Skewer Rack

Type: Food preparation
Material
iron
Dimensions
Overall: 2 7/8 x 5 x 1/4in. (7.3 x 12.7 x 0.6cm)
Creation Date
circa 1750 – 1830
Description
Wrought iron skewer rack with flat-sectioned body and an integral suspension loop at the top. Lower end forked into scrolled hooks set perpendicular to the body at either side.

Roasted meat and foul was as central to the diet of the early American as it is today. One of the preferred ways to cook a piece of meat or a bird was to turn it in front of an open fire, much like a rotisserie. Regardless if the food was being turned by hand, cranked by machine or set in a reflect open, it first had to be impaled on a spit. These long iron rods were pointy at one end, had a provision for being turned at the other, and a number of rectangular openings punched through it along their length. Skewers were smaller iron implements which were thrust through the food, and the openings in the spit, to secure it whatever was being cooked. A set of skewers, often of various sizes, were kept by the hearth suspended from a rack like this one when not in use.
Marks/Inscription
"P" struck into one side of the body.
Provenance
The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. Museum Purchase.
Kitchen Artifact ID
Acc. No. 1933-391
Institutional Collection
Colonial Williamsburg