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Tuesday 15 August 2017

A bit o’ butter



This is a piece of eighteenth century porcelain. Made in Lowestoft round about 1770, the cobalt design has clearly run into the lead glaze but with Lowestoft that is not particularly unusual. Firing these things was an art and some firings turned out better than others but everything had to be sold if at all possible. I have included a 50 pence piece to show how small it is. The capacity is about 50ml.

What is it though? Sometimes such pieces are described as cream boats, sometimes as butter boats. Georgians were fond of cream and melted butter so perhaps they were used for both or maybe something else entirely.

If they were used for melted butter then the question of cleaning them afterwards may be worth a thought, especially if we bear in mind the greasy nature of butter, the lack of modern detergents plus the high cost of porcelain even with that runny design. It was expensive and could not be treated roughly.

In which case a servant would never give a porcelain butter boat to the kitchen cat to lick off the greasy remains of congealed butter. That idea would probably work as a cleaning technique but the risk of breakage is probably too high.

How about this possibility? After the nobs have finished their meal, a servant wipes the butter boat clean with a piece of bread, eats the bread then finishes off by licking the butter boat clean. A quick wipe with a kitchen rag and back on the shelf it goes – job done. 

That’s antiques stimulating the imagination.

4 comments:

Sam Vega said...

No, I think there's more mileage in the animal cleaning agent. A wooden "cat clamp" which holds the item steady while tiddles does her work. Or train a dog to do it gently. Retreivers would have a head start. Terriers need not apply. Or the servant wipes the jug out with the cat's tail - or, better still, a whole kitten if one is available - and then replaces the jug on the shelf while the cat gets on with business.

Demetrius said...

One possibility is a fabric that is little used or known at the present. One is "shoddy" which would do the job. We should be aware that the kind of chemical purity we expect today was not the case in the past.

James Higham said...

A creamer, yes.

A K Haart said...

Sam - or a mouse could be used to wipe it out. Afterwards a buttery mouse would be a real treat for the cat.

Demetrius - I'm sure you are right about their notion of cleanliness as opposed to ours.

James - possibly, but it wouldn't hold much.