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A typical wooden breadbox. A breadbox (chiefly American) or a breadbin (chiefly British) [1] is a container for storing bread and other baked goods to keep them fresh. They were a more common household kitchen item until bread started being made commercially with food preservatives and wrapped in plastic.
A kneading trough is a term for the vessel in which dough, after being mixed and leavened was left to swell or ferment. The first citation of kneading-trough in the Oxford English Dictionary is Chaucer, The Miller's Tale, 1386. Flour was not stored, perhaps for fear of insect infestation, but kneaded into dough and baked into the bread without ...
Special glass jars were manufactured to fit the cabinet and its racks. Original sets of Hoosier glassware consisted of coffee and tea canisters, a salt box, and four to eight spice jars. Some manufacturers also included a cracker jar. [Note 1] Colored glassware, ant-proof casters, and even ironing boards were innovations added later.
Click here to see 10 Vintage Metal Lunch Boxes Worth Big Bucks. In 1950, a company called Aladdin produced the first true lunch boxes of the era, decorating plain metal boxes with stamped pictures ...
This historic cookbook offers a glimpse into early 19th-century White House dining, and includes the favorite recipes of U.S. presidents like Abraham Lincoln and Grover Cleveland.
Example of a bread hook being used, in an Assistent of approximately mid-to-late-1990s vintage. The most distinctive feature of the mixer is that it spins the bowl and its contents while the attachments remain stationary, unlike "planetary" mixers such as the KitchenAid, which moves the attachments around the center of the stationary bowl. [3]
$12.73 at amazon.com. Speaking of cleaner edges, if you find your cookie cutters sticking to the dough as you press, dip the edge in a little bit of flour.
Articles included cribbage boards, paperweights, writing slopes, snuff boxes and glove boxes. [2] At the Great Exhibition of 1851, Tunbridge ware by Edmund Nye, Robert Russell and Henry Hollamby was shown; Edmund Nye received a commendation from the judges for his work. He exhibited a table depicting a mosaic of a ship at sea; 110,800 tesserae ...