In New Zealand a meat safe was just called a "safe" and vented to the outside of the coldest wall in the house. We had one at the far end of of our walk-in pantry. We certainly kept a cold leg of leftover mutton in there, after we had eaten one meat of it roasted.There was a double swung door on the kitchen end that was fantastic. I have never seen it in any other NZ house, not many of the things mentioned above.
Forty years ago I taught myself how to bake bread. My Dad gave me a wood bread box. I still have it on my kitchen counter. I am now 65 years old. Thanks Dad.
We have a house that was built in 1930. When we remodeled our kitchen about 15 yrs ago, we modified it to include a breakfast nook! One of my favorite areas of the house now.
I have one from the 50's, the cans of today are not as they were then and most times now, my wall mount can opener won't work on the newer cans. In Joy
In the southern U.S., those cabinets with wire-mesh walls are generally called “pie safes.” I never heard of keeping meat in one, though maybe that would work on a cooler climate. People kept baked goods, like pies, cakes, and cookies in pie safes. The mesh screening was to keep insects (and pets) out. Meat was kept in an ice box- a metal or metal-lined box with a separate compartment for ice (ice was delivered daily). If you didn’t have an icebox (or ice), you’d hang your meat in the coolest place available- maybe a cellar, or a dark back room.
I cared for a 99 year old in her home who cared for 3 sons and 3 adopted sons. She was a nurse in an early war during this time.. She said she'd buy 10 pounds of hamburger meat and covered it with a cloth, and kept it inside a dark pantry.
We had a meat safe in UK the pantry was down a few steps so lower and on the coldest side of the house. No fridges in those days but no central heating either. Did none of us any harm at all but to be honest food was cooked fresh daily and we actually ate very well now in 80's so it couldn't have been so bad. No upset stomach either😊
They probably re-purposed them when refrigerators arrived simply be removing the hook and installing a few shelves. And what a good idea it is. A place to put baked goods fresh out of the oven to allow it time to cool without becoming an attraction for insects and animals.
In the winter we often use the balcony (enclosed) to keep big items that would take up too much room in the fridge, like a pie or a cake, a lasagna or a frying pan full of something.
My 1925 bungalow has a built-in spice cupboard that I love using. But the OUTSTANDING feature is the laundry chute from the first floor into the basement. What a time and energy saver! Safer too than carrying a bundle of clothes in front of you, where you can't see the stairs.
Never hear mention of a laundry chute without thinking of an Erma Bombeck line. She talks about which is easier to raise, boys or girls. She says definitely boys, because with girls, if you get suspicious and call upstairs to ask what they're doing, they will say "nothing!" and you'll have to go upstairs yourself to find out they're making mud pies with your expensive moisturizer and face powder. With boys, you call up and ask what they're doing, and they'll say "Joey threw the cat down the laundry chute. It was cool!"
My aunt & sister both had a laundry shoot & I was very jealous. When we remodeled our master bedroom & two bathrooms we actually had a great space between the two bathrooms that was great for a laundry shoot. It doesn't fall to the laundry room but close enough. Luv it!
I was a designer in the Los Angeles area. I worked on a kitchen built in the 1920's that had a "root cabinet" in the wall. Its floor was a metal mesh allowing air to circulate up from beneath the house. Wooden slated shelves separated the potatoes from the onions etc. The homeowner kept this feature in the remodel.
I lived in an old farmhouse in the hills of Hayward, CA, in 1972. It had the same feature but all the shelves were wire mesh. It was great for keeping vegetables fresh.
My husband grew up in a house with one of these. It was built in to an exterior wall on the north side of the house. They called it ‘the cool cupboard.’ It pulled cool air up from under the house and vented it to the outside at the top of the cupboard.
We need to bring back wall mounted can openers. Those things worked on the first try, worked if the electricity went out, never got lost, didn't hurt your hands, simple to use and were built to last. Sometimes simpler is better.
I got tired of the handheld ones with cranks wearing out (same with the electric ones), so I just use the boy scout type with a wood handle, fast, effective, and will never wear out.
Because my mother did not have the use of one of her arms, the wall mounted can opener my father put in place for her to use was placed lower than most, but in an area she could open any size can with ease.
My grandparents had a really tiny kitchen in their 1930s home with very little storage. They had a wall mounted can opener, a wall mounted ice crusher, and a wall mounted pencil sharpener. Some of the best meals I’ve ever had were made by granny in that kitchen. 💗
The sleeping porch was the screened window and screen door. Was at the back door, but could be a side entrance or even the front entrance. It was used for sleeping, with beds or cushioned benches. Used to hang wet clothes to dry, since in many parts of the country, summer rains meant hanging outside had to come in. Screen porches were great for children to play, great for entertaining or relaxing.
My great-aunt's was upstairs at the end of the hall. There were 3-4 beds lined up on one side when summer really began and the other side was simply a back porch for relaxing. (They had some money.)
You’re right that screen porches had many positive elements-ours was converted into a small den in the 60’s with a bedroom over it. My late FIL used to sleep in their screened in porch in Ohio-no AC. A screened porch is a safe dry place for children to play as well as nap. ❤❤ I wish I had one now. ❤
My grandparents had a sleeping porch when they lived in the city, but when they moved to the country, they used to sleep on the roof! My grandfather would spread out blankets and such on the roof, and my sister and I would sleep in the middle, with him on one side and Grandmother on the other. It was cool up there and almost like a fairytale to be sleeping in the treetops. Plus, we were above the mosquitoes.
I slept many times on my mother's screened-in porch as a child back in the late 1950's to early 1960's. Even then, southern Louisiana in the summer could turn miserable -- and no one had air conditioning yet. I remember setting up a fan to blow on me while I lay on my little pallet, covered with a top sheet I had dampened in the tub and then wrung out. The evaporation from the sheet being fluttered by the fan was very cooling, and by the wee hours I might be so cooled that I had to go back inside.
I miss the broom closets myself. There was a red wall phone right next to ours so you could go inside and close the door for privacy. I loved it......very cool!
LOL, growing up I saw in a magazine a house where they had turned the hall closet into a phone booth, with a wall phone and a seat, and even a bi-fold door. I bugged my mom to do that when we were teenagers, but she didn't want to give up the space of the closet.
would have been cool to take everything out of the closet, put a small bench, a ceiling light and the phone in there. Viola! your own private phone booth!
I've had broom closets in the last three houses that I've lived in, and these houses were built in 1950, 1994, and 1989. I currently live in the 1989 house, and it has the smallest broom closet.
I really appreciate how informative this video was, while remaining concise! Zero clickbait, good narrator, relevant pictures, no fluff. This is rare on youtube nowadays. Well done :)
That "Step Saving Kitchen" video from 1949 is living rent-free in my head right now. It makes me think about the sense of ingenuity that we've lost over the years. We're trying to make cooking easier through over-engineering "smart" appliances rather than seeing what we can simplify. I want a kitchen with a layout like the one in that old video with some of the features. The garbage hatch wouldn't really work in modern materials like granite, but the rest would fit so well. I do like open-floor plans, but I think that kitchen arrangement (that can also be adapted to an L or corridor type) to make a comeback in the name of ergonomics
I agree with you. We do have an eating area in our kitchen, but we seldom use it; we have a large dining room and prefer to eat in there. (We had three children, plus raised one of hubby's nephews to we needed SPACE.) I honestly don't like to have too many people in the kitchen while I'm cooking Hubby is a big help, but anybody else is either in the way, or distracting. I'm such a grinch!
Well, you need to remember that the older kitchen designs catered to from-scratch cooking by stay-at-home housewives. Starting in the 1960's, as more women left the home to pursue a career and frozen/processed foods really started hitting the mainstream, those designs didn't really make as much sense. Now, as more people realize just how horrible processed food is, and also how fulfilling a "traditional" family (i.e., a stay-at-home parent and one working parent) lifestyle is, these older designs are becoming more relevant again. If you think that's neat, you should really take a look at how some other countries do their kitchens. For example, I live in a part of the country where it is very hot much of the year. Having a main kitchen OUTSIDE make a LOT more sense than putting it in my air-conditioned house where the oven/cooktop are heating up my home and doubling my electric bill. I will be building a home in a few years and you better believe I will be putting my oven and cooktop outside on a screened in porch.
I had never seen the rolling pin drawer before! I'm 63, been in well over 8000 kitchens throughout my appliance service career- many vintage ones, have seen all the other items in this video, but never the rolling pin drawer!
Our house was built in 1912… kitchen was a big open room…no wall cupboards until the house was added onto in 1935 …when a breakfast nook/ small dining area was added also. I have a 1914 Wilson free standing kitchen cabinet now too. We also have a fold down ironing board upstairs hallway.
They always forget to mention the Nutone Food Center. That was a motor built into the countertop, on which several appliances, blender, mixer, juicer, ice crusher and others could be attached. Those were so cool.
Agree. I adore the rusty, crusty and old. There was charm and character. Don't get me wrong, the modern kitchen is fine, but nor a deal breaker if old and screaming to be brought back to life.
My own kitchen is fully authentic in almost every way to 1955. I do have a Swing-away wall-mounted can opener and a flour bin with built-in sifter integrated into an overhead cabinet of my Youngstown By Mullins steel cabinets. Even the range vent hood is a Stanthony from the 1950s. The only visible inauthentic items are the b&w checkerboard floor of 10" square porcelain tiles instead of linoleum squares and a small modern microwave oven on the countertop. The rest of my house is equally 1955 authentic.
I grew up with a 1955 house and thoroughly and completely dislike that era - probably because I lived through it - furniture and all. It seems to me that younger people (I’m pushing 77) really like this era. Nit a problem as I prefer other times - but I’d never give up ,icing without electricity👍👍👍
@@sandybruce9092 To each his own. But I too grew up in a 1950s house, and I am 66, so not that much younger. I live in Palm Springs, California, the epicenter of Mid-Century Modernism. The MCM design aesthetic is highly valued locally. It is a significant part of the local identity. And I love it.
My current home built in 1953 has a built in linen press for formal linens, pull out cutting boards under a few drawers, baking pan storage, serving tray storage, built in spice shelf, original push button stovetop with oven above, a smaller wall oven built with post-war aviation grade stainless steel, a Swingline can opener, original custom cabinetry, a covered hole in the countertop that when opened allows one to discard trash or recycling directly into garbage cans in an enclosed area in the garage, and an under-cabinet recessed corner cabinet that has 2 doors (1 into the kitchen and the 2nd to the outside when the 1950s-1950s local milkman would deliver the fresh milk directly into the kitchen. It also has a large pantry, a cleaning closest, and laundry area with storage cabinets above. At one end of the kitchen is a breakfast area with a large window with wooden louvers beneath, so that light from the garden room enters, a view of the garden area beyond the garden room is visible, and air can flow through the house when the garden room windows and the louvers are open. The house has some very special features, unique to its architect. A 1948 house I used to own had a 1950's type "rec room" with vintage linoleum with a shuffleboard floor design, a dry bar, a built in piano, and a brick BBQ grill with hood, vented to the outside. It also had a 20'x20" screened in porch. Vintage houses are special in their own ways.
Yes, I am sick, sick, sick of it and those horrid stainless steel appliances. I remember when they first came out and I cringed, they remind me of a hospital.
I like color. Color doesn't mean tacky, either. It can be tasteful colors. I think the white and gray showroom look is not for us. I do like white walls and light colors, but not super neutral. Right now I am using bright summer colors, against a white background. I like pops of color. Not maximalism but not minimalism, either. I decorate like a cottage style and love my 50 houseplants and mostly vintage decor. I think people to some extent got sterile with tastes and more expected, but I love homey things, not so much the store showroom look.
I've never been a fan of open floors. So many, including my husband love it. I'd rather these intimate spots in the kitchen and an enclosed dining room.
Growing up int he early and mid sixties, we and our family had many of these features, the can opener, the pull down ironing board, central vac, tile counters, laundry shoots down to the basement where the washer was, push button stoves, linoleum (congoleum) and a push button washing machine. Ahhh the good old days, so much simpler!
Laundry chutes were fun, we used to throw toys into ours to see how fast they'd get to the basement. It's a good thing they were narrow, otherwise we would have tried climbing into them ourselves. I suspect they were designed to be narrow for that very reason!
When I had a residential housecleaning business many years ago I loved it when customers had central vac systems. It saved lugging a heavy machine around those big fancy houses I cleaned.
I am a millennial who actually cooks for my family and there are several things from the vintage kitchens I wish we still had. Like the rolling pin drawer, the drop down ironing board with an outlet in it, breakfast nooks (maybe even the vinyl seats), linoleum throughout the entire house as it's extremely durable and clean. I did grow up with a friend who had the central vacuum system in their house.
I disagree. We bought a 1920 house that had a mid century remodel (unfortunately). There’s a dining nook. It really only works for two people because it’s such a pain to get in and out of the middle of it.
@@shuttersteph That's a bummer ☹️ Maybe there wasn't enough room; probably should have made it storage. Mine is "small" but really just the right size😊 I guess if you get a place where it was planned in, in the first place, it wouldn't be as bad
@@AdamsOlympia From bread. But the fruit filling in a pie would help it stay moist, and so so air circulation helps prevent mold. And the screen mesh blocks entry to fruit (and other "shoo") flies.
I miss the wall oven from the early 60’s in the home I grew up in. It was at eye level, and we didn’t have to bend over to handle hot items and raise them to counter height. I think it’s easier to burn yourself with an oven below the stove top. Our current kitchen is very small, and we have a pretty cabinet in there that we use for extra storage. It doesn’t have a workspace in it, but holds the microwave oven, and reminded me of the Hoosier cabinet featured in the video. Thanks for the blast from the past.
I grew up in a 1926 house that my family lived in for four generations. In the 1960's the original kitchen was removed and we had not one but two ovens eye level, one oven a little bigger than the other. They were terrific. We also had a cabinet with a pull out shelf or drawer soup cans that laid on their side. The house was torn down in the late 1990's and I hope someone removed and re-used that excellent kitchen.
Oh me too. I would love a wall oven, with a stovetop on the counter. It eliminates a big hulking range that sits just high enough off the floor for crumbs to collect, but not high enough to clean underneath.....and that gap between the countertop and the range that you have to buy silicone strips to cover or everything drips down into it. Ugh. I cannot stand modern ovens/stoves/ranges. Some things should have never been "fixed".
My parents had a 1960 brick ranch house with a wall oven and counter top stove. It was so easy for my Mom to cook in and clean that oven. It was a brand called Tappan. It was still working great when she passed away in 1997 and it never had to be serviced.
I've seen old ads with kitchens with the yellow and red metal cabinets and checkerboard yellow and red linoleum floor. Thought that wasn't a real thing until I moved in the 1980s and became acquainted with two families with kitchens like that (including Venetian blinds!). One had fridge and stove in red and the other family had fridge and stove in yellow.
When my daughters husband was stationed in Shilo, Manitoba, Canada, the military housing still had the old metal cabinets. They were replacing them bit, by bit, as they were all rusting. But in the long run it would have likely been cheaper to take them out, sand blast and repaint. Get another 70 years out of them instead of the 10 you get now with the good brands.
@@dawnelder9046 If only they had repainted. I bet there are great rustproofing treatments now that just weren't around back in the day and those cabinets would likely look great for decades.
I've never heard of a meat safe - I've been collecting antiques for 50 years. They show a variety of "pie safes" which we're used for baked goods and pantry storage. Meat was either prepared as soon as it was caught or butchered, bought as needed or dried / salted. The cage with hooks in the top is for hanging game after it's been stripped and gutted to prevent flies from getting to it before it could be cooked. It wasn't for "storage" but for transportation from the field to the kitchen.
My first flat, when I was in university in New Zealand, had a meat safe in the kitchenbuilt into the side of the hill the house backed on to. Initially I was baffled, but I figured it out and came to appreciate it, old fashioned though it was. The front was a zinc perforated small door opening into the kitchen, but the fact that the other three sides were recessed into the damp hillside kept things cool. By the time I had the lower flat in this old house, the kitchen had a tiny refrigerator, but the safe actually kept things just as cool. It wouldn’t work in a hot climate, but you don’t need to refrigerate as much as most people think you do. Some day in the future, someone will make a video for whatever has replaced TH-cam about quaint early 21st century people thinking you need to store all your food in huge ‘refrigerators’ that guzzled vast amounts of energy and almost, along with huge gas-guzzling cars, burnt up the planet.
Best $1400 we spent in the late '90's. Our central vac in a 2000 SQ ft house has worked perfectly ever since! Collects in a canister in the garage. Can go months before it needs to be emptied. Very quiet to use too! All surfaces! Consider installing one people!
You all have had good luck. I installed a large system when building my girlfriend and hubby's 5,000+ sq. ft. home from the ground up. I hated it from the get go. Never had proper suction and had the manufactures people over to diagnose at least a dozen times. It actually held back the move in date at least twice as I didn't want to have them sign off on everything before moving in. Once everybody gets their money, they scatter like roaches. Had the builder put pressure on them too. Anyway, that was over twenty years ago and we never use it and purchased three good quality vacuum cleaners and called it a day. She is in her late 70's and Hubby is 81 and in better shape than me and I am still in my 60's! Glad it worked out, we must have received the "manufactured the day after a holiday" batch!
@naomimoore, I have to be careful with our central vac. I can’t tell you the amount of times it sucked up, in an instant, something it should have. I’ve run to the outlet but never fast enough to rescue something.
I love the efficiency and organization of the cabinetry. They even had built in plate dividers and pull tables for extra workspace. Plus some of those linoleum floor designs were very beautiful.
The house I grew up in had a broom closet that I miss so much in every house I’ve lived in. It held our broom, floor polisher, dust mops, dust cloths, and fly swatters. It was located in the kitchen. Where do people store all those things now?
I don't have a place for my broom, mop, bucket etc because I live in a small trailer where there's not enough room for anything including my brother and I (yes we live together now). It's a pain in the neck as we even have a lot of furniture etc in a storage unit. God bless.
I never knew until today that I needed a rolling pin drawer, but it's now high up on the list of things I want in my dream kitchen. Also, I've lived in a house with a pull down ironing board and I loved it so much.
I got mine several years ago, figuring to use it mostly for storage, simply because it fits my old-fashioned aesthetic. I cannot believe how useful it is! The pull-out is several inches lower than a standard countertop and allows a woman of average height (me) to really get elbows and shoulders into jobs such as kneading or rolling dough. Also, it's deeper than a counter and allows for access around all but one side. I just love it.
I do too! My mom has a beautiful solid oak one. I found a Sears model that was missing its upper half and use it as an island in my storage-deficient kitchen. It’s fabulous for baking. Best $60 I ever spent!
I want that. All of it. Kitchens used to be so well designed - today´s kitchens are not meant for real households with real work being done. I suppose designers think that EITHER you are a single or childless couple that eats out or just uses the microwave and does no actual housework like ironing etc.. OR you are a family with children, so you obviously have not only a kitchen but also a laundry and ironing room, a walk-in pantry, a dining room etc.. Well, surprise: Most families do not live in a huge mansion. I wish we had all of those time and space saving kitchen features today!
I've noticed a lot of even moms with kids thay don't know how to cook at all. It's apparently something to brag about nowadays. People seem to just want an "insta worthy" kitchen and not something functional to cool in
There it's also the issue that homes are less affordable than ever... unless you're ok with a two hour or more commute from nowhere cause that's the only way to find a house.
They aren't designed for people who really COOK. No counter space, no storage space. I look forward to sitting down with a kitchen designer and designing a kitchen that WORKS for my next house.
It's because people don't cook like they once did. There are so many convenience foods and fast foods. My mother cooked breakfast, packed lunches, and made dinner EVERY day. We rarely went out to eat. Convenience for her was frozen vegetables and occasionally Franco American Spaghetti for the kids when Mom and Dad had something nasty like liver and onions, on the weekend. My husband and I eat pretty much the same way and I would love one of those old kitchens.
@@leslielewis7286I still love to cook for my family. I have 3 hungry teenagers and a hungry husband. It makes me sad that some parents feed their children processed cereal snacks as breakfast - especially before school! I now make each child 2 eggs along with toast topped with real butter everyday before a school day. They love it. Good grades and good attitudes start with proper nutrition. Some houses I recently wanted to rent didn’t even have a range vent or didn’t have a dishwasher in the kitchen. 😮
I grew up in the 1960's-70's in a house that was built in the 19th Century. We had the wall-mounted can opener, bread drawer with the sliding inside lid, pull-down ironing board, linoleum kitchen floor, and a pull-out cutting board over the drawers. No breakfast nook but the kitchen was big enough for a recessed pantry area, broom closet (I miss those!), and a medium sized table & chairs, plus a large dining room with a swinging door in-between that we loved playing with until my parents got fed up and removed it.
We have a built in plate warmer in our kitchen radiator. A small metal cabinet with metal doors built on top of our iron radiator. It keeps plates warm but I sometimes use it to let my bread dough rise.
That reminds me of junior High school in the early 70s. A friend of mine would bring a leftover pizza slice wrapped in foil for lunch. She would lay it on the radiator and by lunchtime the smell was so good we all wanted pizza!
Gotta love the flour sifters!!!!!!!!!!! Actually, WOW, some of these brilliant ideas and products would be great today!!!! Wonderful walk back to living history!!!!😊😍❤
Can u imagine trying to clean those cubby hole cupboards ....the flour sifters would attract bugs .. nope...somethings are goodbut not the built flour .sifters...
Unless you do a lot of baking and use up a big bag of flour quickly, flour sifters aren't practical. That's because weevils get into flour in a short time. I keep all my flours, cornmeal, etc.. in glass jars with metal screwtop lids. This eliminates ants and weevils getting into the grain, plus you don't have harmful chemicals from plastic containers.
I love so many of the features of these retro kitchens, but had a different reaction to those built in flour sifters. To me they seemed like a waste of valuable cabinet space. It seems easier and more space efficient to use a hand held sifter or a mesh strainer to sift and it takes up a lot less space.
Someone commented that our kitchen designs have taken a step backwards. I must say, I agree. There were so many useful and practical features in these old kitchen designs, I honestly wish most of them would come back into fashion. Very interesting video. Thank you.😊
In one of the houses I lived in as a kid we had a large pantry that had wide slat shelves and a mesh bottom and was open to the crawlspace. We kept a lot of food in there, root vegies, winter squash, large fruits, cheeses, jams, bread. It was a great place to thaw frozen food.
Quite a number of these need to be brought back. I miss cabinets that were built in to house and show the dishes and crystal, I miss monster Butler pantries, and overall, A large and functional kitchen. The rest of the features shown would be my wife's dream.
Yes, lol. Today's kitchens are so dinky. It's like they forgot to put it in the plans and then, once built, decided that a dinky kitchen can fit here or there. Makes no sense when the rest of the house has huge rooms. I prefer older homes. Well built. Made with common sense. Practical. Functional. My added bonus would be a closet in every room and hall too
@OP My aunt had a "monster " pantry. One day, she walked into the pantry and found her twin sons, my cousins, had poured a gallon of olive oil on the linoleum floor and were "ice skating" in their new school shoes. My cousins are now 76 years old. Edit: punctuation
Modern kitchens have not "evolved". They have become easier to clean but less useful as a work space if you make everything from scratch as I do. Most of the young people I know now, don't need a kitchen--just a fridge next to the microwave and Keurig--and new house design is reflecting that.
@@priestessofkek2406 Most people I know, regardless of age, fit that description...including my in-laws (in their 60s). Funnily enough, the ones who don't fit it are younger (40 and under).
You don’t see built in bread or cutting boards in new homes. Even if you don’t cut directly on it for hygiene reasons, this pull out workspace is really an essential kitchen feature in my mind.
I have a house that was built in 1949, although the kitchen was remodeled at some point, probably the 1970’s, it still has the bread board. Over the years it had gotten rough and stained with anything that had been placed on it that was wet. I recently sanded it down and covered it with mineral oil. It looks brand new and beautiful!
my first kitchen as a wife had a crapload of cupboards and drawers including a pullout cutting board and small "secretary" just big enough for bill paying, etc. i loved that little house. We'd still be married and living there if i hadn't done everything the old man told me to do. He's somebody elses problem now. No regrets.
I had a cabinet with one and it was handy as a extra work surface on large cooking days. I do miss it. The cabinet got damaged beyond repair while swapping out a fridge.
My sister still has and uses the 1949 Frigidaire with door lever and rubber gasket. She’s had the motor repaired, belt replaced, gasket replaced. It runs great. It’s her extra fridge in the basement. She buys food in bulk because she has a rooming house with bed and board.
My parents house had an old refrigerator in the basement to store gallons of milk since there was 7 of us. Went through a gallon of milk a day back then. My parents lived in that house for 55 years and the fridge was still working. The new owners did not want it so it got junked. They don't make them like they used to.
New fridges are so badly made. I don’t remember anything breaking on our 1980s fridge. Now our fancy ice and cold water dispensing fridge has broken down twice, bins are already cracked, and one of the shelves broke because we had a gallon of milk on it. (But we do love the ice and cold water lol)
Years ago we toured a home for sale that had pink fixtures and tile in the bathroom, and original turquoise-coloredfixtures in the kitchen. I so wish we'd bought it!😮
Best feature I've seen: a 6-apartment building from 1920 had 3 metal-lined refrigerator cabinets, of varying sizes, in the kitchen wall of each apartment, all powered by a central compressor in the basement. They were no longer functional when I saw them and the cabinets were used for ordinary storage. Lee Valley still sells pull-down ironing boards.
You know, an apartment building that has one compressor to run multiple units fridges likely would save electricity, which in today's world would mean less fossil fuels burned, which would mean we could help the climate change problem. We need to make that a feature in today's world.
@@alericjohansen6775 unfortunately refrigeration repair is E-X-P-E-N-S-I-V-E. Every time a central compressor in a grocery store goes out - and they do - that's upwards of a $600 bill to do something simple. And imagine twelve fridges going bad at once...
@@tsm688 I did think about of it goes out, that's a lot of people's fridges. But I think that's a small piece to pay for things that save the climate (technically the climate will be fine with it without us, it's more trying to keep it within a range we humans can survive in). And I did think about the fact that it could be more expensive to repair, but the 600 you mentioned seems like a lot, but at the same time, refrigerators in general are pretty expensive, at least the home floor style ones we use today. Since most fridges today last years on end without issues, I'd imagine it would be the same for a central version. But you are right, those are things to consider. There are pros and cons to every idea. Those are some cons that people should be aware of and have a discussion about whether it's value is something that would be desired or not. As you can see, personally I think those cons are worth it, not not everyone will think so.
@@alericjohansen6775 Refrigerant costs are through the roof because of environmental concerns. I've seen the bills for those things and I'd know. There's also questions of efficiency. You'd have evaporators hundreds of feet from the condensor. In a grocery, economies of scale overcome that, but when you're just doing it to run twelve tiny fridges, I'm not sure there's any benefit. Also, a multi user system has a whole lot of weak points. You're building something as complex as a grocery system, to store 1/20th the food of a grocery system. It would break down frequently, 1 - 3 times a year, where a normal fridge can outlive your dog without maintenance. It's a noble idea but I don't think its that practical. The simple refrigerator is actually pretty efficient now anyway. It takes about as much power as an old 100-watt tungsten when on, and spends most of its time off
@@desundial I have three pull out cutting boards in various locations in my kitchen. They were all in bad shape so I sanded them down and they are smooth as silk. Then I used cutting board oil on them. They turned out great. When I was a kid they were called bread boards for slicing bread. We made sandwiches on them, and many other things.
We installed a central vacuum system in our homes sind the 1990th. Safes your back in a 3 story home, better quallity air, cleaner and easyer to empty and todays are easy to maintain yourself. Bonus is that the warm and dusty air goes under your house. I love it, so sad it is not possible for our new house, we have now a vacuum cleaner on each floor.
Our last home had central vacc. Built in 64, when it was installed. We had to replace to hose. But still working great when we sold the house 6 years ago.
My only experience with central vac was in the apartment I rented in the 80’s. I liked it but I have a friend who has one in her home, and she doesn’t like hers. Everyone has their own preferences. I think about having one put in sometimes.
A central vacuum is not a "kitchen feature", it's for the entire house. They are certainly still made, they are better than ever at being user friendly, and they are the best way of ridding a home of dust and allergens especially when that vacuum is vented outside.
This may partially be because mine is a couple decades old, but the hose is a pain to lug around. The house is long enough to cover the entire main floor from one hookup, but that much house is heavy. It's better made than the cheap shop vac tubes, it's never had to be replaced, but that just adds to the weight. We tried using a different one that was lighter, but it tore in just 6 months. Other than bringing the hose up and down the stairs though, I like the system.
My favorite kitchen, memory is of my mother, who never had any conveniences when we lived on the farm. As a matter of fact, she always kept the wooden boxes that the grocery gave us to carry things home in, and she turned them into cupboards to put things away in the kitchen. I guess my favorite thing in the kitchen was my mother because she could ring a chickens neck, pull a few things from her garden, take the few ingredients she had in the kitchen, and turn it into something wonderful to eat! They don’t make women like that anymore.
Yes they do. I 'm too disabled to do many of those things now, but when I was a kid I lived on a farm for while. We didn't have electricity even. I learned how to do many things the pioneer way - including how to butcher animals, milk goats, cook on a woodstove, keep a fire going, make cheese, bake bread, make butter, weed a garden, can foods, and so on. We even had a treadle sewing machine, and a washboard.
I have lazy Susans in my corner cabinets. I love breakfast nooks. I like linoleum flooring better than vynal, use my antique Hoosier cabinet as my baking center and love the convenience of a lull down ironing board....guess I amm from a different century.
In early 1960s England my grandmother had a zinc-lined meat safe, that she also used for milk. If she bought a block of ice cream for dessert it would be wrapped in many layers of newspaper to keep it cold until served. The other thing she had that is now a collectable was scales with one pan for what she was weighing and the other for weights, 2 oz, 4 oz etc.
This brought back sudden memories of a dining nook in my grandparents house over 50 years ago. I hadn’t thought of that until now but the memories suddenly came back in the first minute of this video
The last shot of this TH-cam video is about 1938 kitchen economist from a university extension on saving steps for the American housewife. She interviewed housewives on what the liked and didn't like about their kitchen. Then she talked with kitchen designers on designers on how it could be built. After many of hard work they came up with a brilliant design. I love everything about this kitchen. Even though this is in 1938 and didn't have a microwave, dish washer etc. If I could I would have a kitchen exactly like that (with the microwave and dishwasher). Watch the video, it's very impressive.
had a programme here in the UK about a family living as a victorian family would. after it was over asked mum what she missed from 21st "automatic washing machine" 19th mum boil water in copper, wash cloths using tongs as water too hot get to dry using mangle hang out to dry in a coal smoked filled city iron clothes using flat irons this was a 3 women operation
@@bunnymcfoo8650 If you look up “A step saving kitchen, 1949” you should find it, the TH-cam channel is called “US National Archives”. I tried including the link but for some reason my replies weren’t showing up.
i LIVED WITH AN ICE BOX ON THE FARM UNTIL WE GOTA PROPANE FRIDGE LATER. rINGER WASHING MACHINES WERE TERRIBLE BECAUSE THEY SO OFTEN POPPED THE BUTTONS OFF OF CLOTHES.
wow... i personally LOVE LOVE LOVE THE DINING NOOKS!!!! my mom had a small round table in the kitchen area in her mid century childhood...but, not a built in dining nook!! NEVER KNEW OF THIS BEFORE AND ITS THE BEST THING EVERRRRR.... ❤❤❤❤❤
Another thing that was very common back in the day was the rotating spice rack, often in a corner cabinet. Very easy and quick to find what you need, and you wouldn't have little items sitting unnoticed in the back (for years sometimes!).
When we moved from the city to the suburbs in 1963, we had the first built in dishwasher and wall oven in copper finish. The kitchen was ultramodern with an intercom, Formica countertops, and all the built in cabinets. We were very impressed.
I still prefer sitting in a breakfast nook and one you missed is the single recessed back burner for pots like soup or boiling spaghetti water, etc. which made tip overs impossible. Wish that was available now.😊
I could go on and on. The small door outside the kitchen for milk bottle delivery- in the days of the 1-quart bottles. The fancier ones had a signaling device with a pointer to let the milkman know what other dairy products the happy homemaker needed. The rotating lazy susan storage system with the small trough at the bottom of the central shaft to pour in ant poison. The aluminum hatch set into the tiled counter with an inner cylinder and a linked lower door that allowed you to load up the upper chamber with garbage and dump it into a garbage pail accessed from the outside. The blender and citrus juicer attachments for my mother's prized Mixmaster countertop mixer. The curved-sided ceramic salt and pepper shakers that fitted into the backsplash of her O"keefe and Merritt 4-burner stove (with central griddle) with the timer and light switch. Our rich friends had an O'Keefe and Merritt "Town and Country Aristocrat" stove, 6 burners, a griddle, 2 broilers, 2 ovens, a warming oven and 18 pilot lights. The memorable accessory for my mother's ironing board was the sprinkling bottle, this one made as a Cub Scout project by my older brother, age 8. An RC Cola painted off-white (with a few smears and fingerprints), a flower decal and a mushroom-shaped plastic sprinkler head with a cork gasket.
I’m 63, born in 1961. Back in the 1960s, we had a metal Hoosier-styled cabinet with a flour sifter in it. We also had a wall-mounted can opener that my father installed. When we moved in 1972 to another house, my parents had a new kitchen installed by Sears. It had a bread box built into one of the cabinets.
My mom was a housekeeper in the 90s and my sister and I sometimes helped out. There was one house that had a fairly modern central vacuum cleaner installed. You had a 20 ft long hose/cord that plugged into a special outlet (intake?) in every room and a large collection canister and motor in the garage. It was indeed much quieter and more powerful than a normal vacuum, though I don't know if the added cost would be worth it.
I feel so old - especially since apart from the built in flour sifter and meat safe, I assumed people still had all those things in their kitchen. Mine does!
My kitchen is slightly larger than a galley, and I have a small dining area that we put in a small 4 seat table we love. I can't have lots of details in the kitchen due to space. I have 3 cabinets in the dining area I use for extra storage. I love our house, but I do work full time and as much as I love to bake, I am not a homemaker and do not spend a ton of time cooking in it.
@@briansullivan5908 Most of you are "not as fortunate" as poor people like me who have old-fashioned, outdated kitchen features?! My dear, I think you have missed the point.
@@nutmeg208 no outdated kitchen features are wonderful. I have an outdated kitchen myself and wouldn’t want those gadget disasters for all the world. It’s just mine us scaled down it doesn’t really have any cool features so that’s it’s just basic.
My dad built the house I grew up in in the early '50s. It had tile counters, cutting boards that you pulled out of the cabinet like drawers, linoleum floors, and a pull-down ironing board. It was a beautifully crafted home. I wish we'd kept it after my mom died.
The kitchen of my childhood had a breakfast nook. We ate breakfast there together every morning. That was way back when families ate meals together at a table and breakfast was considered the most important meal to fuel you through the day. I'm now 80.
My grandmothers large craftsman house in LA had such a mesh screened builtin cabinet - hers got its cooling from the basement air circulating up from the mesh floor and through it and out a vent in the top. I always marveled at the eggs, bread and veggies kept in there, in the hot LA summers!
@@darleneengebretsen1468 Our Pittsburgh and Harrisburg houses had the tiles close together. My mother complained that they made rolling out pie dough and noodle dough difficult.
I have to say, I love a retro kitchen, but for countertops, to me the best retro substance is Formica! Easy to clean, hard to damage, smooth, lasts for ages.
@@sundayoliver3147 me too! I like a clean background to do my decorating against - so much easier to change movable things than permanent stuff like elaborate backsplashes or exotic countertops. 💕
I remember most of these. I had a built-in ironing board in an old apt built in the 1940s. I LOVED it because we still ironed everything back then. Best kitchen thing I LOVED was a cutting board that came out in the cupboard right below the kitchen counter. You just pulled it out, made a sandwich, wiped it off, and pushed it back in to hide it away. I wish they STLL did that!! Loved it!!! TFS! Austin TX USA
Tile counter tops: every glass that fell on them, broke and eventually a tile here and there would crack and peel up- no replacements. I loved the central vacuum in a house I rented in the 1970's. Dumb-waiters and servant staircases into the kitchen (made for great hide and seek escapes as a kid) We had separate "butler's pantry" with glass cabinets to store the china. Large crocks with heavy lids for flour and sugar.
My mom's house, built about 1940, had a wall-mounted can opener, fold-down ironing board, and also a pull-out bread board built into one of the cabinets. I miss those!
It was seen a few times in the video, but not mentioned: The integrated sink/drainboard. Often part of a metal cabinet. I imagine they went away when the dishwasher became popular. The central vac is still widely in use. Features I remember as a kid: built in blender, trash compactor, pull out cutting board, and grid style flourescent lighting.
@@denisehill7769 I'm from the UK, now live in the US. No one has heard of a one piece stainless steel sink and drainboard. This isn't civilisation, these people are savages!
I have been planning on trying to build pull outs for my bottom cupboards. The smallest, I put up barriers for cookie sheets, cutting boards and cooling racks to keep them upright. I was going to start with that one. Same design, but pull out. If I do it I will have enough room for a shallow pull out second drawer on the top. And it could have a dedicated spot for my rolling pin and my rolling mats.
Wall mounted ironing boards and can openers need to make a come back!! So do breakfast nooks and Hoosier cabinets! Edited to add: also central vacuum cleaners!!! I grew up in a house with one of those, and it was SO MUCH EASIER than lugging a heavy vac around. Also less trouble to store. Currently living in an apartment with no storage for things like ironing boards and vacuum cleaners.
you can still get a wall mounted ironing board if you really want one. common feature in motel rooms, also known as "what the hell is that weird thing on the wall". Mostly we just do a hell of a lot less ironing now. We also wear a lot less hats.
I love vintage and antique things so much. Everything looks so cool!! Wish I had one of those breakfast nooks😊 Some mid century houses are so beautiful!
My Seattle apartments each had vintage items - one had the old ice box where ice blocks were stored and the other had the fold down ironing board built into the wall of the kitchen. Both lovely apartments where rent was about $160/month.
I have those same wonderful memories at my own Oma and Opa's house! To this day I love breakfast nook's for that exact reason. Eating in breakfast nooks forced family's to sit close together and actually look at each other 😊.
My grandpa was a woodworker he built a nook and the seating opened up filled with coloring books , crayons after meals it was soooo fun! My grandma always snuck candies etc. In them for us to hide from my mom. That’s my happiest memories! 👍❤️🙏
My 1951 home has a narrow cupboard with built ins to hold plastic wrap, wax paper, etc. I use my wooden pullout bread boards daily for extra counter space. Somewhere in history, someone replaced tile counter tops with Wilsonart daisy laminate, which I love! My favorite kitchen item is in my canning kitchen which has a Youngstown double sink, double drainboard. It is super efficient and still a workhorse.
In Cyprus, all relatively older houses have built-in air cleaners in the kitchens: a fan installed in the wall near the ceiling that pulled air (and smoke/smells) from cooking from inside to outside.
Correction - many of those meat safes are PIE SAFES, for cooling pies while keeping flies out. Note the wheat sheaf decoration!
Definitely
In New Zealand a meat safe was just called a "safe" and vented to the outside of the coldest wall in the house. We had one at the far end of of our walk-in pantry. We certainly kept a cold leg of leftover mutton in there, after we had eaten one meat of it roasted.There was a double swung door on the kitchen end that was fantastic. I have never seen it in any other NZ house, not many of the things mentioned above.
@@faodail3913”one meat of it”??
'pie safe' makes more sense. I've (64f) heard of those, but I've never heard of a 'meat safe'.
Yeah, don’t know where the writer got the idea of a MEAT safe?
Forty years ago I taught myself how to bake bread. My Dad gave me a wood bread box. I still have it on my kitchen counter. I am now 65 years old. Thanks Dad.
Wow, that’s so awesome to have the bread box 🥰
Thanks for sharing, love it !
Nothing better than freshly home-baked bread!
That is a beautiful anecdote. Thanks for sharing!
🥰
I think we have taken a step BACKWARD in our current designs....so many good features in these old kitchens. They need to have a comeback!!
Alot became more portable these days
Many items are still available, and many of the items they show on this channel were either not that popular, or just concepts.
I agree. Especially the drop down ironing board and the rolling pin drawer.
@@jessieflores8788 Drop down irroning boards were quite common where I came from. The rolling pin drawer, not so much.
absolutely, we have lost imagination, ingenuity, vision, desire lots of things 😪
We have a house that was built in 1930. When we remodeled our kitchen about 15 yrs ago, we modified it to include a breakfast nook! One of my favorite areas of the house now.
Nooks are cool. Very space efficient. And very cozy. I think they facilitate communication.
My 1927 house has one and I LIVE in it! Great east light!
❤
@@PRH123❤️
I have one from the 50's, the cans of today are not as they were then and most times now, my wall mount can opener won't work on the newer cans. In Joy
In the southern U.S., those cabinets with wire-mesh walls are generally called “pie safes.” I never heard of keeping meat in one, though maybe that would work on a cooler climate. People kept baked goods, like pies, cakes, and cookies in pie safes. The mesh screening was to keep insects (and pets) out.
Meat was kept in an ice box- a metal or metal-lined box with a separate compartment for ice (ice was delivered daily). If you didn’t have an icebox (or ice), you’d hang your meat in the coolest place available- maybe a cellar, or a dark back room.
I cared for a 99 year old in her home who cared for 3 sons and 3 adopted sons. She was a nurse in an early war during this time.. She said she'd buy 10 pounds of hamburger meat and covered it with a cloth, and kept it inside a dark pantry.
We had a meat safe in UK the pantry was down a few steps so lower and on the coldest side of the house. No fridges in those days but no central heating either. Did none of us any harm at all but to be honest food was cooked fresh daily and we actually ate very well now in 80's so it couldn't have been so bad. No upset stomach either😊
I was born in PA and yes, they were pie safes - never for meat!!! Meat needed to be refrigerated - this was a dumb statement!
They probably re-purposed them when refrigerators arrived simply be removing the hook and installing a few shelves. And what a good idea it is. A place to put baked goods fresh out of the oven to allow it time to cool without becoming an attraction for insects and animals.
In the winter we often use the balcony (enclosed) to keep big items that would take up too much room in the fridge, like a pie or a cake, a lasagna or a frying pan full of something.
My 1925 bungalow has a built-in spice cupboard that I love using. But the OUTSTANDING feature is the laundry chute from the first floor into the basement. What a time and energy saver! Safer too than carrying a bundle of clothes in front of you, where you can't see the stairs.
Never hear mention of a laundry chute without thinking of an Erma Bombeck line. She talks about which is easier to raise, boys or girls. She says definitely boys, because with girls, if you get suspicious and call upstairs to ask what they're doing, they will say "nothing!" and you'll have to go upstairs yourself to find out they're making mud pies with your expensive moisturizer and face powder. With boys, you call up and ask what they're doing, and they'll say "Joey threw the cat down the laundry chute. It was cool!"
*hear - drat the stupid dictation that changes what I said just as I hit the "send" button
My aunt & sister both had a laundry shoot & I was very jealous. When we remodeled our master bedroom & two bathrooms we actually had a great space between the two bathrooms that was great for a laundry shoot. It doesn't fall to the laundry room but close enough. Luv it!
@@vickidemarco2076 * chute. But somehow "shoot" also works, to describe the push of putting items into it.
I lived in a house that had a closet with a stacked washer & dryer on the 2nd floor (where all the bedrooms were).
I was a designer in the Los Angeles area. I worked on a kitchen built in the 1920's that had a "root cabinet" in the wall. Its floor was a metal mesh allowing air to circulate up from beneath the house. Wooden slated shelves separated the potatoes from the onions etc.
The homeowner kept this feature in the remodel.
That sounds like such a cool idea!
@jbelle021 Yes, it was/is cool, literally.tge cool air from beneath the house circulated up around the vegetables helping them to last longer.
I lived in an old farmhouse in the hills of Hayward, CA, in 1972. It had the same feature but all the shelves were wire mesh. It was great for keeping vegetables fresh.
My husband grew up in a house with one of these. It was built in to an exterior wall on the north side of the house. They called it ‘the cool cupboard.’ It pulled cool air up from under the house and vented it to the outside at the top of the cupboard.
We had one in our 1920s house in Los Angeles. It had lazy susan shelves above the wire mesh, which allowed cool air from the cellar. It was fabulous.
We need to bring back wall mounted can openers. Those things worked on the first try, worked if the electricity went out, never got lost, didn't hurt your hands, simple to use and were built to last. Sometimes simpler is better.
they are still available
I got tired of the handheld ones with cranks wearing out (same with the electric ones), so I just use the boy scout type with a wood handle, fast, effective, and will never wear out.
The built in ironing board is what I need most.
Because my mother did not have the use of one of her arms, the wall mounted can opener my father put in place for her to use was placed lower than most, but in an area she could open any size can with ease.
My grandparents had a really tiny kitchen in their 1930s home with very little storage. They had a wall mounted can opener, a wall mounted ice crusher, and a wall mounted pencil sharpener. Some of the best meals I’ve ever had were made by granny in that kitchen. 💗
The sleeping porch was the screened window and screen door. Was at the back door, but could be a side entrance or even the front entrance. It was used for sleeping, with beds or cushioned benches. Used to hang wet clothes to dry, since in many parts of the country, summer rains meant hanging outside had to come in. Screen porches were great for children to play, great for entertaining or relaxing.
My great-aunt's was upstairs at the end of the hall. There were 3-4 beds lined up on one side when summer really began and the other side was simply a back porch for relaxing. (They had some money.)
We have a sleeping porch in 100 a 100-year-old house. It's a study/office now. Very useable for about 9 months of the year.
You’re right that screen porches had many positive elements-ours was converted into a small den in the 60’s with a bedroom over it.
My late FIL used to sleep in their screened in porch in Ohio-no AC. A screened porch is a safe dry place for children to play as well as nap. ❤❤
I wish I had one now. ❤
My grandparents had a sleeping porch when they lived in the city, but when they moved to the country, they used to sleep on the roof! My grandfather would spread out blankets and such on the roof, and my sister and I would sleep in the middle, with him on one side and Grandmother on the other. It was cool up there and almost like a fairytale to be sleeping in the treetops. Plus, we were above the mosquitoes.
I slept many times on my mother's screened-in porch as a child back in the late 1950's to early 1960's. Even then, southern Louisiana in the summer could turn miserable -- and no one had air conditioning yet. I remember setting up a fan to blow on me while I lay on my little pallet, covered with a top sheet I had dampened in the tub and then wrung out. The evaporation from the sheet being fluttered by the fan was very cooling, and by the wee hours I might be so cooled that I had to go back inside.
I miss the broom closets myself. There was a red wall phone right next to ours so you could go inside and close the door for privacy. I loved it......very cool!
LOL, growing up I saw in a magazine a house where they had turned the hall closet into a phone booth, with a wall phone and a seat, and even a bi-fold door. I bugged my mom to do that when we were teenagers, but she didn't want to give up the space of the closet.
Yes, bring back broom closets! Why did they disappear? Everyone still has brooms, and mops. Where are you supposed to keep them?
would have been cool to take everything out of the closet, put a small bench, a ceiling light
and the phone in there. Viola! your own private phone booth!
I've had broom closets in the last three houses that I've lived in, and these houses were built in 1950, 1994, and 1989. I currently live in the 1989 house, and it has the smallest broom closet.
Also miss in newer homes and apts, the linen closet!
I really appreciate how informative this video was, while remaining concise! Zero clickbait, good narrator, relevant pictures, no fluff. This is rare on youtube nowadays. Well done :)
I believe this is an AI narrator.
@@ferociousgumby well at least it's a good one .
The 1950's house I grew up in had a pull out cutting board near the sink -- it was built into the counter -- loved it.
Had a pull out cutting board in the house I lived in for 30 yes unfortunately I lost it during covid
Many modern kitchens have pull-out cutting boards. We included one when we renovated our entire kitchen a few years ago. We use it all the time.
That "Step Saving Kitchen" video from 1949 is living rent-free in my head right now. It makes me think about the sense of ingenuity that we've lost over the years. We're trying to make cooking easier through over-engineering "smart" appliances rather than seeing what we can simplify. I want a kitchen with a layout like the one in that old video with some of the features. The garbage hatch wouldn't really work in modern materials like granite, but the rest would fit so well. I do like open-floor plans, but I think that kitchen arrangement (that can also be adapted to an L or corridor type) to make a comeback in the name of ergonomics
I agree with you. We do have an eating area in our kitchen, but we seldom use it; we have a large dining room and prefer to eat in there. (We had three children, plus raised one of hubby's nephews to we needed SPACE.) I honestly don't like to have too many people in the kitchen while I'm cooking Hubby is a big help, but anybody else is either in the way, or distracting. I'm such a grinch!
I watch that step saving kitchen video at least once every six months. I love it. I want it.
It depends on how many people are in the kitchen . Step kitchens get crowded fast.
Well, you need to remember that the older kitchen designs catered to from-scratch cooking by stay-at-home housewives. Starting in the 1960's, as more women left the home to pursue a career and frozen/processed foods really started hitting the mainstream, those designs didn't really make as much sense. Now, as more people realize just how horrible processed food is, and also how fulfilling a "traditional" family (i.e., a stay-at-home parent and one working parent) lifestyle is, these older designs are becoming more relevant again.
If you think that's neat, you should really take a look at how some other countries do their kitchens. For example, I live in a part of the country where it is very hot much of the year. Having a main kitchen OUTSIDE make a LOT more sense than putting it in my air-conditioned house where the oven/cooktop are heating up my home and doubling my electric bill. I will be building a home in a few years and you better believe I will be putting my oven and cooktop outside on a screened in porch.
As a baker, I 100% would appreciate a rolling pin drawer today!
And a sifter. I eat gluten free and low carb. I need to sift. And a pull out workspace.
I had never seen the rolling pin drawer before! I'm 63, been in well over 8000 kitchens throughout my appliance service career- many vintage ones, have seen all the other items in this video, but never the rolling pin drawer!
Right!? They take up such a weird amount of space in a regular drawer and that's such a neat solution!
I hang my collection of rolling pins on the wall.
Our house was built in 1912… kitchen was a big open room…no wall cupboards until the house was added onto in 1935 …when a breakfast nook/ small dining area was added also. I have a 1914 Wilson free standing kitchen cabinet now too. We also have a fold down ironing board upstairs hallway.
They always forget to mention the Nutone Food Center. That was a motor built into the countertop, on which several appliances, blender, mixer, juicer, ice crusher and others could be attached. Those were so cool.
Now I'm going to Google it.
I was just thinking of that & trying to remember the name thank you!
Wow! Sounds cool!
sewrena here on youtube has one, and she also shows off recipes using the nutone cookbook with it!
@@emilycoleslawinstantly thought of SewRena myself!
These kitchens had charm, character that always spoke "welcome, come in a sit a spell." In Joy
Agree. I adore the rusty, crusty and old. There was charm and character. Don't get me wrong, the modern kitchen is fine, but nor a deal breaker if old and screaming to be brought back to life.
Cant sit a spell on a bar stool looking at white office cabinets
"sit a spell"?? this ain't a Beverly Hillbillies eppy
My own kitchen is fully authentic in almost every way to 1955. I do have a Swing-away wall-mounted can opener and a flour bin with built-in sifter integrated into an overhead cabinet of my Youngstown By Mullins steel cabinets. Even the range vent hood is a Stanthony from the 1950s. The only visible inauthentic items are the b&w checkerboard floor of 10" square porcelain tiles instead of linoleum squares and a small modern microwave oven on the countertop. The rest of my house is equally 1955 authentic.
I grew up with a 1955 house and thoroughly and completely dislike that era - probably because I lived through it - furniture and all. It seems to me that younger people (I’m pushing 77) really like this era. Nit a problem as I prefer other times - but I’d never give up ,icing without electricity👍👍👍
@@sandybruce9092 To each his own. But I too grew up in a 1950s house, and I am 66, so not that much younger. I live in Palm Springs, California, the epicenter of Mid-Century Modernism. The MCM design aesthetic is highly valued locally. It is a significant part of the local identity. And I love it.
My current home built in 1953 has a built in linen press for formal linens, pull out cutting boards under a few drawers, baking pan storage, serving tray storage, built in spice shelf, original push button stovetop with oven above, a smaller wall oven built with post-war aviation grade stainless steel, a Swingline can opener, original custom cabinetry, a covered hole in the countertop that when opened allows one to discard trash or recycling directly into garbage cans in an enclosed area in the garage, and an under-cabinet recessed corner cabinet that has 2 doors (1 into the kitchen and the 2nd to the outside when the 1950s-1950s local milkman would deliver the fresh milk directly into the kitchen. It also has a large pantry, a cleaning closest, and laundry area with storage cabinets above. At one end of the kitchen is a breakfast area with a large window with wooden louvers beneath, so that light from the garden room enters, a view of the garden area beyond the garden room is visible, and air can flow through the house when the garden room windows and the louvers are open. The house has some very special features, unique to its architect. A 1948 house I used to own had a 1950's type "rec room" with vintage linoleum with a shuffleboard floor design, a dry bar, a built in piano, and a brick BBQ grill with hood, vented to the outside. It also had a 20'x20" screened in porch. Vintage houses are special in their own ways.
Your house sounds awesome@@annetteclark8854
@@sandybruce9092 I am with you, sister. The only people who liked the 50's didn't live through them.
According to this video, my kitchen is very retro. So retro, I'm practically a time traveller.
You are indeed lucky!
Or, you never left 1955 ... !
Don’t you all just hate the drab grey modern interiors! I do.
Yes, I am sick, sick, sick of it and those horrid stainless steel appliances. I remember when they first came out and I cringed, they remind me of a hospital.
@@KeniteSlayeror a morgue! NOT an industrial look fan either!
And dull exterior colors as well! There's a mid ground.
They are so ugly. I love a lot of color in a house.
I like color. Color doesn't mean tacky, either. It can be tasteful colors. I think the white and gray showroom look is not for us. I do like white walls and light colors, but not super neutral. Right now I am using bright summer colors, against a white background. I like pops of color. Not maximalism but not minimalism, either. I decorate like a cottage style and love my 50 houseplants and mostly vintage decor. I think people to some extent got sterile with tastes and more expected, but I love homey things, not so much the store showroom look.
I've never been a fan of open floors. So many, including my husband love it. I'd rather these intimate spots in the kitchen and an enclosed dining room.
I totally agree with you!
They don't keep babies and pets out of the kitchen, and they can get hurt, and start fires. I agree. Kitchens should be an enclosed room.
I want to take 3 lefts and a right to get to the bathroom, i like getting lost, open floorplans are the absolute worst.
Growing up int he early and mid sixties, we and our family had many of these features, the can opener, the pull down ironing board, central vac, tile counters, laundry shoots down to the basement where the washer was, push button stoves, linoleum (congoleum) and a push button washing machine. Ahhh the good old days, so much simpler!
Laundry chutes were fun, we used to throw toys into ours to see how fast they'd get to the basement. It's a good thing they were narrow, otherwise we would have tried climbing into them ourselves. I suspect they were designed to be narrow for that very reason!
That ironing board wasn’t a sixties thing. Older houses-1940s, say-had them.
When I had a residential housecleaning business many years ago I loved it when customers had central vac systems. It saved lugging a heavy machine around those big fancy houses I cleaned.
@@brendasnow8255 I think of built-in ironing boards as more 1920s, but they may have had a long run, because if you iron, they were practical!
I am a millennial who actually cooks for my family and there are several things from the vintage kitchens I wish we still had. Like the rolling pin drawer, the drop down ironing board with an outlet in it, breakfast nooks (maybe even the vinyl seats), linoleum throughout the entire house as it's extremely durable and clean. I did grow up with a friend who had the central vacuum system in their house.
I have a rolling pin drawer but it isn't round. I never use the rolling pin in it because I have a longer one I like better!
These would be so useful.
Yeah, linoleum floor is great!
barely any maintenance, easy to clean, warm to the touch, durable,...
I still have the glass rolling pin that holds ice that my mother in law maid's used when making pastry 80 years ago.
Oh wow! Sounds like a great invention for pastry, especially if you're making it in summer.
I used it a few times in the last fifty years. Found it easier to just crank the A/C up $$$@@sundayoliver3147
😲 I need this in my life!
I still have my partner's, glass rolling pin. that he inherited from her after she died. he used it when he would make pie crusts.
I have my grandmother’s.
Dining nooks were awesome
Still our. Our home we bought 6 years ago has one. I love it.
We had a home 25 years ago with a round bench table. It was great!
Mine was built in the 90s, and it has one🤷♀️
I disagree. We bought a 1920 house that had a mid century remodel (unfortunately). There’s a dining nook. It really only works for two
people because it’s such a pain to get in and out of the middle of it.
@@shuttersteph That's a bummer ☹️ Maybe there wasn't enough room; probably should have made it storage. Mine is "small" but really just the right size😊 I guess if you get a place where it was planned in, in the first place, it wouldn't be as bad
The screened cabinet was a Pie Safe where bake goods and breads were kept almost Never for meat.
Would you want to keep air circulation away from baked goods so they don't dry out?
@@AdamsOlympia From bread. But the fruit filling in a pie would help it stay moist, and so so air circulation helps prevent mold. And the screen mesh blocks entry to fruit (and other "shoo") flies.
I did think that was weird… a “meat safe”
Yes I totally think it was for pies!!!
Right. If you wanted to preserve meat, you canned it. For just a short time, kept it in a cool root cellar.
@@AdamsOlympia na your wrong you can get meat safes
I miss the wall oven from the early 60’s in the home I grew up in. It was at eye level, and we didn’t have to bend over to handle hot items and raise them to counter height. I think it’s easier to burn yourself with an oven below the stove top. Our current kitchen is very small, and we have a pretty cabinet in there that we use for extra storage. It doesn’t have a workspace in it, but holds the microwave oven, and reminded me of the Hoosier cabinet featured in the video. Thanks for the blast from the past.
I grew up in a 1926 house that my family lived in for four generations. In the 1960's the original kitchen was removed and we had not one but two ovens eye level, one oven a little bigger than the other. They were terrific. We also had a cabinet with a pull out shelf or drawer soup cans that laid on their side. The house was torn down in the late 1990's and I hope someone removed and re-used that excellent kitchen.
Oh me too. I would love a wall oven, with a stovetop on the counter. It eliminates a big hulking range that sits just high enough off the floor for crumbs to collect, but not high enough to clean underneath.....and that gap between the countertop and the range that you have to buy silicone strips to cover or everything drips down into it. Ugh.
I cannot stand modern ovens/stoves/ranges. Some things should have never been "fixed".
My parents had a 1960 brick ranch house with a wall oven and counter top stove. It was so easy for my Mom to cook in and clean that oven. It was a brand called Tappan. It was still working great when she passed away in 1997 and it never had to be serviced.
Had a home once with the wall oven. Got a regular stove and oven. It was great having to ovens.
My parents have a wall oven that worked nicely for many years.
My grandparents had metal cabinets that were from the 1950s. They lived in Florida where termites were a problem for wood cabinets.
Our first house had metal cabinets. They had to be sanded and painted every two to three years because rust would develop.
I've seen old ads with kitchens with the yellow and red metal cabinets and checkerboard yellow and red linoleum floor. Thought that wasn't a real thing until I moved in the 1980s and became acquainted with two families with kitchens like that (including Venetian blinds!). One had fridge and stove in red and the other family had fridge and stove in yellow.
When my daughters husband was stationed in Shilo, Manitoba, Canada, the military housing still had the old metal cabinets.
They were replacing them bit, by bit, as they were all rusting.
But in the long run it would have likely been cheaper to take them out, sand blast and repaint. Get another 70 years out of them instead of the 10 you get now with the good brands.
I still have my great aunt's metal stand alone "pantry cabinet."
@@dawnelder9046 If only they had repainted. I bet there are great rustproofing treatments now that just weren't around back in the day and those cabinets would likely look great for decades.
I've never heard of a meat safe - I've been collecting antiques for 50 years. They show a variety of "pie safes" which we're used for baked goods and pantry storage. Meat was either prepared as soon as it was caught or butchered, bought as needed or dried / salted. The cage with hooks in the top is for hanging game after it's been stripped and gutted to prevent flies from getting to it before it could be cooked. It wasn't for "storage" but for transportation from the field to the kitchen.
I never heard of it either. But according to Google, this was more an British thing. So that might explain it.
I'm from rural New Zealand and we had a meat safe in several places we lived .
@@donna8243I'm English and Meat Safes were commonplace.
My first flat, when I was in university in New Zealand, had a meat safe in the kitchenbuilt into the side of the hill the house backed on to. Initially I was baffled, but I figured it out and came to appreciate it, old fashioned though it was. The front was a zinc perforated small door opening into the kitchen, but the fact that the other three sides were recessed into the damp hillside kept things cool. By the time I had the lower flat in this old house, the kitchen had a tiny refrigerator, but the safe actually kept things just as cool. It wouldn’t work in a hot climate, but you don’t need to refrigerate as much as most people think you do.
Some day in the future, someone will make a video for whatever has replaced TH-cam about quaint early 21st century people thinking you need to store all your food in huge ‘refrigerators’ that guzzled vast amounts of energy and almost, along with huge gas-guzzling cars, burnt up the planet.
I totally agree with you!
Central vacuums are awesome. They are so much easier to use when needing to reach up high.
They are especially useful on carpeted stairs.
Best $1400 we spent in the late '90's. Our central vac in a 2000 SQ ft house has worked perfectly ever since! Collects in a canister in the garage. Can go months before it needs to be emptied. Very quiet to use too! All surfaces!
Consider installing one people!
You all have had good luck. I installed a large system when building my girlfriend and hubby's 5,000+ sq. ft. home from the ground up. I hated it from the get go. Never had proper suction and had the manufactures people over to diagnose at least a dozen times. It actually held back the move in date at least twice as I didn't want to have them sign off on everything before moving in. Once everybody gets their money, they scatter like roaches. Had the builder put pressure on them too. Anyway, that was over twenty years ago and we never use it and purchased three good quality vacuum cleaners and called it a day. She is in her late 70's and Hubby is 81 and in better shape than me and I am still in my 60's!
Glad it worked out, we must have received the "manufactured the day after a holiday" batch!
@naomimoore,
I have to be careful with our central vac. I can’t tell you the amount of times it sucked up, in an instant, something it should have. I’ve run to the outlet but never fast enough to rescue something.
@@colettesantoro8797- that’s when you go to the central unit and pop it open. Nothing is ever truly lost if it’s vacuumed up.
Whoa!! The Hoosier cabinet is honestly amazing. The built in organization features and the compact design would be perfect for a tiny kitchen.
I love the efficiency and organization of the cabinetry.
They even had built in plate dividers and pull tables for extra workspace.
Plus some of those linoleum floor designs were very beautiful.
My Grandma's house from the 1950's had a pull out rack where you could hang dish towels to dry.
Oh we used to have one of those in our kitchen. Inside the cabinet door underneath the sink.
You can still buy them at the hardware store.
Would love this
I have one in the laundry we put in a few years ago. I didn't know they weren't a thing now lol
The house I grew up in had a broom closet that I miss so much in every house I’ve lived in. It held our broom, floor polisher, dust mops, dust cloths, and fly swatters. It was located in the kitchen. Where do people store all those things now?
less broomy closet, if available, bathroom, if not
Besides the fridge or in the garage
Mine are in the laundry room
I don't have a place for my broom, mop, bucket etc because I live in a small trailer where there's not enough room for anything including my brother and I (yes we live together now). It's a pain in the neck as we even have a lot of furniture etc in a storage unit. God bless.
I have a laundry room with a closet where I keep the brooms, vacuum, and gum boots etc
I never knew until today that I needed a rolling pin drawer, but it's now high up on the list of things I want in my dream kitchen. Also, I've lived in a house with a pull down ironing board and I loved it so much.
My son and daughter in law have a very nice, upscale house built in 1992 that has central vac. They use it all the time and it's worth every cent IMO
I would love to have a central vac!
We use a Roomba. It is a small house and we run it constantly.
We built our house in 1991 and included a central vacuum system also. Still works very well, trouble free and soooo convenient.
I have a Nutone/Braun whole house vacuum we installed in our house in 1982. Use it all the time. Very quiet, little maintenance, easy use.
I'll take my wall mounted Dyson any day over central Vac
I love Hoosier cabinets. I'm looking for one for my kitchen.
I got mine several years ago, figuring to use it mostly for storage, simply because it fits my old-fashioned aesthetic. I cannot believe how useful it is! The pull-out is several inches lower than a standard countertop and allows a woman of average height (me) to really get elbows and shoulders into jobs such as kneading or rolling dough. Also, it's deeper than a counter and allows for access around all but one side. I just love it.
I've got my grandmothers Hoosier. Very good shape too except it's missing the flour bin/sifter.
Just don’t store your meat in it😂
I do too! My mom has a beautiful solid oak one. I found a Sears model that was missing its upper half and use it as an island in my storage-deficient kitchen. It’s fabulous for baking. Best $60 I ever spent!
@@kimberlywoodbury1739 Indeed: as bacteria on and in the meat fast grow, meat must be refrigerated.
Our house was built in 92. We bought it 6 years ago. It has a dining nook. Love it. And I do store things under the benches.
I want that. All of it. Kitchens used to be so well designed - today´s kitchens are not meant for real households with real work being done. I suppose designers think that EITHER you are a single or childless couple that eats out or just uses the microwave and does no actual housework like ironing etc.. OR you are a family with children, so you obviously have not only a kitchen but also a laundry and ironing room, a walk-in pantry, a dining room etc.. Well, surprise: Most families do not live in a huge mansion. I wish we had all of those time and space saving kitchen features today!
I've noticed a lot of even moms with kids thay don't know how to cook at all. It's apparently something to brag about nowadays. People seem to just want an "insta worthy" kitchen and not something functional to cool in
There it's also the issue that homes are less affordable than ever... unless you're ok with a two hour or more commute from nowhere cause that's the only way to find a house.
They aren't designed for people who really COOK. No counter space, no storage space. I look forward to sitting down with a kitchen designer and designing a kitchen that WORKS for my next house.
It's because people don't cook like they once did. There are so many convenience foods and fast foods. My mother cooked breakfast, packed lunches, and made dinner EVERY day. We rarely went out to eat. Convenience for her was frozen vegetables and occasionally Franco American Spaghetti for the kids when Mom and Dad had something nasty like liver and onions, on the weekend. My husband and I eat pretty much the same way and I would love one of those old kitchens.
@@leslielewis7286I still love to cook for my family. I have 3 hungry teenagers and a hungry husband. It makes me sad that some parents feed their children processed cereal snacks as breakfast - especially before school! I now make each child 2 eggs along with toast topped with real butter everyday before a school day. They love it. Good grades and good attitudes start with proper nutrition.
Some houses I recently wanted to rent didn’t even have a range vent or didn’t have a dishwasher in the kitchen. 😮
I love the look of those porcelain drain boards that were on the sides of sinks!
I grew up in the 1960's-70's in a house that was built in the 19th Century. We had the wall-mounted can opener, bread drawer with the sliding inside lid, pull-down ironing board, linoleum kitchen floor, and a pull-out cutting board over the drawers. No breakfast nook but the kitchen was big enough for a recessed pantry area, broom closet (I miss those!), and a medium sized table & chairs, plus a large dining room with a swinging door in-between that we loved playing with until my parents got fed up and removed it.
Ugh I miss a broom closet!!!! 😅❤
My Grandma place still has Central vacuuming system and she still uses it today
I think you can still get them. I tried to talk my husband into installing one about 8 years ago. So practical.
I install them in new houses every week been doing it for 20. They are not an item that disappeared.
We have a built in plate warmer in our kitchen radiator. A small metal cabinet with metal doors built on top of our iron radiator. It keeps plates warm but I sometimes use it to let my bread dough rise.
That reminds me of junior High school in the early 70s. A friend of mine would bring a leftover pizza slice wrapped in foil for lunch. She would lay it on the radiator and by lunchtime the smell was so good we all wanted pizza!
i love a breakfast nook. they should really bring those back
Gotta love the flour sifters!!!!!!!!!!! Actually, WOW, some of these brilliant ideas and products would be great today!!!! Wonderful walk back to living history!!!!😊😍❤
Can u imagine trying to clean those cubby hole cupboards ....the flour sifters would attract bugs .. nope...somethings are goodbut not the built flour .sifters...
I still use a sifter. I live in a very humid tropical climate and dries clump.
Unless you do a lot of baking and use up a big bag of flour quickly, flour sifters aren't practical. That's because weevils get into flour in a short time. I keep all my flours, cornmeal, etc.. in glass jars with metal screwtop lids. This eliminates ants and weevils getting into the grain, plus you don't have harmful chemicals from plastic containers.
@@darleneengebretsen1468 Of course you're correct! I had never seen one of these items before so I thought they "looked" cool.....................
I love so many of the features of these retro kitchens, but had a different reaction to those built in flour sifters. To me they seemed like a waste of valuable cabinet space. It seems easier and more space efficient to use a hand held sifter or a mesh strainer to sift and it takes up a lot less space.
Someone commented that our kitchen designs have taken a step backwards. I must say, I agree. There were so many useful and practical features in these old kitchen designs, I honestly wish most of them would come back into fashion. Very interesting video. Thank you.😊
I love all the different breakfast nooks depicted in the first vignette.
They're beautiful. I paused on that.
And the interesting shapes of some of the counters. Just like cars back then, very outer space looking. We've gotten so boring and mundane these days.
In one of the houses I lived in as a kid we had a large pantry that had wide slat shelves and a mesh bottom and was open to the crawlspace. We kept a lot of food in there, root vegies, winter squash, large fruits, cheeses, jams, bread. It was a great place to thaw frozen food.
I love these retro kitchens. So practical.
Quite a number of these need to be brought back. I miss cabinets that were built in to house and show the dishes and crystal, I miss monster Butler pantries, and overall, A large and functional kitchen. The rest of the features shown would be my wife's dream.
Yes, lol. Today's kitchens are so dinky. It's like they forgot to put it in the plans and then, once built, decided that a dinky kitchen can fit here or there. Makes no sense when the rest of the house has huge rooms. I prefer older homes. Well built. Made with common sense. Practical. Functional. My added bonus would be a closet in every room and hall too
@OP My aunt had a "monster " pantry. One day, she walked into the pantry and found her twin sons, my cousins, had poured a gallon of olive oil on the linoleum floor and were "ice skating" in their new school shoes.
My cousins are now 76 years old.
Edit: punctuation
Modern kitchens have not "evolved". They have become easier to clean but less useful as a work space if you make everything from scratch as I do. Most of the young people I know now, don't need a kitchen--just a fridge next to the microwave and Keurig--and new house design is reflecting that.
@@RobertJarecki Love that story! 😅🤣😂 Some little hineys probably got blistered for that escapade.
@@priestessofkek2406 Most people I know, regardless of age, fit that description...including my in-laws (in their 60s). Funnily enough, the ones who don't fit it are younger (40 and under).
Worked at a vet clinic that had a wall vacuum, loved it. If I every have a custom built house, it will have a built in vacuum.
Exactly right ✅️. My vet had a central vacuum system in his office and exam rooms.
You don’t see built in bread or cutting boards in new homes. Even if you don’t cut directly on it for hygiene reasons, this pull out workspace is really an essential kitchen feature in my mind.
I have a house that was built in 1949, although the kitchen was remodeled at some point, probably the 1970’s, it still has the bread board. Over the years it had gotten rough and stained with anything that had been placed on it that was wet. I recently sanded it down and covered it with mineral oil. It looks brand new and beautiful!
my first kitchen as a wife had a crapload of cupboards and drawers including a pullout cutting board and small "secretary" just big enough for bill paying, etc. i loved that little house. We'd still be married and living there if i hadn't done everything the old man told me to do. He's somebody elses problem now. No regrets.
I had a cabinet with one and it was handy as a extra work surface on large cooking days. I do miss it. The cabinet got damaged beyond repair while swapping out a fridge.
We actually put bread boards in our kitchen. They slide into the island and have really made it more useful.
We had a bread board… Right above the bread drawer in our kitchen cabinet.
My sister still has and uses the 1949 Frigidaire with door lever and rubber gasket. She’s had the motor repaired, belt replaced, gasket replaced. It runs great. It’s her extra fridge in the basement. She buys food in bulk because she has a rooming house with bed and board.
I miss the fridge door lever SOOOOOO much
My parents house had an old refrigerator in the basement to store gallons of milk since there was 7 of us. Went through a gallon of milk a day back then. My parents lived in that house for 55 years and the fridge was still working. The new owners did not want it so it got junked. They don't make them like they used to.
New fridges are so badly made. I don’t remember anything breaking on our 1980s fridge. Now our fancy ice and cold water dispensing fridge has broken down twice, bins are already cracked, and one of the shelves broke because we had a gallon of milk on it. (But we do love the ice and cold water lol)
@@Anwelei Yep. Planned obsolescence sucks.
Years ago we toured a home for sale that had pink fixtures and tile in the bathroom, and original turquoise-coloredfixtures in the kitchen. I so wish we'd bought it!😮
We moved into an early 1960s house in 1992 that had a pink bathroom. I couldn't wait to get rid of it.
When we were first house-hunting in the early 80s, we saw a house with a pink kitchen sink. Total No for me
Pink tile backslash, sink, toilet and floor, pink Formica counter tops with gray Boomerangs! Now that's class! LOL
The pink bathroom reminds me of my Oma and Opa's house...they are long gone now 😞...
Best feature I've seen: a 6-apartment building from 1920 had 3 metal-lined refrigerator cabinets, of varying sizes, in the kitchen wall of each apartment, all powered by a central compressor in the basement. They were no longer functional when I saw them and the cabinets were used for ordinary storage.
Lee Valley still sells pull-down ironing boards.
You know, an apartment building that has one compressor to run multiple units fridges likely would save electricity, which in today's world would mean less fossil fuels burned, which would mean we could help the climate change problem.
We need to make that a feature in today's world.
@@alericjohansen6775 unfortunately refrigeration repair is E-X-P-E-N-S-I-V-E. Every time a central compressor in a grocery store goes out - and they do - that's upwards of a $600 bill to do something simple. And imagine twelve fridges going bad at once...
@@tsm688
I did think about of it goes out, that's a lot of people's fridges. But I think that's a small piece to pay for things that save the climate (technically the climate will be fine with it without us, it's more trying to keep it within a range we humans can survive in).
And I did think about the fact that it could be more expensive to repair, but the 600 you mentioned seems like a lot, but at the same time, refrigerators in general are pretty expensive, at least the home floor style ones we use today. Since most fridges today last years on end without issues, I'd imagine it would be the same for a central version.
But you are right, those are things to consider. There are pros and cons to every idea. Those are some cons that people should be aware of and have a discussion about whether it's value is something that would be desired or not. As you can see, personally I think those cons are worth it, not not everyone will think so.
@@alericjohansen6775 Refrigerant costs are through the roof because of environmental concerns. I've seen the bills for those things and I'd know.
There's also questions of efficiency. You'd have evaporators hundreds of feet from the condensor. In a grocery, economies of scale overcome that, but when you're just doing it to run twelve tiny fridges, I'm not sure there's any benefit.
Also, a multi user system has a whole lot of weak points. You're building something as complex as a grocery system, to store 1/20th the food of a grocery system. It would break down frequently, 1 - 3 times a year, where a normal fridge can outlive your dog without maintenance.
It's a noble idea but I don't think its that practical. The simple refrigerator is actually pretty efficient now anyway. It takes about as much power as an old 100-watt tungsten when on, and spends most of its time off
@@alericjohansen6775 How about a double-sided fridge? One compressor serves two apartments. Heatsink to the side.
Pull out cutting boards! Some kitchen cabinet makers still offer them, but I rarely find them in newer homes. Such a space saver.
We had one but harder to clean - rarely used
@@desundial I have three pull out cutting boards in various locations in my kitchen. They were all in bad shape so I sanded them down and they are smooth as silk. Then I used cutting board oil on them. They turned out great. When I was a kid they were called bread boards for slicing bread. We made sandwiches on them, and many other things.
@@robertagannon442 I had these as a kid as well!
We installed a central vacuum system in our homes sind the 1990th.
Safes your back in a 3 story home, better quallity air, cleaner and easyer to empty and todays are easy to maintain yourself.
Bonus is that the warm and dusty air goes under your house.
I love it, so sad it is not possible for our new house, we have now a vacuum cleaner on each floor.
You a still buy central vac
Our last home had central vacc. Built in 64, when it was installed. We had to replace to hose. But still working great when we sold the house 6 years ago.
@@paulstewart2444 yes you can but the layout and materials make ik way to expensive to install it.
My only experience with central vac was in the apartment I rented in the 80’s. I liked it but I have a friend who has one in her home, and she doesn’t like hers. Everyone has their own preferences. I think about having one put in sometimes.
A central vacuum is not a "kitchen feature", it's for the entire house. They are certainly still made, they are better than ever at being user friendly, and they are the best way of ridding a home of dust and allergens especially when that vacuum is vented outside.
This may partially be because mine is a couple decades old, but the hose is a pain to lug around. The house is long enough to cover the entire main floor from one hookup, but that much house is heavy. It's better made than the cheap shop vac tubes, it's never had to be replaced, but that just adds to the weight. We tried using a different one that was lighter, but it tore in just 6 months. Other than bringing the hose up and down the stairs though, I like the system.
I think a good Miele vac is more convenient and just as performative. Certainly far cheaper.
Exactly right. The company I work for installs them daily in brand new construction
@@StevenCootwareyou can buy hoses for each floor and not have to carry them
Bring back dining nooks like that. It is nice to to eat closer together
My favorite kitchen, memory is of my mother, who never had any conveniences when we lived on the farm. As a matter of fact, she always kept the wooden boxes that the grocery gave us to carry things home in, and she turned them into cupboards to put things away in the kitchen. I guess my favorite thing in the kitchen was my mother because she could ring a chickens neck, pull a few things from her garden, take the few ingredients she had in the kitchen, and turn it into something wonderful to eat! They don’t make women like that anymore.
Yes they do. I 'm too disabled to do many of those things now, but when I was a kid I lived on a farm for while. We didn't have electricity even. I learned how to do many things the pioneer way - including how to butcher animals, milk goats, cook on a woodstove, keep a fire going, make cheese, bake bread, make butter, weed a garden, can foods, and so on. We even had a treadle sewing machine, and a washboard.
@@darleneengebretsen1468we had wash boards when I was a kid and a machine with a ringer up top so you had to put the clothes through manually.
They still make women like that, but these days those women are apparently neglected and unappreciated by people like you. Your loss ☺️
I can assure you, those women do still exist. Look harder.
@@r3db0x there really wasn’t any need to be rude.
I have lazy Susans in my corner cabinets. I love breakfast nooks. I like linoleum flooring better than vynal, use my antique Hoosier cabinet as my baking center and love the convenience of a lull down ironing board....guess I amm from a different century.
We installed a central vacuum system in our house in 1994. It still works great!
My old boss had one of those, it clogged so much he had to abandon it and get a regular vacuum.
We had installed when our house was built in 2006-it’s great-no dust
Love my central vac. So much more powerful than any other vacuum.
Those breakfast nooks though…so convenient and cozy. Different styles to fit big and small kitchens.
In early 1960s England my grandmother had a zinc-lined meat safe, that she also used for milk. If she bought a block of ice cream for dessert it would be wrapped in many layers of newspaper to keep it cold until served.
The other thing she had that is now a collectable was scales with one pan for what she was weighing and the other for weights, 2 oz, 4 oz etc.
This brought back sudden memories of a dining nook in my grandparents house over 50 years ago. I hadn’t thought of that until now but the memories suddenly came back in the first minute of this video
The last shot of this TH-cam video is about 1938 kitchen economist from a university extension on saving steps for the American housewife. She interviewed housewives on what the liked and didn't like about their kitchen. Then she talked with kitchen designers on designers on how it could be built. After many of hard work they came up with a brilliant design. I love everything about this kitchen. Even though this is in 1938 and didn't have a microwave, dish washer etc. If I could I would have a kitchen exactly like that (with the microwave and dishwasher). Watch the video, it's very impressive.
had a programme here in the UK about a family living as a victorian family would. after it was over asked mum what she missed from 21st "automatic washing machine"
19th mum
boil water in copper, wash cloths using tongs as water too hot get to dry using mangle hang out to dry in a coal smoked filled city iron clothes using flat irons this was a 3 women operation
Do you have a link to that video by any chance?
@@bunnymcfoo8650 If you look up “A step saving kitchen, 1949” you should find it, the TH-cam channel is called “US National Archives”. I tried including the link but for some reason my replies weren’t showing up.
@@bunnymcfoo8650 It was on PBS a decade or so ago. Called "Victorian House".
When I was a boy we had an ice box in our home, and a ringer washing machine also every home had an incinerator in the back yard.
We still have an incinerator in our farm yard.
i LIVED WITH AN ICE BOX ON THE FARM UNTIL WE GOTA PROPANE FRIDGE LATER. rINGER WASHING MACHINES WERE TERRIBLE BECAUSE THEY SO OFTEN POPPED THE BUTTONS OFF OF CLOTHES.
wow... i personally LOVE LOVE LOVE THE DINING NOOKS!!!! my mom had a small round table in the kitchen area in her mid century childhood...but, not a built in dining nook!! NEVER KNEW OF THIS BEFORE AND ITS THE BEST THING EVERRRRR.... ❤❤❤❤❤
I have too many things to say so I’m not going to say anything but I love this!
Thank you for compiling this trip down memory lane. 🌹
Another thing that was very common back in the day was the rotating spice rack, often in a corner cabinet. Very easy and quick to find what you need, and you wouldn't have little items sitting unnoticed in the back (for years sometimes!).
never seen one of those that wasn't crammed full and unrotatable ;)
When we moved from the city to the suburbs in 1963, we had the first built in dishwasher and wall oven in copper finish. The kitchen was ultramodern with an intercom, Formica countertops, and all the built in cabinets. We were very impressed.
You were impressed with Formica? 😐
I still prefer sitting in a breakfast nook and one you missed is the single recessed back burner for pots like soup or boiling spaghetti water, etc. which made tip overs impossible. Wish that was available now.😊
And that faucet over the stove to fill large pots!
I could go on and on. The small door outside the kitchen for milk bottle delivery- in the days of the 1-quart bottles. The fancier ones had a signaling device with a pointer to let the milkman know what other dairy products the happy homemaker needed. The rotating lazy susan storage system with the small trough at the bottom of the central shaft to pour in ant poison. The aluminum hatch set into the tiled counter with an inner cylinder and a linked lower door that allowed you to load up the upper chamber with garbage and dump it into a garbage pail accessed from the outside. The blender and citrus juicer attachments for my mother's prized Mixmaster countertop mixer. The curved-sided ceramic salt and pepper shakers that fitted into the backsplash of her O"keefe and Merritt 4-burner stove (with central griddle) with the timer and light switch. Our rich friends had an O'Keefe and Merritt "Town and Country Aristocrat" stove, 6 burners, a griddle, 2 broilers, 2 ovens, a warming oven and 18 pilot lights. The memorable accessory for my mother's ironing board was the sprinkling bottle, this one made as a Cub Scout project by my older brother, age 8. An RC Cola painted off-white (with a few smears and fingerprints), a flower decal and a mushroom-shaped plastic sprinkler head with a cork gasket.
You have a great memory. I never knew about the ant poison trough!
The dairy hatch would be fantastic for package delivery in the modern era. No more porch pirates!
@@Axqu7227 That was the exact same thought I also had.
Love your stories!👍❤️
I’m 63, born in 1961. Back in the 1960s, we had a metal Hoosier-styled cabinet with a flour sifter in it. We also had a wall-mounted can opener that my father installed. When we moved in 1972 to another house, my parents had a new kitchen installed by Sears. It had a bread box built into one of the cabinets.
My mom was a housekeeper in the 90s and my sister and I sometimes helped out. There was one house that had a fairly modern central vacuum cleaner installed. You had a 20 ft long hose/cord that plugged into a special outlet (intake?) in every room and a large collection canister and motor in the garage. It was indeed much quieter and more powerful than a normal vacuum, though I don't know if the added cost would be worth it.
My house has one still. Quieter and more powerful
I loved breakfast nooks! One thing I miss is having a utility sink!
I had a ironing board in the wall in college, I loved it. I hardly ever ironed, but without it I never would have.
I feel so old - especially since apart from the built in flour sifter and meat safe, I assumed people still had all those things in their kitchen. Mine does!
My kitchen is slightly larger than a galley, and I have a small dining area that we put in a small 4 seat table we love. I can't have lots of details in the kitchen due to space. I have 3 cabinets in the dining area I use for extra storage. I love our house, but I do work full time and as much as I love to bake, I am not a homemaker and do not spend a ton of time cooking in it.
Most of us are not as fortunate.
@@briansullivan5908 Most of you are "not as fortunate" as poor people like me who have old-fashioned, outdated kitchen features?! My dear, I think you have missed the point.
@@nutmeg208 no outdated kitchen features are wonderful. I have an outdated kitchen myself and wouldn’t want those gadget disasters for all the world. It’s just mine us scaled down it doesn’t really have any cool features so that’s it’s just basic.
My dad built the house I grew up in in the early '50s. It had tile counters, cutting boards that you pulled out of the cabinet like drawers, linoleum floors, and a pull-down ironing board. It was a beautifully crafted home. I wish we'd kept it after my mom died.
I loved the pull out cutting board, & the pull out cabinet on wheels with work surface top.
Plus they are wheel chair friendly!
I'm 61 and all these items have been in all the homes I have lived in. My present home has many of these features. It's a fairly new home.
The kitchen of my childhood had a breakfast nook. We ate breakfast there together every morning. That was way back when families ate meals together at a table and breakfast was considered the most important meal to fuel you through the day. I'm now 80.
I'm 62, I remember the wall mounted can openers. Fun video. Thanks.
Newly constructed apartments in Chula Vista in the 1970s had tiled counters. It seemed a new trend to those of us moving in.
My grandmothers large craftsman house in LA had such a mesh screened builtin cabinet - hers got its cooling from the basement air circulating up from the mesh floor and through it and out a vent in the top. I always marveled at the eggs, bread and veggies kept in there, in the hot LA summers!
Don’t talk to me about tile countertops!! Soooo many shattered glasses and broken dishes! sez me - the Very Clumsy Chef!!💕
I love CERAMIC COUNTERTOPS. tO KEEP THE GROUT FROM GETTING NASTY, YOU HAVE TO SEAL IT EXTREMELY WELL WHEN IT IS FIRST INSTALLED.
@@darleneengebretsen1468 Our Pittsburgh and Harrisburg houses had the tiles close together. My mother complained that they made rolling out pie dough and noodle dough difficult.
I have to say, I love a retro kitchen, but for countertops, to me the best retro substance is Formica! Easy to clean, hard to damage, smooth, lasts for ages.
@@sundayoliver3147 me too! I like a clean background to do my decorating against - so much easier to change movable things than permanent stuff like elaborate backsplashes or exotic countertops. 💕
I always liked the built-in pull-out cutting board. So handy. Would love it my modern kitchen had one.
My house (built 1950) had a breakfast nook added in 1970. Great feature!
I remember most of these. I had a built-in ironing board in an old apt built in the 1940s. I LOVED it because we still ironed everything back then. Best kitchen thing I LOVED was a cutting board that came out in the cupboard right below the kitchen counter. You just pulled it out, made a sandwich, wiped it off, and pushed it back in to hide it away. I wish they STLL did that!! Loved it!!! TFS! Austin TX USA
Tile counter tops: every glass that fell on them, broke and eventually a tile here and there would crack and peel up- no replacements. I loved the central vacuum in a house I rented in the 1970's. Dumb-waiters and servant staircases into the kitchen (made for great hide and seek escapes as a kid) We had separate "butler's pantry" with glass cabinets to store the china. Large crocks with heavy lids for flour and sugar.
Susanjeffay3851, you were fancy.
My mom's house, built about 1940, had a wall-mounted can opener, fold-down ironing board, and also a pull-out bread board built into one of the cabinets. I miss those!
It was seen a few times in the video, but not mentioned:
The integrated sink/drainboard. Often part of a metal cabinet. I imagine they went away when the dishwasher became popular.
The central vac is still widely in use.
Features I remember as a kid:
built in blender, trash compactor, pull out cutting board, and grid style flourescent lighting.
Still popular here in the UK - mine has a small central bowl between the sink and the drainer (I am the dishwasher :) )
@@denisehill7769 I'm from the UK, now live in the US. No one has heard of a one piece stainless steel sink and drainboard. This isn't civilisation, these people are savages!
I just can't imagine not having a draining board. I have two, and a dishwasher.@@denisehill7769
That dedicated rolling pin drawer is cool AF. Maybe I’ll build one in my kitchen.
I have been planning on trying to build pull outs for my bottom cupboards. The smallest, I put up barriers for cookie sheets, cutting boards and cooling racks to keep them upright.
I was going to start with that one. Same design, but pull out.
If I do it I will have enough room for a shallow pull out second drawer on the top. And it could have a dedicated spot for my rolling pin and my rolling mats.
Wall mounted ironing boards and can openers need to make a come back!! So do breakfast nooks and Hoosier cabinets!
Edited to add: also central vacuum cleaners!!! I grew up in a house with one of those, and it was SO MUCH EASIER than lugging a heavy vac around. Also less trouble to store. Currently living in an apartment with no storage for things like ironing boards and vacuum cleaners.
you can still get a wall mounted ironing board if you really want one. common feature in motel rooms, also known as "what the hell is that weird thing on the wall". Mostly we just do a hell of a lot less ironing now. We also wear a lot less hats.
I love vintage and antique things so much. Everything looks so cool!! Wish I had one of those breakfast nooks😊 Some mid century houses are so beautiful!
My Seattle apartments each had vintage items - one had the old ice box where ice blocks were stored and the other had the fold down ironing board built into the wall of the kitchen. Both lovely apartments where rent was about $160/month.
If I ever build a home, the breakfast nook, central vacuum are an absolute must have.
We always ate all our meals in grandma’s breakfast nook when we stayed with her!
I have those same wonderful memories at my own Oma and Opa's house! To this day I love breakfast nook's for that exact reason. Eating in breakfast nooks forced family's to sit close together and actually look at each other 😊.
My grandpa was a woodworker he built a nook and the seating opened up filled with coloring books , crayons after meals it was soooo fun! My grandma always snuck candies etc. In them for us to hide from my mom. That’s my happiest memories! 👍❤️🙏
My 1951 home has a narrow cupboard with built ins to hold plastic wrap, wax paper, etc. I use my wooden pullout bread boards daily for extra counter space. Somewhere in history, someone replaced tile counter tops with Wilsonart daisy laminate, which I love! My favorite kitchen item is in my canning kitchen which has a Youngstown double sink, double drainboard. It is super efficient and still a workhorse.
In Cyprus, all relatively older houses have built-in air cleaners in the kitchens: a fan installed in the wall near the ceiling that pulled air (and smoke/smells) from cooking from inside to outside.
Here in America, a lot of houses had exhaust fans. Our old house had a big hood with a exhaust fan over the stove as my current one.
Pretty much every house I've ever been inside has a range hood.
My grandparents had a breakfast nook! I loved it and miss it to this day.