Pasta/Macaroni Servers

Do not post mark questions here.
Post Reply
Granmaa
co-admin
Posts: 1734
Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2006 9:32 am
Location: London
Contact:

Pasta/Macaroni Servers

Post by Granmaa »

This question is addressed primarily to American members. I would like to find out more about silver pasta servers or macaroni servers, which I believe were far more common in America than they were in Britain. The only literature I have on the subject is the Jan/Feb 1992 edition of an American magazine called Silver.
Does anyone have an example of a pasta server, or a catalogue listing and describing them?

Miles
dognose
Site Admin
Posts: 62319
Joined: Thu Dec 29, 2005 12:53 pm
Location: England

Re: Pasta/Macaroni Servers

Post by dognose »

Image

The brief description accompanying this image:

Macaroni, Spaghetti, or Fried Oyster Servers

'As pratical as they are difficult to locate are these large-toothed, or notched, servers. They are unsurpassable for serving pasta dishes, many entrées, cutlets or scallopini, stuffed pork chops, fish, and many vegetable dishes'.


Source: 'Silver Flatware Dictionary' by Richard F. Osterberg and Betty Smith.

Trev.
dragonflywink
co-admin
Posts: 2500
Joined: Wed Jun 22, 2005 10:42 am
Location: Orlando, Florida
Contact:

Re: Pasta/Macaroni Servers

Post by dragonflywink »

Some of my books on American silver show examples of macaroni servers, however, at this point, I'd have to dig into some boxes to find them.

~Cheryl

U.S. Patent #15266, issued on July 1, 1856 to Boston silversmith Albert Lamb Lincoln, assigned to Lincoln & Foss:
Image

Image

1905 catalog page, Towle Old Colonial (1895):
Image

1905 catalog page, Towle Georgian (1898):
Image

1905 catalog page, Towle Old Newbury (1900):
Image

1911 catalog page, Reed & Barton Francis I (1907):
Image
Granmaa
co-admin
Posts: 1734
Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2006 9:32 am
Location: London
Contact:

Re: Pasta/Macaroni Servers

Post by Granmaa »

Thank you both for your replies.
The article I mentioned said that the American use of the word macaroni includes pasta made into tubes, ribbbons, sticks and strands. Is this still the definition used in America? The British usage is for pasta small tubes only.

Miles
dragonflywink
co-admin
Posts: 2500
Joined: Wed Jun 22, 2005 10:42 am
Location: Orlando, Florida
Contact:

Re: Pasta/Macaroni Servers

Post by dragonflywink »

Heh, have to say, as a small child in the 1960s, any flat pasta was a noodle, any long round pasta was spaghetti, and most other forms of pasta, including the classic elbow shape were called macaroni (not including the beloved ravioli and tortellini). But so far as I recall, when I was a bit older, we generally called it "pasta" and identified it by shape, with "macaroni" being the small curved tubes. All that said, believe that the terms "macaroni" and "pasta" were pretty much interchangeable both here and in Great Britain in the 19th century, with "macaroni" appearing to be the more common, and seeming to gradually be used more often for the tubular forms. Kind of interesting stuff, but don't believe I'll delve any further.....

~Cheryl

Excerpt from an 1858 article on Macaroni-Making in Charles Dickens' Household Words (British):
(if by some remote chance anyone is interested, the entire article can be posted)
Image

1857 excerpt from Emerson's Magazine (American):
Image

1886 excerpt from Mrs. Rorer's Philadelphia Cook Book (American):
Image

1901 article in The Pharmaceutical Journal (British):
Image

1902 excerpt from Practical Cooking and Serving (American):
Image

1913 illustration from The New Cookery showing Macaroni with Kidney Beans (American):
Image
Granmaa
co-admin
Posts: 1734
Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2006 9:32 am
Location: London
Contact:

Re: Pasta/Macaroni Servers

Post by Granmaa »

Wow! That's that question dealt with. It was also interesting to read in one of those snippets that pasta was considered a luxury among the upper classes. Clearly that is why we get these silver servers.

Miles
dragonflywink
co-admin
Posts: 2500
Joined: Wed Jun 22, 2005 10:42 am
Location: Orlando, Florida
Contact:

Re: Pasta/Macaroni Servers

Post by dragonflywink »

A bit more:

Osterberg's Sterling Silver Flatware for Dining Elegance (1994) notes the similarity between macaroni, entree and fried oyster servers, noting, "Again, the manufacturers have created a labeling problem, as some refer to the servers as macaroni spoons or macaroni knives or even as fried oyster servers.". Not uncommon for old silver catalogs and advertisements to show the same item with different names, marketing them under whatever description might increase sales.

Dr. Hood's Tiffany Silver Flatware 1845-1905, When Dining Was an Art (1999) (a fabulous book for anyone with a Victorian-era flatware fetish) shows three different macaroni servers/forks by Tiffany, including one with long wide tines at the end rather than on the side, noting, "Tiffany made two types of macaroni forks (confirmed by blueprint)." Additionally shown are two by Gorham that he describes as "multipurpose servers" or as an "entrée/fried oyster/macaroni server". He also references the patent below, "Some of the old forms of macaroni servers are still being made. Tiffany now offers a variation of Harding's macaroni spoon as a pasta server in its Padova pattern, designed by Elsa Peretti in 1984.".

~Cheryl


U.S. Design Patent #D1906, issued on March 1, 1864 to Boston silversmith Webb Harding:
Image

Image~Cheryl
Granmaa
co-admin
Posts: 1734
Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2006 9:32 am
Location: London
Contact:

Re: Pasta/Macaroni Servers

Post by Granmaa »

Having seen all these American pieces I'm now not convinced by my English item. Any suggestions as to what it might be for?

Miles

Image
Granmaa
co-admin
Posts: 1734
Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2006 9:32 am
Location: London
Contact:

Re: Pasta/Macaroni Servers

Post by Granmaa »

I believe the above item to be a melon knife/fork.

Miles
dragonflywink
co-admin
Posts: 2500
Joined: Wed Jun 22, 2005 10:42 am
Location: Orlando, Florida
Contact:

Re: Pasta/Macaroni Servers

Post by dragonflywink »

From Small Antique Silverware, by G. Bernard Hughes (1957):

Image

~Cheryl
Post Reply

Return to “General Questions”