Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

How did kitchens develop

165 bytes added, 20:36, 27 February 2017
Early History
==Early History==
In early complex societies in the Near East, Egypt, and in the eastern Mediterranean, including Crete and Cyprus, many homes had open fire places or covered stoves with a fire burning inside (similar to modern clay ovens often used for bread baking). Stoves ranged from simple clay-made pieces to brick-made cooking places. The stoves for cooking were often in open places so that the smoke can escape. Most cooking, therefore, would be outside, although food preparation could take place nearby or in the same space. Some homes may not have had a specific place for cooking, such as smaller homes, where a shared communal space may have been used for making meals (Figure 1). Wealthy people generally had more elaborate rooms that had facilities for storage of foods, what were essentially pantries, that were often next to an open space for cooking. In very wealthy residences, or even palaces, food storage may have been more elaborate, where types of ice houses and large storage rooms would have been present. Some kitchens could also be enclosed, where a possible chimney could have carried the smoke for cooking fires(Figure 2).
One interesting find is cuneiform tablets in Mesopotamia and other parts of the Near East have been found to sometimes indicate recipes. Although recipes on tablets have not generally been found in kitchens, it is likely chefs at more wealthy residences and palaces would have had access to these recipes as a way to prepare elaborate feasts for guests.
[[File:Egyptian kitchen Berlin 1.jpg|thumbnail|Figure 1. Model from Egypt, found in a wealthy tomb, showing a food preparation scene. ]]
 
[[File:Reconstructed Roman kitchen (culina), Museum of London (14855574970).jpg|thumbnail|Figure 2. Kitchen reconstructed from an ancient Roman house.]]
==Later Periods==

Navigation menu