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How did kitchens develop

296 bytes added, 19:33, 27 February 2017
Later Periods
In the late Medieval period in Europe, by the 12-13th centuries, kitchens in wealthier homes and palaces began to be more commonly separated. This created more class separation between areas where food was prepared versus areas where food was served. This had to do with the smoke and smells of the kitchen, which nobles were keen to separate. Alternatives included using sunken floor or areas to allow the smoke another way to escape away from the main building. In more common homes, fireplaces and chimneys were now more typically created, particularly around a side of the house or along one particular wall. This now made the corner of larger room or where chimney might be placed as an area where indoor cooking was done. Pots and pans were now mostly metalic, where they were hung above a fireplace on stands.
 
Although cooking was still mostly done in a basic space, by moving the cooking and food preparation space to a more isolated part of the house, more room was now created for a common living area or room where food could be shared and with that space become the primary social area of the house.
==Technology Evolution==

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