Monday, March 7, 2011

Stocking The Larder and The Pantry

A larder is a cool area for storing food prior to use. Larders were commonplace in houses before the widespread use of the refrigerator. Many larders had small unglazed windows with the window opening covered in fine mesh. This allowed free circulation of air without allowing flies to enter. Many larders had tiled or painted walls to simplify cleaning. Older larders and especially those in larger houses had hooks in the ceiling to hang joints of meat or game. Others had insulated containers for ice, anticipating the future development of refrigerators.
A pantry is a room where food, provisions or dishes are stored and served in an ancillary capacity to the kitchen. The pantry sometimes contained a thrawl, which was a stone slab or shelf used to keep food cool in the days before refrigeration was domestically available. In the late medieval hall, a thrawl would have been appropriate to a larder. In a large or moderately large nineteenth century house, all these rooms would have been placed as low in the building as possible in order to use the mass of the ground to retain a low summer temperature.
In a late medieval hall, there were separate rooms for the various service functions and food storage. A pantry was where bread was kept and food preparation associated with it done. The head of this room was referred to as a pantler. There were similar rooms for storage of bacon and other meats (larder), alcoholic beverages (buttery) and cooking (kitchen).
In America, pantries evolved from Early American "butteries", built in a cold north corner of a Colonial home, into a variety of pantries in self-sufficient farmsteads. Butler's pantries, or china pantries, were built between the dining room and kitchen.
 A butler's pantry or serving pantry is a utility room primarily used to store serving items, rather than food. Traditionally, a butler's pantry was used for storage, cleaning and counting of silver; European butlers often slept in the pantry, as their job was to keep the silver under lock and key. The wine log and merchant's account books may also have been kept in there.
In modern homes, butler's pantries are usually located in transitional spaces between kitchens and dining rooms, and are used as staging areas for serving meals. They commonly contain counters and storage for tableware, serving pieces, table linens, candles, wine, and other dining-room articles. The pantry is making a comeback in American and English homes as part of a resurgence of nesting and housekeeping since the late 1990s. It is one of the most requested features in homes today. There is a charm and nostalgia to the pantry.
How do your store your food, tableware and linens?
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24 comments:

  1. What a wonderfully informative post, so interesting:)

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  2. Love your pics! I've heard/read that the only decorations that look "right" in a kitchen are those that are edible and your fruits/veggies make that seem true! The colours and arrangements you've created are gorgeous. Interesting and informative post about the various storage options!

    DD

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  3. Hello,
    great post and I love the shamrock plates.
    Greetings, Johanna

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  4. Nature's bounty of food does provide us with about all the color we need. Your photos are beautiful and I too love your shamrock plates. Thanks for sharing.

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  5. All those soothing greens are just what i need to see, Candy! I'm so ready for spring! Those shamrock plates are darling!!!

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  6. Wonderful post and photos! I also love the shamrick plates. Perfect for St. Patricks Day.

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  7. Wow great photos and thanks for the history lesson too!

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  8. so vivid pictures!

    Here is my entry.

    Happy Wednesday!

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  9. Great pics my friend, you're good at evrything...a great photographer! Those square shemrock plates are great and the steeped cake stand is just so pretty! I love to visit you! Thank you for sharing Tuesday!

    XOXO
    FABBY

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  10. I would MUCH rather have my fridge than a larder, wouldn't you? :))
    Tell you what I would LOVE to have...a butlers pantry for all my dishes and such. Bet you have one...you have so many dishes.
    Thanks for this great post.
    xoxo

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  11. Wow, those are some sexy potatoes. You really know how to photograph vegetables and totally learned some things today.

    Happy WW!!

    http://www.nycsinglemom.com

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  12. beautiful photos and great information. i am an expat in Thailand and many homes here still do not have refrigerators (which is a bit challenging at times because of the heat). amazingly to me, it seems that many Thai people are immune to a lot of the issues associated with unrefrigerated food. but, coming from Michigan, myself, i made sure to get a fridge after moving here. I doubt that i am immune to such things. ;)

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  13. I could not live without my pantry! I am also lucky enough to have pleant of cabinets and a buffet cabinet for storage.

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  14. I would so love to have a walk in pantry! Your photos are gorgeous.

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  15. Thank you all for dropping by! Vegetables are so camera friendly! So easy to photograph with none of those pesky reflections you get from dishes. LOL

    Candy

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  16. This was so interesting! I never realized that "buttery" didn't mean where they kept the butter LOL! Love your shamrock plates.

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  17. Thanks Scribbler! I hope you stop back again this week for more Irish cheer.

    Candy

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  18. Very interesting post! I have always thought that refrigerators were probably not the best system and learning what was done for hundreds of years before we invented them is so very interesting. Love your little sheep in the post, and the plates!

    Thanks so much for adding this to the St. Patrick's Day party!

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  19. Thanks for dropping in Jessa, I'm so pleased you enjoyed your visit.

    Candy

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  20. Can you tell me where you found your square shamrock plates?
    Thanks, Denise

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  21. Hi Denise -

    I found them at Home Goods about 18 months ago and would love to find additional pieces. :-)

    Candy

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  22. Wonderful post and photos! So interesting!

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Thank you for your lovely comments.

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