See photo Cork Screw. Posted by Maura in Tableware, Cutlery & Crockery in Aigburth. 13 May 2020
See full version: Tableware for Sale in Old Swan, Merseyside
See photo Cork Screw. Posted by Maura in Tableware, Cutlery & Crockery in Aigburth. 13 May 2020
5 Victorian cranberry glasses 2 glasses slightly taller and small chip to underneath stand
2 serving platters, one red, glass, 36.5cm diameter, the other gold, lacquerware, 33cm diameter. Both used but still very useable and presentable. In good condition, some slight paint chips (specks) in the red one Large red platter is £14 Gold lac
Never used Orla Kiely large casserole dish . Posted by Ruth in Tableware, Dinnerware & Crockery in Newton-le-Willows. 31 August 2021 more
Handmade resin tray and 4 coasters. Clear set resin with silver leaf and flowers, finished with a silver painted edge. I can make these in different colours and designs but this is one I've had made for a while so putting it up for sale. Any enquir
New rose gold champagne flutes in bucket from next. Collection only please.
But, for all of the importance that personal knives held in Western culture, they were eventually cut out of European dining, replaced by duller, more impersonal tools placed on the table for no one in particular. Legend has it that, during one royal French dinner, King Louis XII’s chief adviser was horrified by the sight of a dinner guest picking at his teeth with the point of his knife—and demanded all his knives be created blunt. The next king, Louis XIV, followed suit, issuing a nationwide moratorium on the creation of sharp, pointed knives.
During the Middle Ages, forks weren’t really part of the picture in Europe. Until the 17th century, sharp, dagger-like knives were used to slice, tear, pierce, and poke whatever was on the plate—from soft cheese to sturdier meat. The first knives to touch meat dishes, in particular, typically belonged to the carver, a professional whose prestige surpassed even that of the cook. According to Bee Wilson, food writer, historian, and author of Consider the Fork, carvers had their own sets of specialized knives, which they selected based on the weapon with which the animal was hunted.
The initial carving and serving of the beast was deemed to be so important, it was given an office in court, known as the Carvership. In Consider the Fork, Wilson includes an eerie 16th-century book excerpt detailing the somber “terms” of an English carver.
Tucked away in a sheath and strung to one’s belt, a personal dagger-like knife was a quotidian accessory to the medieval European outfit. Though it could be used as a defensive weapon, its primary purpose was as an eating utensil. One would just as soon leave the house without shoes as walk around without a knife strung from the girdle. In fact, it was so habitually worn, Wilson says, that it was often easy to forget it was there. According to her, one sixth-century text “reminded monks to detach their knives from their belts before they went to bed, so they didn’t cut themselves in the night.” more
But knives weren’t just for professionals. In fact, while carvers made preliminary cuts, broke up large bones, and arranged the dish, the rest of the slicing was up to the diners. This was hardly an odd ask at the time—almost all food was prepared so that it could be picked up by hand, spoon, or the pointed tip of one’s knife—a tool almost everyone had on hand.
In Medieval Europe, all dinner parties were BYO-knife. Except for the occasionally-provided spoon, guests were responsible for bringing their own cutlery to the table. Showing up without a knife would be an awkward, if not outrageous, predicament—one that could leave the ill-prepared diner both hungry and vulnerable. But it probably never happened. Personal eating knives were en vogue.
Pioneer PL-J210 Turntable with new Belt, also on collection, the Buyer has choice from 63 Vinyls (27 Pop LPs, 29 Classic LPs and 7 mixed 45s) all for 50p each
Verona Full Back Sofa Collection *5 Seater Corner *3+2 Seater *Armchair *Cuddle Chair *Footstool Foam Cushions Full UK Fire Proof Nationwide Delivery Sofa Dimensions: *6 Seater Corner 255 x 255 x 90 cm * 3 Seater 196 x 90 x 90 cm 2 Seater 1 more
G plan Mahogany sideboard in great condition. Delivery can be arranged, within 15mile radius
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