. 0d.
1 Coffee-pot2s. 3d.2 Fish-kettles10s. 0d.
The Set£8 11s. 1d.

Isabella Mary Beeton, The Book of Household Management[20]

Parloa, in her 1880 cookbook, took two pages to list all of the essential kitchen utensils for a well-furnished kitchen, a list running to 93 distinct sorts of item.[19] The 1882 edition ran to 20 pages illustrating and describing the various utensils for a well-furnished kitchen. Sarah Tyson Rorer's 1886 Philadelphia Cook Book (Rorer 1886) listed more than 200 kitchen utensils that a well-furnished kitchen should have.[21]

"Labour-saving" utensils generating more labour

However, many of these utensils were expensive and not affordable by the majority of householders.[17] Some people considered them unnecessary, too. James Frank Breazeale decried the explosion in patented "labour-saving" devices for the modern kitchen—promoted in exhibitions and advertised in "Household Guides" at the start of the 20th century—, saying that "the best way for the housewife to peel a potato, for example, is in the old-fashioned way, with a knife, and not with a patented potato peeler". Breazeale advocated simplicity over dishwashing machines "that would have done credit to a moderate sized hotel", and noted that the most useful kitchen utensils were "the simple little inexpensive conveniences that work themselves into every day use", giving examples, of utensils that were simple and cheap but indispensable once obtained and used, of a stiff brush for cleaning saucepans, a sink strainer to prevent drains from clogging, and an ordinary wooden spoon.[22]

The "labour-saving" devices didn't necessarily save labour, either. While the advent of mass-produced standardized measuring instruments permitted even householders with little to no cooking skills to follow recipes and end up with the desired result and the advent of many utensils enabled "modern" cooking, on a stove or range rather than at floor level with a hearth, they also operated to raise expectations of what families would eat. So while food was easier to prepare and to cook, ordinary householders at the same time were expected to prepare and to cook more complex and harder-to-prepare meals on a regular basis. The labour-saving effect of the tools was cancelled out by the increased labour required for what came to be expected as the culinary norm in the average household.[23]

See also

References

Citations
  1. Thompson 1969, p. 232–239.
  2. Parloa 1908, p. xxvi.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Vargel 2004, p. 579.
  4. van Rensselaer, Rose & Canon 1919, p. 233–234.
  5. Thompson 1969, p. 232–233.
  6. 6.0 6.1 van Rensselaer, Rose & Canon 1919, p. 235–236.
  7. Thompson 1969, p. 236–239.
  8. 8.0 8.1 van Rensselaer, Rose & Canon 1919, p. 234–235.
  9. van Rensselaer, Rose & Canon 1919, p. 236.
  10. Breazeale 1918, p. 36–37.
  11. van Rensselaer, Rose & Canon 1919, p. 232–233.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Vargel 2004, p. 581–582.
  13. Beeton 1861, p. 28.
  14. Schwartz 2006, p. 439–441.
  15. Carlin & Rosenthal 1998, pp. 42–32.
  16. Kreidberg 1975, pp. 164.
  17. 17.0 17.1 Volo & Volo 2007, p. 245.
  18. Williams 2006, p. 67–69.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Williams 2006, p. 68.
  20. Beeton 1861, p. 31.
  21. Quinzio 2009, p. 133.
  22. Breazeale 1918, p. 36.
  23. Williams 2006, p. 53.
Bibliography
  • Beeton, Isabella Mary (1861). The Book of Household Management. Wordworth Reference Series (republished by Wordsworth Editions, 2006 ed.). London: Samuel Orchart Beeton. ISBN 978-1-84022-268-5. 
  • Breazeale, James Frank (1918). Economy in the Kitchen. Cooking in America (republished by Applewood Books, 2007 ed.). New York: Frye Publishing Co. ISBN 978-1-4290-1024-5. 
  • Carlin, Martha; Rosenthal, Joel Thomas (1998). Food and eating in medieval Europe. Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-85285-148-4. 
  • Kreidberg, Marjorie (1975). Food on the frontier: Minnesota cooking from 1850 to 1900, with selected recipes. Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 978-0-87351-097-4. 
  • Parloa, Maria (1908). Miss Parloa's New Cook Book and Marketing Guide. Cooking in America (republished by Applewood Books, 2008 ed.). Boston: Dana Estes & Co. ISBN 978-1-4290-1274-4. 
  • Thompson, Benjamin (1969). "On the construction of Kitchen Fireplaces and Kitchen Utensils". In Brown, Sanborn Conner. Collected Works of Count Rumford: Devices and techniques 3. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-13953-4. 
  • Quinzio, Jeri (2009). "Women's Work". Of sugar and snow: a history of ice cream making. California studies in food and culture 25. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24861-8. 
  • Schwartz, Joshua J. (2006). "The Material Realities of Jewish Life in the Land of Israel c. 235–638". In Davies, William David; Katz, Steven T.; Finkelstein, Louis. The Cambridge History of Judaism: The late Roman-Rabbinic period 4. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-77248-8. 
  • van Rensselaer, Martha; Rose, Flora; Canon, Helen (1919). "Kitchen Utensils". A Manual of Home-Making. Cooking in America (republished by Applewood Books, 2008 ed.). New York: The Macmillan Co. ISBN 978-1-4290-1241-6. 
  • Vargel, Christian (2004). Corrosion of aluminium. Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-08-044495-6. 
  • Volo, James M.; Volo, Dorothy Denneen (2007). Family life in nineteenth-century America. Family life through history. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-33792-5. 
  • Williams, Susan (2006). Food in the United States, 1820s–1890. Food in American history. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-33245-6. 

Further reading

  • Brooks, Phillips V. (2004). Kitchen utensils: names, origins, and definitions through the ages. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4039-6619-3. 
  • Matranga, Victoria K. (1996). America at Home: A Celebration of Twentieth-Century Housewares, International Housewares Association, ISBN 978-0-9655487-0-0
  • Schuler, Stanley; Schuler, Elizabeth Meriwether (1975). "kitchen utensils". The householders' encyclopedia. Galahad Books. ISBN 978-0-88365-301-2.  Unknown parameter |isbn10= ignored (help)
  • Byrne, David; Wheeler, Mike (1995). Kitchen utensils. Science in the kitchen. Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-12457-8. 
  • Studley, Vance (1981). The woodworker's book of wooden kitchen utensils. Van Nostrand Reinhold Co. ISBN 978-0-442-24726-3. 
  • Shrock, Joel (2004). The Gilded Age. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-32204-4. 
  • Klippensteen, Kate (2006). Cool Tools: Cooking Utensils from the Japanese Kitchen. Kodansha International. ISBN 978-4-7700-3016-0. 
  • McGee, Harold (2004). "Cooking Methods and Utensil Materials". On Food and Cooking: The Science and lore of the Kitchen. Simon and Schuster. pp. 787–791. ISBN 978-0-684-80001-1. 
  • Hancock, Ralph (2006). "metal utensils". In Davidson, Alan; Jaine, Tom. The Oxford companion to food. Oxford Companions Series (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280681-9. 
  • Lifshey, Earl (1973). The housewares story: a history of the American housewares industry. Chicago: National Housewares Manufacturers Association. pp. 125–195. 
  • Parkes, Frances Byerley (1828). Domestic Duties ; or, Instructions to Young Married Ladies on the Management of their Household, and the Regulations of their conduct in the various Relations and Duties of Married Life. New York: JJ Harper. 
  • Putnam, Elizabeth H. (1858). Mrs Putnam's Receipt Book and Young Housekeeper's Assistant. New York: Sheldon & Co. 
  • Rorer, Sarah Tyson (1886). Philadelphia Cook Book: A Manual of Home Economies. Philadelphia: Arnold and Company. 
  • Wilcox, Estelle Woods (1877). Buckeye Cookery & Practical Housekeeping: Tried and Approved, Compiled from Original Recipes (reprinted by Applewood Books, 2002 ed.). Minneapolis: Buckeye Publishing Company. pp. 364–365. ISBN 978-1-55709-515-2. 
  • Ettlinger, Steve (2001). The kitchenware book. Barnes & Noble Books. ISBN 978-0-7607-2332-6. 

External links

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