The furniture for a kitchen
should not be cumbersome, and should be so made and dressed as to be easily
cleaned. There should be plenty of cupboards, and each for the sake of order,
should be devoted to a special purpose. Cupboards with sliding doors are much
superior to closets. They should be placed upon casters so as to be easily
moved, as they, are thus not only more convenient, but admit of more thorough
cleanliness.
Cupboards used for the storage of
food should be well ventilated; otherwise, they furnish choice conditions for
the development of mold and germs. Movable cupboards may be ventilated by means
of openings in the top, and doors covered with very fine wire gauze which will
admit the air but keep out flies and dust.
For ordinary kitchen uses, small
tables of suitable height on easy-rolling casters, and with zinc tops, are the
most convenient and most easily kept clean. It is quite as well that they be
made without drawers, which are too apt to become receptacles for a
heterogeneous mass of rubbish.
It is desirable to have some
handy place for keeping articles which are frequently required for use. An
arrangement similar to that represented in the accompanying cut may be made at
very small expense. It may be also an advantage to arrange small shelves about
and above the range, on which may be kept various articles necessary for
cooking purposes.
One of the most indispensable
articles of furnishing for a well-appointed kitchen, is a sink. However, a sink
must be properly constructed and well cared for, or it is likely to become a
source of great danger to the health of the inmates of the household. The sink should if possible stand out from
the wall, so as to allow free access to all sides of it for the sake of cleanliness.
The pipes and fixtures should be selected and placed by a competent plumber.
Great pains should be taken to
keep the pipes clean and well disinfected. Refuse of all kinds should be kept
out. Thoughtless housekeepers and careless domestics often allow greasy water
and bits of table waste to find their way into the pipes.
Drain pipes usually have a bend,
or trap, through which water containing no sediment flows freely; but the
melted grease which often passes into the pipes mixed with hot water, becomes
cooled and solid as it descends, adhering to the pipes, and gradually
accumulating until the drain is blocked, or the water passes through very
slowly. A grease-lined pipe is a hotbed for disease germs.
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