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Wikipedia

Kitchen

A kitchen is a room or part of a room used for cooking and food preparation in a dwelling or in a commercial establishment. A modern middle-class residential kitchen is typically equipped with a stove, a sink with hot and cold running water, a refrigerator, and worktops and kitchen cabinets arranged according to a modular design. Many households have a microwave oven, a dishwasher, and other electric appliances. The main functions of a kitchen are to store, prepare and cook food (and to complete related tasks such as dishwashing). The room or area may also be used for dining (or small meals such as breakfast), entertaining and laundry. The design and construction of kitchens is a huge market all over the world.

An early-20th century Art Nouveau-style kitchen in Riga

Commercial kitchens are found in restaurants, cafeterias, hotels, hospitals, educational and workplace facilities, army barracks, and similar establishments. These kitchens are generally larger and equipped with bigger and more heavy-duty equipment than a residential kitchen. For example, a large restaurant may have a huge walk-in refrigerator and a large commercial dishwasher machine. In some instances, commercial kitchen equipment such as commercial sinks is used in household settings as it offers ease of use for food preparation and high durability.[1][2]

In developed countries, commercial kitchens are generally subject to public health laws. They are inspected periodically by public-health officials, and forced to close if they do not meet hygienic requirements mandated by law.[citation needed]

History

Middle Ages

 
The roasting spit in this European Renaissance kitchen was driven automatically by a propeller—the black cloverleaf-like structure in the upper left

Early medieval European longhouses had an open fire under the highest point of the building. The "kitchen area" was between the entrance and the fireplace. In wealthy homes, there was typically more than one kitchen. In some homes, there were upwards of three kitchens. The kitchens were divided based on the types of food prepared in them.[3]

The kitchen might be separate from the great hall due to the smoke from cooking fires and the chance the fires may get out of control.[4] Few medieval kitchens survive as they were "notoriously ephemeral structures".[5]

 
Kitchen interior, c. 1565

Colonial America

In Connecticut, as in other colonies of New England during Colonial America, kitchens were often built as separate rooms and were located behind the parlor and keeping room or dining room. One early record of a kitchen is found in the 1648 inventory of the estate of a John Porter of Windsor, Connecticut. The inventory lists goods in the house "over the kittchin" and "in the kittchin". The items listed in the kitchen were: silver spoons, pewter, brass, iron, arms, ammunition, hemp, flax and "other implements about the room".[6]

Rationalization

A stepping stone to the modern fitted kitchen was the Frankfurt Kitchen, designed by Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky for social housing projects in 1926. This kitchen measured 1.9 by 3.4 metres (6 ft 3 in by 11 ft 2 in), and was built to optimize kitchen efficiency and lower building costs. The design was the result of detailed time-motion studies and interviews with future tenants to identify what they needed from their kitchens. Schütte-Lihotzky's fitted kitchen was built in some 10,000 apartments in housing projects erected in Frankfurt in the 1930s.[7]

Materials

The Frankfurt Kitchen of 1926 was made of several materials depending on the application. The modern built-in kitchens of today use particle boards or MDF, decorated with a variety of materials and finishes including wood veneers, lacquer, glass, melamine, laminate, ceramic and eco gloss. Very few manufacturers produce home built-in kitchens from stainless steel. Until the 1950s, steel kitchens were used by architects, but this material was displaced by the cheaper particle board panels sometimes decorated with a steel surface.

Domestic kitchen planning

 
Beecher's "model kitchen" brought early ergonomic principles to the home
 
The Frankfurt kitchen using Taylorist principles

Domestic (or residential) kitchen design is a relatively recent discipline. The first ideas to optimize the work in the kitchen go back to Catharine Beecher's A Treatise on Domestic Economy (1843, revised and republished together with her sister Harriet Beecher Stowe as The American Woman's Home in 1869). Beecher's "model kitchen" propagated for the first time a systematic design based on early ergonomics. The design included regular shelves on the walls, ample workspace, and dedicated storage areas for various food items. Beecher even separated the functions of preparing food and cooking it altogether by moving the stove into a compartment adjacent to the kitchen.

Christine Frederick published from 1913 a series of articles on "New Household Management" in which she analyzed the kitchen following Taylorist principles of efficiency, presented detailed time-motion studies, and derived a kitchen design from them. Her ideas were taken up in the 1920s by architects in Germany and Austria, most notably Bruno Taut, Erna Meyer, Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky and Benita Otte, who designed the first fitted kitchen for the Haus am Horn, which was completed in 1923.[8] Similar design principles were employed by Schütte-Lihotzky for her famous Frankfurt kitchen, designed for Ernst May's Römerstadt, a social housing project in Frankfurt, in 1927.

While this "work kitchen" and variants derived from it were a great success for tenement buildings, homeowners had different demands and did not want to be constrained by a 6.4-square-metre (69 sq ft) kitchen. Nevertheless, the kitchen design was mostly ad-hoc following the whims of the architect. In the U.S., the "Small Homes Council", since 1993 the "Building Research Council", of the School of Architecture of the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign was founded in 1944 with the goal to improve the state of the art in home building, originally with an emphasis on standardization for cost reduction. It was there that the notion of the kitchen work triangle was formalized: the three main functions in a kitchen are storage, preparation, and cooking (which Catharine Beecher had already recognized), and the places for these functions should be arranged in the kitchen in such a way that work at one place does not interfere with work at another place, the distance between these places is not unnecessarily large, and no obstacles are in the way. A natural arrangement is a triangle, with the refrigerator, the sink, and the stove at a vertex each.

This observation led to a few common kitchen forms, commonly characterized by the arrangement of the kitchen cabinets and sink, stove, and refrigerator:

  • A single-file kitchen (also known as a one-way galley or a straight-line kitchen) has all of these along one wall; the work triangle degenerates to a line. This is not optimal, but often the only solution if space is restricted. This may be common in an attic space that is being converted into a living space, or a studio apartment.
  • The double-file kitchen (or two-way galley) has two rows of cabinets on opposite walls, one containing the stove and the sink, the other the refrigerator. This is the classical work kitchen and makes efficient use of space.
  • In the L-kitchen, the cabinets occupy two adjacent walls. Again, the work triangle is preserved, and there may even be space for an additional table at a third wall, provided it does not intersect the triangle.
  • A U-kitchen has cabinets along three walls, typically with the sink at the base of the "U". This is a typical work kitchen, too, unless the two other cabinet rows are short enough to place a table on the fourth wall.
  • A G-kitchen has cabinets along three walls, like the U-kitchen, and also a partial fourth wall, often with a double basin sink at the corner of the G shape. The G-kitchen provides additional work and storage space and can support two work triangles. A modified version of the G-kitchen is the double-L, which splits the G into two L-shaped components, essentially adding a smaller L-shaped island or peninsula to the L-kitchen.
 
A block kitchen
  • The block kitchen (or island) is a more recent development, typically found in open kitchens. Here, the stove or both the stove and the sink are placed where an L or U kitchen would have a table, in a free-standing "island", separated from the other cabinets. In a closed room, this does not make much sense, but in an open kitchen, it makes the stove accessible from all sides such that two persons can cook together, and allows for contact with guests or the rest of the family since the cook does not face the wall any more. Additionally, the kitchen island's counter-top can function as an overflow surface for serving buffet-style meals or sitting down to eat breakfast and snacks.

In the 1980s, there was a backlash against industrial kitchen planning and cabinets with people installing a mix of work surfaces and free standing furniture, led by kitchen designer Johnny Grey and his concept of the "unfitted kitchen". Modern kitchens often have enough informal space to allow for people to eat in it without having to use the formal dining room. Such areas are called "breakfast areas", "breakfast nooks" or "breakfast bars" if space is integrated into a kitchen counter. Kitchens with enough space to eat in are sometimes called "eat-in kitchens". During the 2000s, flat pack kitchens were popular for people doing DIY renovating on a budget. The flat pack kitchens industry makes it easy to put together and mix and matching doors, bench tops and cabinets. In flat pack systems, many components can be interchanged.

In larger homes, where the owners might have meals prepared by a household staff member, the home may have a chef's kitchen. This typically differs from a normal domestic kitchen by having multiple ovens (possibly of different kinds for different kinds of cooking), multiple sinks, and warming drawers to keep food heated between cooking and service.

Other types

 
A canteen kitchen
 
A food technology training kitchen of Marling School in the United Kingdom

Restaurant and canteen kitchens found in hotels, hospitals, educational and workplace facilities, army barracks, and similar institutions are generally (in developed countries) subject to public health laws. They are inspected periodically by public health officials and forced to close if they do not meet hygienic requirements mandated by law.

Canteen kitchens (and castle kitchens) were often the places where new technology was used first. For instance, Benjamin Thompson's "energy saving stove", an early 19th-century fully closed iron stove using one fire to heat several pots, was designed for large kitchens; another thirty years passed before they were adapted for domestic use.

As of 2017, restaurant kitchens usually have tiled walls and floors and use stainless steel for other surfaces (workbench, but also door and drawer fronts) because these materials are durable and easy to clean. Professional kitchens are often equipped with gas stoves, as these allow cooks to regulate the heat more quickly and more finely than electrical stoves. Some special appliances are typical for professional kitchens, such as large installed deep fryers, steamers, or a bain-marie.

The fast food and convenience food trends have changed the manner in which restaurant kitchens operate. Some of these type restaurants may only "finish" convenience food that is delivered to them or just reheat completely prepared meals. At the most they may grill a hamburger or a steak. But in the early 21st century, c-stores (convenience stores) are attracting greater market share by performing more food preparation on-site and better customer service than some fast food outlets.[9]

The kitchens in railway dining cars have presented special challenges: space is limited, and, personnel must be able to serve a great number of meals quickly. Especially in the early history of railways, this required flawless organization of processes; in modern times, the microwave oven and prepared meals have made this task much easier. Kitchens aboard ships, aircraft and sometimes railcars are often referred to as galleys. On yachts, galleys are often cramped, with one or two burners fueled by an LP gas bottle. Kitchens on cruise ships or large warships, by contrast, are comparable in every respect with restaurants or canteen kitchens.

On passenger airliners, the kitchen is reduced to a pantry. The crew's role is to heat and serve in-flight meals delivered by a catering company. An extreme form of the kitchen occurs in space, e.g., aboard a Space Shuttle (where it is also called the "galley") or the International Space Station. The astronauts' food is generally completely prepared, dehydrated, and sealed in plastic pouches before the flight. The kitchen is reduced to a rehydration and heating module.

Outdoor areas where food is prepared are generally not considered kitchens, even though an outdoor area set up for regular food preparation, for instance when camping, might be referred to as an "outdoor kitchen". An outdoor kitchen at a campsite might be placed near a well, water pump, or water tap, and it might provide tables for food preparation and cooking (using portable camp stoves). Some campsite kitchen areas have a large tank of propane connected to burners so that campers can cook their meals. Military camps and similar temporary settlements of nomads may have dedicated kitchen tents, which have a vent to enable cooking smoke to escape.

In schools where home economics, food technology (previously known as "domestic science"), or culinary arts are taught, there are typically a series of kitchens with multiple equipment (similar in some respects to laboratories) solely for the purpose of teaching. These consist of multiple workstations, each with its own oven, sink, and kitchen utensils, where the teacher can show students how to prepare food and cook it.

By region

China

 
A traditional 1920s Shanghainese shikumen style kitchen, Shikumen Open House Museum

Kitchens in China are called chúfáng(厨房). More than 3000 years ago, the ancient Chinese used the ding for cooking food. The ding was developed into the wok and pot used today. In Chinese spiritual tradition, a Kitchen God watches over the kitchen for the family and reports to the Jade Emperor annually about the family's behavior. On Chinese New Year's Eve, families would gather to pray for the kitchen god to give a good report to heaven and wish him to bring back good news on the fifth day of the New Year.

The most common cooking equipment in Chinese family kitchens and restaurant kitchens are woks, steamer baskets and pots. The fuel or heating resource was also an important technique to practice the cooking skills. Traditionally Chinese were using wood or straw as the fuel to cook food. A Chinese chef had to master flaming and heat radiation to reliably prepare traditional recipes. Chinese cooking will use a pot or wok for pan-frying, stir-frying, deep frying or boiling.

Japan

 
Reconstruction of a 1832 Japanese kitchen in Dejima, Nagasaki, Japan.

Kitchens in Japan are called Daidokoro (台所; lit. "kitchen"). Daidokoro is the place where food is prepared in a Japanese house. Until the Meiji era, a kitchen was also called kamado (かまど; lit. stove) and there are many sayings in the Japanese language that involve kamado as it was considered the symbol of a house and the term could even be used to mean "family" or "household" (similar to the English word "hearth"). When separating a family, it was called Kamado wo wakeru, which means "divide the stove". Kamado wo yaburu (lit. "break the stove") means that the family was bankrupt.

India

 
Preparation of bread in the kitchen of Gurudwara Bangla Sahib in New Delhi, India

In India, a kitchen is called a "Rasoi" (in Hindi\Sanskrit) or a "Swayampak ghar" in Marathi, and there exist many other names for it in the various regional languages. Many different methods of cooking exist across the country, and the structure and the materials used in constructing kitchens have varied depending on the region. For example, in the north and central India, cooking used to be carried out in clay ovens called "chulha" (also chullha or chullah), fired by wood, coal or dried cow dung. In households where members observed vegetarianism, separate kitchens were maintained to cook and store vegetarian and non-vegetarian food. Religious families often treat the kitchen as a sacred space. Indian kitchens are built on an Indian architectural science called vastushastra. The Indian kitchen vastu is of utmost importance while designing kitchens in India. Modern-day architects also follow the norms of vastushastra while designing Indian kitchens across the world.

While many kitchens belonging to poor families continue to use clay stoves and the older forms of fuel, the urban middle and upper classes usually have gas stoves with cylinders or piped gas attached. Electric cooktops are rarer since they consume a great deal of electricity, but microwave ovens are gaining popularity in urban households and commercial enterprises. Indian kitchens are also supported by biogas and solar energy as fuel. World's largest solar energy[10] kitchen is built in India. In association with government bodies, India is encouraging domestic biogas plants to support the kitchen system.

 
Outdoor kitchen in Takoradi, Ghana

See also

References

  1. ^ . Home Decor Expert. 2018-06-14. Archived from the original on 2019-03-30. Retrieved 2018-07-22.
  2. ^ Vogel, Carol (1982-12-09). "The commercial kitchen at home: pros and cons". The New York Times.
  3. ^ Thompson, Theodor (1992) Medieval Homes, Sampson Lowel House
  4. ^ Christie, Neil; Creighton, Oliver; Edgeworth, Matt; Hamerow, Helena (2013), Transforming Townscapes: From burgh to borough: the archaeology of Wallingford, AD 800–1400, The Society for Medieval Archaeology Monograph Series, Oxford: Society for Medieval Archaeology, p. 201, ISBN 978-1-909662-09-4
  5. ^ Creighton, Oliver; Christie, Neil (2015), "The Archaeology of Wallingford Castle: a summary of the current state of knowledge", in Keats-Rohan, K. S. B.; Christie, Neil; Roffe, David (eds.), Wallingford: The Castle and the Town in Context, BAR British Series, Oxford: Archaeopress, p. 13, ISBN 978-1-4073-1418-1
  6. ^ Trumbull, J. Hammond (1850). The Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut 1636–1776. Vol. 1. Hartford, Brown & Parsons. p. 476.
  7. ^ Rawsthorn, Alice (2010-09-27) Modernist triumph in the kitchen. New York Times
  8. ^ Moore, Rowan (2019-01-21). "Bauhaus at 100: its legacy in five key designs". The Guardian. Retrieved 2019-01-21.
  9. ^ Blank, Christine (9 January 2014). "C-Stores Eating Your Lunch". QSR Magazine.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2019-03-30. Retrieved 2017-03-17.

Further reading

  • Beecher, C. E. and Beecher Stowe, H.: The American Woman's Home, 1869. The American Woman's Home
  • Cahill, Nicolas. Household and City Organization at Olynthus ISBN 0-300-08495-1
  • Cromley, Elizabeth Collins. The Food Axis: Cooking, Eating, and the Architecture of American Houses (University of Virginia Press; 2011); 288 pages; Explores the history of American houses through a focus on spaces for food preparation, cooking, consumption, and disposal.
  • Harrison, M.: The Kitchen in History, Osprey; 1972; ISBN 0-85045-068-3
  • Kinchin, Juliet and Aidan O'Connor, Counter Space: Design and the Modern Kitchen (MoMA: New York, 2011)
  • Lupton, E. and Miller, J. A.: The Bathroom, the Kitchen, and the Aesthetics of Waste, Princeton Architectural Press; 1996; ISBN 1-56898-096-5. The Bathroom, the Kitchen and the Aesthetics of Waste
  • Snodgrass, M. E.: Encyclopedia of Kitchen History; Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers; (November 2004); ISBN 1-57958-380-6

External links

  Media related to Kitchens at Wikimedia Commons

  • Photo History of the Kitchen 1860–1960

kitchen, other, uses, disambiguation, kitchen, room, part, room, used, cooking, food, preparation, dwelling, commercial, establishment, modern, middle, class, residential, kitchen, typically, equipped, with, stove, sink, with, cold, running, water, refrigerato. For other uses see Kitchen disambiguation A kitchen is a room or part of a room used for cooking and food preparation in a dwelling or in a commercial establishment A modern middle class residential kitchen is typically equipped with a stove a sink with hot and cold running water a refrigerator and worktops and kitchen cabinets arranged according to a modular design Many households have a microwave oven a dishwasher and other electric appliances The main functions of a kitchen are to store prepare and cook food and to complete related tasks such as dishwashing The room or area may also be used for dining or small meals such as breakfast entertaining and laundry The design and construction of kitchens is a huge market all over the world An early 20th century Art Nouveau style kitchen in RigaCommercial kitchens are found in restaurants cafeterias hotels hospitals educational and workplace facilities army barracks and similar establishments These kitchens are generally larger and equipped with bigger and more heavy duty equipment than a residential kitchen For example a large restaurant may have a huge walk in refrigerator and a large commercial dishwasher machine In some instances commercial kitchen equipment such as commercial sinks is used in household settings as it offers ease of use for food preparation and high durability 1 2 In developed countries commercial kitchens are generally subject to public health laws They are inspected periodically by public health officials and forced to close if they do not meet hygienic requirements mandated by law citation needed Contents 1 History 1 1 Middle Ages 1 2 Colonial America 1 3 Rationalization 2 Materials 3 Domestic kitchen planning 4 Other types 5 By region 5 1 China 5 2 Japan 5 3 India 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistoryMiddle Ages nbsp The roasting spit in this European Renaissance kitchen was driven automatically by a propeller the black cloverleaf like structure in the upper leftEarly medieval European longhouses had an open fire under the highest point of the building The kitchen area was between the entrance and the fireplace In wealthy homes there was typically more than one kitchen In some homes there were upwards of three kitchens The kitchens were divided based on the types of food prepared in them 3 The kitchen might be separate from the great hall due to the smoke from cooking fires and the chance the fires may get out of control 4 Few medieval kitchens survive as they were notoriously ephemeral structures 5 nbsp Kitchen interior c 1565Colonial America In Connecticut as in other colonies of New England during Colonial America kitchens were often built as separate rooms and were located behind the parlor and keeping room or dining room One early record of a kitchen is found in the 1648 inventory of the estate of a John Porter of Windsor Connecticut The inventory lists goods in the house over the kittchin and in the kittchin The items listed in the kitchen were silver spoons pewter brass iron arms ammunition hemp flax and other implements about the room 6 Rationalization A stepping stone to the modern fitted kitchen was the Frankfurt Kitchen designed by Margarete Schutte Lihotzky for social housing projects in 1926 This kitchen measured 1 9 by 3 4 metres 6 ft 3 in by 11 ft 2 in and was built to optimize kitchen efficiency and lower building costs The design was the result of detailed time motion studies and interviews with future tenants to identify what they needed from their kitchens Schutte Lihotzky s fitted kitchen was built in some 10 000 apartments in housing projects erected in Frankfurt in the 1930s 7 MaterialsThe Frankfurt Kitchen of 1926 was made of several materials depending on the application The modern built in kitchens of today use particle boards or MDF decorated with a variety of materials and finishes including wood veneers lacquer glass melamine laminate ceramic and eco gloss Very few manufacturers produce home built in kitchens from stainless steel Until the 1950s steel kitchens were used by architects but this material was displaced by the cheaper particle board panels sometimes decorated with a steel surface Domestic kitchen planningThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Beecher s model kitchen brought early ergonomic principles to the home nbsp The Frankfurt kitchen using Taylorist principlesDomestic or residential kitchen design is a relatively recent discipline The first ideas to optimize the work in the kitchen go back to Catharine Beecher s A Treatise on Domestic Economy 1843 revised and republished together with her sister Harriet Beecher Stowe as The American Woman s Home in 1869 Beecher s model kitchen propagated for the first time a systematic design based on early ergonomics The design included regular shelves on the walls ample workspace and dedicated storage areas for various food items Beecher even separated the functions of preparing food and cooking it altogether by moving the stove into a compartment adjacent to the kitchen Christine Frederick published from 1913 a series of articles on New Household Management in which she analyzed the kitchen following Taylorist principles of efficiency presented detailed time motion studies and derived a kitchen design from them Her ideas were taken up in the 1920s by architects in Germany and Austria most notably Bruno Taut Erna Meyer Margarete Schutte Lihotzky and Benita Otte who designed the first fitted kitchen for the Haus am Horn which was completed in 1923 8 Similar design principles were employed by Schutte Lihotzky for her famous Frankfurt kitchen designed for Ernst May s Romerstadt a social housing project in Frankfurt in 1927 While this work kitchen and variants derived from it were a great success for tenement buildings homeowners had different demands and did not want to be constrained by a 6 4 square metre 69 sq ft kitchen Nevertheless the kitchen design was mostly ad hoc following the whims of the architect In the U S the Small Homes Council since 1993 the Building Research Council of the School of Architecture of the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign was founded in 1944 with the goal to improve the state of the art in home building originally with an emphasis on standardization for cost reduction It was there that the notion of the kitchen work triangle was formalized the three main functions in a kitchen are storage preparation and cooking which Catharine Beecher had already recognized and the places for these functions should be arranged in the kitchen in such a way that work at one place does not interfere with work at another place the distance between these places is not unnecessarily large and no obstacles are in the way A natural arrangement is a triangle with the refrigerator the sink and the stove at a vertex each This observation led to a few common kitchen forms commonly characterized by the arrangement of the kitchen cabinets and sink stove and refrigerator A single file kitchen also known as a one way galley or a straight line kitchen has all of these along one wall the work triangle degenerates to a line This is not optimal but often the only solution if space is restricted This may be common in an attic space that is being converted into a living space or a studio apartment The double file kitchen or two way galley has two rows of cabinets on opposite walls one containing the stove and the sink the other the refrigerator This is the classical work kitchen and makes efficient use of space In the L kitchen the cabinets occupy two adjacent walls Again the work triangle is preserved and there may even be space for an additional table at a third wall provided it does not intersect the triangle A U kitchen has cabinets along three walls typically with the sink at the base of the U This is a typical work kitchen too unless the two other cabinet rows are short enough to place a table on the fourth wall A G kitchen has cabinets along three walls like the U kitchen and also a partial fourth wall often with a double basin sink at the corner of the G shape The G kitchen provides additional work and storage space and can support two work triangles A modified version of the G kitchen is the double L which splits the G into two L shaped components essentially adding a smaller L shaped island or peninsula to the L kitchen nbsp A block kitchenThe block kitchen or island is a more recent development typically found in open kitchens Here the stove or both the stove and the sink are placed where an L or U kitchen would have a table in a free standing island separated from the other cabinets In a closed room this does not make much sense but in an open kitchen it makes the stove accessible from all sides such that two persons can cook together and allows for contact with guests or the rest of the family since the cook does not face the wall any more Additionally the kitchen island s counter top can function as an overflow surface for serving buffet style meals or sitting down to eat breakfast and snacks In the 1980s there was a backlash against industrial kitchen planning and cabinets with people installing a mix of work surfaces and free standing furniture led by kitchen designer Johnny Grey and his concept of the unfitted kitchen Modern kitchens often have enough informal space to allow for people to eat in it without having to use the formal dining room Such areas are called breakfast areas breakfast nooks or breakfast bars if space is integrated into a kitchen counter Kitchens with enough space to eat in are sometimes called eat in kitchens During the 2000s flat pack kitchens were popular for people doing DIY renovating on a budget The flat pack kitchens industry makes it easy to put together and mix and matching doors bench tops and cabinets In flat pack systems many components can be interchanged In larger homes where the owners might have meals prepared by a household staff member the home may have a chef s kitchen This typically differs from a normal domestic kitchen by having multiple ovens possibly of different kinds for different kinds of cooking multiple sinks and warming drawers to keep food heated between cooking and service Other types nbsp A canteen kitchen nbsp A food technology training kitchen of Marling School in the United KingdomRestaurant and canteen kitchens found in hotels hospitals educational and workplace facilities army barracks and similar institutions are generally in developed countries subject to public health laws They are inspected periodically by public health officials and forced to close if they do not meet hygienic requirements mandated by law Canteen kitchens and castle kitchens were often the places where new technology was used first For instance Benjamin Thompson s energy saving stove an early 19th century fully closed iron stove using one fire to heat several pots was designed for large kitchens another thirty years passed before they were adapted for domestic use As of 2017 restaurant kitchens usually have tiled walls and floors and use stainless steel for other surfaces workbench but also door and drawer fronts because these materials are durable and easy to clean Professional kitchens are often equipped with gas stoves as these allow cooks to regulate the heat more quickly and more finely than electrical stoves Some special appliances are typical for professional kitchens such as large installed deep fryers steamers or a bain marie The fast food and convenience food trends have changed the manner in which restaurant kitchens operate Some of these type restaurants may only finish convenience food that is delivered to them or just reheat completely prepared meals At the most they may grill a hamburger or a steak But in the early 21st century c stores convenience stores are attracting greater market share by performing more food preparation on site and better customer service than some fast food outlets 9 The kitchens in railway dining cars have presented special challenges space is limited and personnel must be able to serve a great number of meals quickly Especially in the early history of railways this required flawless organization of processes in modern times the microwave oven and prepared meals have made this task much easier Kitchens aboard ships aircraft and sometimes railcars are often referred to as galleys On yachts galleys are often cramped with one or two burners fueled by an LP gas bottle Kitchens on cruise ships or large warships by contrast are comparable in every respect with restaurants or canteen kitchens On passenger airliners the kitchen is reduced to a pantry The crew s role is to heat and serve in flight meals delivered by a catering company An extreme form of the kitchen occurs in space e g aboard a Space Shuttle where it is also called the galley or the International Space Station The astronauts food is generally completely prepared dehydrated and sealed in plastic pouches before the flight The kitchen is reduced to a rehydration and heating module Outdoor areas where food is prepared are generally not considered kitchens even though an outdoor area set up for regular food preparation for instance when camping might be referred to as an outdoor kitchen An outdoor kitchen at a campsite might be placed near a well water pump or water tap and it might provide tables for food preparation and cooking using portable camp stoves Some campsite kitchen areas have a large tank of propane connected to burners so that campers can cook their meals Military camps and similar temporary settlements of nomads may have dedicated kitchen tents which have a vent to enable cooking smoke to escape In schools where home economics food technology previously known as domestic science or culinary arts are taught there are typically a series of kitchens with multiple equipment similar in some respects to laboratories solely for the purpose of teaching These consist of multiple workstations each with its own oven sink and kitchen utensils where the teacher can show students how to prepare food and cook it By regionChina nbsp A traditional 1920s Shanghainese shikumen style kitchen Shikumen Open House MuseumKitchens in China are called chufang 厨房 More than 3000 years ago the ancient Chinese used the ding for cooking food The ding was developed into the wok and pot used today In Chinese spiritual tradition a Kitchen God watches over the kitchen for the family and reports to the Jade Emperor annually about the family s behavior On Chinese New Year s Eve families would gather to pray for the kitchen god to give a good report to heaven and wish him to bring back good news on the fifth day of the New Year The most common cooking equipment in Chinese family kitchens and restaurant kitchens are woks steamer baskets and pots The fuel or heating resource was also an important technique to practice the cooking skills Traditionally Chinese were using wood or straw as the fuel to cook food A Chinese chef had to master flaming and heat radiation to reliably prepare traditional recipes Chinese cooking will use a pot or wok for pan frying stir frying deep frying or boiling Japan Main article Japanese kitchen nbsp Reconstruction of a 1832 Japanese kitchen in Dejima Nagasaki Japan Kitchens in Japan are called Daidokoro 台所 lit kitchen Daidokoro is the place where food is prepared in a Japanese house Until the Meiji era a kitchen was also called kamado かまど lit stove and there are many sayings in the Japanese language that involve kamado as it was considered the symbol of a house and the term could even be used to mean family or household similar to the English word hearth When separating a family it was called Kamado wo wakeru which means divide the stove Kamado wo yaburu lit break the stove means that the family was bankrupt India nbsp Preparation of bread in the kitchen of Gurudwara Bangla Sahib in New Delhi IndiaIn India a kitchen is called a Rasoi in Hindi Sanskrit or a Swayampak ghar in Marathi and there exist many other names for it in the various regional languages Many different methods of cooking exist across the country and the structure and the materials used in constructing kitchens have varied depending on the region For example in the north and central India cooking used to be carried out in clay ovens called chulha also chullha or chullah fired by wood coal or dried cow dung In households where members observed vegetarianism separate kitchens were maintained to cook and store vegetarian and non vegetarian food Religious families often treat the kitchen as a sacred space Indian kitchens are built on an Indian architectural science called vastushastra The Indian kitchen vastu is of utmost importance while designing kitchens in India Modern day architects also follow the norms of vastushastra while designing Indian kitchens across the world While many kitchens belonging to poor families continue to use clay stoves and the older forms of fuel the urban middle and upper classes usually have gas stoves with cylinders or piped gas attached Electric cooktops are rarer since they consume a great deal of electricity but microwave ovens are gaining popularity in urban households and commercial enterprises Indian kitchens are also supported by biogas and solar energy as fuel World s largest solar energy 10 kitchen is built in India In association with government bodies India is encouraging domestic biogas plants to support the kitchen system nbsp Outdoor kitchen in Takoradi GhanaSee also nbsp Cooking portal nbsp Food portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kitchens Cooking techniques Cuisine Dirty kitchen Hearth Hoosier cabinet Kitchen utensil Kitchen ventilation Universal designReferences The Pros and Cons of Using A Commercial Sink at Home Home Decor Expert and Home Decor Expert 2018 06 14 Archived from the original on 2019 03 30 Retrieved 2018 07 22 Vogel Carol 1982 12 09 The commercial kitchen at home pros and cons The New York Times Thompson Theodor 1992 Medieval Homes Sampson Lowel House Christie Neil Creighton Oliver Edgeworth Matt Hamerow Helena 2013 Transforming Townscapes From burgh to borough the archaeology of Wallingford AD 800 1400 The Society for Medieval Archaeology Monograph Series Oxford Society for Medieval Archaeology p 201 ISBN 978 1 909662 09 4 Creighton Oliver Christie Neil 2015 The Archaeology of Wallingford Castle a summary of the current state of knowledge in Keats Rohan K S B Christie Neil Roffe David eds Wallingford The Castle and the Town in Context BAR British Series Oxford Archaeopress p 13 ISBN 978 1 4073 1418 1 Trumbull J Hammond 1850 The Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut 1636 1776 Vol 1 Hartford Brown amp Parsons p 476 Rawsthorn Alice 2010 09 27 Modernist triumph in the kitchen New York Times Moore Rowan 2019 01 21 Bauhaus at 100 its legacy in five key designs The Guardian Retrieved 2019 01 21 Blank Christine 9 January 2014 C Stores Eating Your Lunch QSR Magazine World s Largest 38500 meal Solar Kitchen in India Archived from the original on 2019 03 30 Retrieved 2017 03 17 Further readingBeecher C E and Beecher Stowe H The American Woman s Home 1869 The American Woman s Home Cahill Nicolas Household and City Organization at Olynthus ISBN 0 300 08495 1 Cromley Elizabeth Collins The Food Axis Cooking Eating and the Architecture of American Houses University of Virginia Press 2011 288 pages Explores the history of American houses through a focus on spaces for food preparation cooking consumption and disposal Harrison M The Kitchen in History Osprey 1972 ISBN 0 85045 068 3 Kinchin Juliet and Aidan O Connor Counter Space Design and the Modern Kitchen MoMA New York 2011 Lupton E and Miller J A The Bathroom the Kitchen and the Aesthetics of Waste Princeton Architectural Press 1996 ISBN 1 56898 096 5 The Bathroom the Kitchen and the Aesthetics of Waste Snodgrass M E Encyclopedia of Kitchen History Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers November 2004 ISBN 1 57958 380 6External links nbsp Media related to Kitchens at Wikimedia Commons Photo History of the Kitchen 1860 1960 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kitchen amp oldid 1197944976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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