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[C380]Chafing Dishes For Sale
by Debra Haydel, Deb

Planning your next big get-together? Whether it's a birthday bash, church fundraiser or holiday gathering--serving buffet-style is the way to go. When setting up a buffet table, chafing dishes are the best way to keep food hot. They allow a large number of guests to serve themselves while the host can mix and mingle without having to worry about food on the stove or in the oven. Even if you don't entertain frequently, purchasing or renting chafing dishes can't be beat.

Chafing dishes, sometimes called steam pans, are simply large serving dishes in which food is kept warm (or cold). The different types of chafing dishes consist of a frame or wire rack, a water pan, a food pan and a cover. Water in the pan is used to conduct the heat which maintains the food at a proper serving temperature. The heat source is sterno or an electrical heating element placed underneath the water pan.

Oval or round, ornately decorated chafing dishes, would be perfect for an elegant or formal gathering. They are generally made of silver and sit on a platform with tapered legs. They can be used with sterno or a heating element and are available to rent from party rental stores, or for purchase at department stores or restaurant and catering supply outlets.

The most widely used chafing dishes are long and rectangular in shape and made of stainless steel. The water pan is placed on a wire or chrome rack and will hold up to two half-sized food pans. Rent these from a party rental store or purchase at a party supply store, department store or restaurant and catering supply outlet.

Disposable chafing dishes are the least expensive and are designed like the stainless steel set-up. They consist of a large aluminum water pan and one or two smaller aluminum food pans. The wire racks are somewhat thinner. These are sometimes called caterers' racks and are usually found at party supply stores, discount stores or restaurant and catering supply outlets.

For the home buffet table, stainless steel and aluminum rectangular food pan sizes range from 20 x 12 x 4 (full size) to 10 x 12 x 2 (half size). Water pans are sized to fit and the wire racks are usually full-sized. Other chafing dishes vary in size.

HOW TO USE

The first thing to remember is that chafing dishes cannot be used to bring foods up to serving temperature. Food must first be at the proper temperature before adding to the pan. Stainless steel and aluminum food pans can be used for cooking and/or heating the food in the oven. The water pan is placed in the wire rack and filled with HOT water to a level that is close to but not touching the food pan. The sterno is then lit and placed under the water pan. The resulting steam will maintain the temperature of food that is already at serving temperature. The water pan should be checked periodically to make sure the water level is maintained and the food should be stirred occasionally to evenly distribute the heat and prevent scorching. Using a lid or cover will keep food moist.

Chafing dishes will also keep cold foods cold. Fill the water pan with cold water and ice and of course, don't light the fuel!

A WORD ABOUT STERNO

Sterno fuel is a formulation of denatured alcohol, water and gel and is perfectly safe when used as directed. It comes in small cans and is generally available from hardware stores and party supply stores. The sterno wick is lit and placed underneath the water pan. A full-sized water pan may require two sterno cans placed at opposite ends, particularly if the food is dense (such as pasta and cheese). The flame is blue in color and an 8-oz. can burns for about 2 to 2 1/2 hours. The fuel can be extinguished and relit.

QUICK SAFETY TIPS

-DO NOT LEAVE AN OPEN FLAME UNATTENDED

-Open the pan cover carefully, to avoid burns from the escaping steam.

-Do not use anything but sterno-type fuel in the burner.

-Properly working chafing dishes keep hot food at a safe temperature of 140 degrees or above to avoid bacterial growth. Ideally, temperature should not exceed 160 degrees to avoid overcooking

Chafing dishes make your buffet table look professional, appetizing and attractive. They also allow you to cook food ahead of time and place in the dishes just before your guests arrive--leaving you free to mingle with your guests. Yes, chafing dishes are a party hosts' dream come true.

Happy Cooking

Debra Haydel


Chafing dishes are Synonymous with Luxury
The extravagant banquets of ancient Greece and Rome depended on them for drama at the table; the ruins of Pompeii show the evidence of their status.? Some of their aura rose from their association with the noble host, himself preparing a delicacy for the entertainment and delectation of his honored guests, as he proved, at the same time, his cultural sophistication and wealth.? With the passage of centuries, very little has changed.? Copper, silver, bronze, and iron, valuable metals in their early development, continued in use even as they became more common, because they worked so well.? And so to this day, the erudite mistress of the dining table may tote out her best fondue service (an adapted chafing dish, after all) and impress her guests with both her savvy and her expensive, fine imported chocolate.
Chafing dishes, often connected to elegant entertaining, have also remained in the batteries de cuisine because they worked so well.? During all those centuries of cooking near raging fire, it was a major challenge to maintain a low gentle heat.? Certainly there was no knob with which to turn down the fire, and even small piles of coals on the hearth required constant bending and replenishing.? When the lady of the well-appointed?kitchen turned her hand to the fancy dishes that made her reputation, it is likely that she moved away from the raging flames to a nearby brazier.? These more easily controlled ?stoves? were often self-contained cooking units, each with its own chamber for coals, and over which a small pan rested on gratings or prongs.? The heat it produced was clearly mild, and its place on the kitchen table, or sometimes at waist height on its own stand, was far more comfortable-work height.? Some appear to have been made just to hold the coals themselves, while others included the suspended pan.
Recipes that called for braziers, chafing dishes, or even ?a dish of coles? [sic] were often required in early cooking manuscripts, whether in the private recipe collections or in household libraries of the privileged.? The foods themselves could have been sweet or savory: For example, a seventeenth and eighteenth century Welsh Rabbit used one to melt the cheese mixture; the slow gentle heat also benefited stews and fricassee's.? In a dish called ?French Pottage,? sippets (toast triangles) were softened in warmed wine just before the final presentation.? And when candying violets or burrage blossoms they were indispensable.? Thus is little wonder that chafing dishes were listed as the more valuable cookery possessions in wills or estate inventories (where they were assessed for inheritance taxes after the death of the head of household) In 1642 Henry Roffe, Ipswich, Massachusetts, directed that ?If any of my children dye then that porcon shalbe equally divided betweene my wife & the rest of my children I doe give unto my wife one great brasse pott and one great brasse pann, and a great brasse posnett and a chafing dish and five pewter platters.? And when he subsequently died, his inventory listed the chafing dish and a posnet (saucepan) together as worth 5 shillings.?
Chafing dishes and braziers were made of a thin metal, often brass or copper, spun or pressed or hammered; the pots suspended over them were similarly constructed for lightweight and so as to permit sensitive heat transmission.? The ?dish of coles,? closely related, was more often used as a drying implement.? A few coals, or embers, were held under the upper chamber, which was more enclosed, boxy, and suited to slow dehydration of dried fruits or candied flowers...?to candy flowers in theyr naturall culler,? ?set them A drying in a sive, set in an oven,? or when candying violets, ?then put in a box & keep them to dry in a stove.?? Their integral place in early American cookery is revealed by Amelia Simmons (1796) who used one to preserve strawberries.? As may be evident, these chafing dishes, braziers, and dishes of coals were always used in the kitchen, were considered to be pots, and were not appropriate at the dining table. Their high position was derived from the fact that the ingredients were costly (especially the sugar, perhaps imported wines), that they required exceptional skill that one might expect in an ordinary farm family or from a hired kitchen girl, and that they frequently prepared and preserved dishes that could not easily be found or eaten out of season.
However, the growth of cities changed this, and by the end of the nineteenth century, chafing dishes took on a new cast.? The cook stove had made it possible to work at waist height over gentle heat by simply sliding the pot to the far end of the stovetop, away from the firebox area underneath.? But now the glowing coals of earlier chafing dishes were replaced by small alcohol burners under the pan, sometimes wickless, but sometimes with wicks that could be adjusted to vary the temperature.? Some rigs offered the use of a pan of water underneath the cooking compartment, a la bain marie; these could not only cook very gently but also kept food warm on a sideboard or buffet.
Late nineteenth-century urban middle class women now had more time and interest in delicacies, and the price of sugar had dropped considerably.? With more leisure they entertained more, often with luncheons, teas, and suppers.? No longer an exotic adjunct of the hearth, the chafing dish reverted to the ancient role of charming one's guests by displaying expertise and offering flattering, personalized efforts.? ??????
A new genre of cookbooks devoted to the chafing dish was now published, some promotional in nature and distributed by the manufacturers of elaborate silver sets or their copies in copper, nickel, and brass. Others were written by trendy cookbook authors on the cutting edge of table fashion.? Together they guided newcomers to the urban middle class, instructing them on how to use the new equipment in the light and dainty cuisine just then finding favor in new social rituals.? And thus were developed such new recipes as cherries jubilee, deviled eggs, creamed salmon or chicken, or kidneys in mushrooms and wine.
In the midst of meat-and-potatoes home cooking now rose a group of cookbooks that clearly connected chafing dish specialties, other dainty innovations of the time (salads, finger sandwiches, sweets and relishes), and new meal patterns (teas, luncheons, suppers).? Just look at the titles and their dates, keeping in mind that no such cooking had previously existed.
?????????? 1890;??[anonymous] On the Chafing Dish, A Word for Sunday Night Teas offered a selection of savory dishes that could be put together easily and served graciously at the table. The author noted that ?The few receipts for the chafing Dish I have found successful in making the informal Sunday night tea a meal much to be desired.? All of them are dishes simply and easily prepared by the ?? housekeeper herself- or himself.?? Its ?Epilogue?added salad choices.?
????????? 1900;????????? [ca.].? Christine Terhune Herrick, The Chafing Dish Supper.
????????? 1902;????????? Fannie Merritt Farmer, Chafing Dish Possibilities.? Included some history of the utensil, and non-chafing dish preparations such as fashionable sweets, relishes, and candies.
????????? 1905;????????? Frank Scholesser, The Cult of the Chafing Dish.
????????? 1906;????????? Chef? Louis Muckensturm, Louis? Salads & Chafing Dishes.
????????? 1912; ???????? Alice L James, The Chafing Dish, Together With Directions For The Preparation of Sandwiches.
????????? 1912; ????????? Mrs. S. T. Rorer, How To Use a Chafing Dish.
????????? 1912; Gesine Lemcke, Chafing Dish Recipes: included salads, canapes, sweet desserts and chafing dish luncheon menus.
????????? 1913;????????? A. C. Hoff, The Chafing Dish Specialties.
A similar series of works had been targeted specially at bachelors, the bon vivants who might be found ?In Clubs, Yachting Circles, Army and Navy, and The Dreams of Fair Women?Heaven Bless ?m ?? (Deshler Welch,?The Bachelor and The Chafing Dish, 1896).
And so on.
Needless to say, such an audience sought the equipment necessary to make the right impression.? In 1892, the Jewett Chafing Dish promotions portrayed a decorative utensil available in silver plate, nickel plate, or polished copper.? It burned alcohol, and boasted that it had no ?wick to get out of order.?? Four years later, the Gorham Manufacturing Company used the standard cookbook format, filled with illustrations, as a catalog of enticing designs.
In 1906, Sternau's small promotional booklet of chafing dish recipes described a more complicated set of equipment.? It declared that ?the Sterno-Inferno Burner, which is the most important adjunct of all, is really a part of the Chafing Dish.?? The complete set included a special spoon, fork, skimmer, egg poacher, toaster, omelet or chop dish, chafing-dish tray, and covered flagon (for wine, cream, etc.).?????????
And finally, the chafing dish made its way into popular culture, a sure sign that it was well known, in the traditional song, The Eddystone Light:
My father was the keeper of the Eddystone light
And he slept with a mermaid one fine night
Out of this union there came three
A porpoise and a porgy and the other was me!
Yo ho ho, the wind blows free,
Oh for the life on the rolling sea!
One night, as I was a-trimming the glim
Singing a verse from the evening hymn
I head a voice cry out an ?Ahoy!?
And there was my mother, sitting on a buoy.
Yo ho ho, the wind blows free,
Oh for the life on the rolling sea!

?Oh, what has become of my children three??
My mother then inquired of me.
One's on exhibit as a talking fish
The other was served in a chafing dish.
Yo ho ho, the wind blows free,
Oh for the life on the rolling sea!
And onward through the twentieth century, the chafing dish conferred status and importance on a meal, and continued to be, in one form or another (think fondue pots), one of the standard ?important? gifts at middle-class weddings.??
This article was republished with the permission of the author ? Alice Ross. Alice Ross brings 25 years as a dedicated food professional teacher, writer, researcher and collector to her Hearth Studios, at which she teaches workshops in various aspects of hearth, woodstove and brick oven cookery. She has served as consultant in historical food for such noted museums as Virginia's Colonial Williamsburg and The Lowell National Historical Park in Massachusetts. Ross wrote her doctoral dissertation in food history at the State University at Stony Brook. Currently, she is involved in a major kitchen report on Rock Hall Museum, a 1770's Georgian mansion on Long Island. Her web site is www.aliceross.com

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Both Debra Haydel & Kathy Amiel are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Debra Haydel has sinced written about articles on various topics from Cooking Tips. . Debra Haydel's top article generates over 2900 views. to your Favourites.

Kathy Amiel has sinced written about articles on various topics from Cooking Tips. If you would like to purchase Chafers, Chafing dishes or Braziers, visit www.AbleKitchen.com, and see over 40,000 restaurant and kitchen supplies includingbakeware, cookware, dinnerware, flatware, serveware, and restaurant equipment.. Kathy Amiel's top article generates over 2900 views. to your Favourites.
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