Fork, Knife, and Spoon Spoon, Knife, and Fork There was a time when people of the Western world dined without that useful set of tools, the knife, fork, and spoon. Families did not have matching implements to set at the place of each person at the dining table as families normally do in modern times.
A knife with one sharp edge and a comfortable handle designed just for cutting meat and vegetables or spreading butter and jam was unknown to them. They did not have a fork with four pointed prongs curved conveniently to spear food and carry it to the mouth. Nor did they have spoons of different sizes for soup, dessert, tea, and coffee.
Until late in the 1600s, when Benjamin Franklin's father was a young man, Americans and Europeans nearly always used their fingers at meals as people in the Near East still do. The steel daggers they carried for defense cut their meat, and round-bowled spoons with a pencillike handle helped them eat stews and soup. This hard-to-hold spoon was called a table spoon to distinguish it from the long spoons that stirred things in the kitchen. Few people had small forks with which to eat. Most people thought that forks belonged in the kitchen or at the serving table to hold meat when it was being cut. These short-handled forks with their two long, sharp tines, or prongs, were called flesh forks.
Knives and spoons were among mankind's earliest inventions. In prehistoric times knives of flintstone, shells, and bones helped men kill and cut up animals for food and scrape their hides to make coverings that kept out the cold and rain. Spoons, made first of shells and later of wood and bone, helped scoop up liquids and soft food. In the Iron Age, when men discovered how to refine the ores they dug from the ground, they made knives and spoons of iron. Before 1350 BC the Hittites in the land that is now Turkey made iron spoons with shallow bowls and straight handles. About 1200 BC the Egyptians made similar spoons of ivory, slate, and wood. They made spoons also of animal horns that they softened in water and molded into shape. The ancient Greeks and Romans made knives and spoons of bronze. Some of these bronze implements had handles shaped like banisters. Others had plain handles with ends like the hoof of a deer. In the Middle Ages, Europeans made spoons of wood, tin, or silver with handles ending in a knob and later, in the 16th century, with handles ending in figures of saints or other religious figures.
The idea of using forks to aid in eating was introduced from Byzantium into Greece about AD 1100 and traveled northward into Italy and France for the next four centuries. England did not adopt the custom until the 15th century and then only for women when they ate certain foods such as preserved fruits. But in the late 1500s, when Queen Elizabeth I was reigning in England, a few well-to-do people began to carry a case fitted with a small pointed metal knife, a round straight-handled spoon, and a small fork with two long metal tines to use wherever they ate a meal. A century and a half later, wealthy Englishmen and American merchants and planters began to use forks along with spoons and knives at the table. Finally, in about 1750 middle-class Americans did, too.
It was about 1700 that dagger-like table knife blades gave way to those rounded at the end. The pencil-like handles of table spoons were abandoned for those flat and widened at the end. The long tines of forks were shortened to 1 1/2 inches (3.8 centimeters) in length and sometimes, particularly in Europe, came in threes and fours instead of in twos. Handles of knives and forks were made with bone or horn instead of metal. Ordinary spoons were made of wood, horn, pewter, copper, brass, wood, or latten, an inexpensive metal somewhat like brass. The best were of silver or even of gold.
About 1730 spoon bowls became egg shaped, and the style of their handle ends changed from flat and broad to spatula-like. The spatulate ends turned upward. Handles had a long rib on the front, a new style known in the 20th century as midrib, or Hanoverian, after the English kings who came from Hanover in Germany. Just before the American Revolution, spoon handle ends changed again. This time they became rounded, oval, or pointed and downturned in a style that in the 20th century is called Old English. Craftsmen engraved delicate designs and the owner's initials on the front and stamped their own name or initials on the back. Knives and forks left their straight handles behind for new ones that were curved like pistol handles.
After the Revolutionary War silversmiths made knives, forks, and spoons to match each other and sold them in sets of six or twelve. Several new kinds then came to the table. Among them were butter servers and fish servers; mustard spoons and salt spoons; large gravy spoons for serving the juices of large roasts of meat; large and small ladles for use in punch bowls and gravy and sauce boats; tea and coffee spoons for the drinks that had been brought from the Orient and the Near East in the 1600s; dessert knives, forks, and spoons; and carving knives and forks to be used at the dinner table.
At the beginning of the 19th century spoon handles looked a bit like violins, or fiddles, in a style that the French had begun 50 years earlier. Pewter and silver forks also had fiddle-like handles. Knife handles, usually of bone, horn, ivory, or porcelain, once again were straight. By 1820 or so, with the Industrial Revolution well under way, power-driven machinery brought a new era. Machines could stamp a piece of silver or pewter, or even of a hard pewter known as britannia, into the fiddle shape and with the same blow raise a shell, thread border, or other decoration onto the front and back. Machine stamping was far easier and quicker than hand hammering. Consequently much more flatware was produced. Designers patented their ideas for handle decoration in the United States patent office and from 1850 on turned out dozens of flatware patterns.
The buyers of the new silver admired its machine regularity and wanted a separate implement for every table purpose. Following the Civil War in America, manufacturers pleased them by making such new forms as luncheon knives and forks; cake and pie knives; salad, pickle, olive, and sardine forks; and soup, egg, sugar, ice cream, jam, and children's spoons. Silver was the favorite material. It was expensive, but, when manufacturers used an inexpensive white metal and coated it with silver, nearly everyone could afford flatware that looked like silver. Objects made of the new electroplated nickel silver were stamped ERNS to distinguish them from objects made of sterling silver, that is, of silver that is 92.5 percent pure.
By the end of the century the designs that decorated the new forms—like the designs of furniture, fabrics, and wallpapers of this late Victorian period—were copied from Roman sculpture, the Italian Renaissance, the scrolls and shells of the rococo 18th century, and Gothic churches. The designs also copied the flowers and leaves of nature.
In the latter half of the 20th century, when people no longer crowd their tables with food as they did earlier, manufacturers make fewer pieces of flatware. A standard five-piece place setting and a few serving pieces are the rule. Stainless steel is more popular than silver or plated silver. Designs derive from 18th-century classical, 19th-century fiddle, and 20th-century art nouveau, art deco, and Scandinavian.
2006-06-29 08:40:06
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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