





Merry Gourmet Miniatures © 1988 -
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Hello Aileen and Gail,
I'm very charmed by all the little items you sent! The little roots on the spring onions are a delightful detail - and the little holes in the biscuits. All the cheese is wonderfully realistic. Thank you. Kind regards,Joanna Read
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Dear Gail,
Thank you very much for sending me the missing item. It is lovely! Although I said you didn't have to give me back my money for the wrong item, also thanks! When we see eachother again, I will certainly buy more items from you. With kind regards,Barbara Kattz
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Hi Gail
Brilliant!
I've just ordered them - Thanks so muchNicola
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My friend Sara was thrilled to bits with her which arrived beautifully packaged with a lovely Happy Birthday message. The attention to detail is fantastic, and it looks great in her amazing Tudor dolls house! Many thanks, great work!
Elisabeth Clewlow
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Hello, This order arrived today! Thank you! I love these new peaces! I'm sorry for me being so impatient, my earlier orders arrived in 2-3 days.
Erja Aaltonen
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Dolls House and Miniature Food







Georgian Era
(1714 - 1830)
Georgian Kitchen Foods
By the 18th Century cooking in wealthier households had become more sophisticated. While the bulk of dishes were still cooked on open fires or spit roasted, the introduction of the metal grate, and later in the century metal hobs, which were built into fireplaces, made boiling and stewing easier.
Separate small brick built ranges burning charcoal were used to cook sauces and fried dishes. By the third quarter of the century, the very first simple kitchen ranges with a cast iron oven on one side and a boiler for heating water on the other were the cutting edge of kitchen technology.
The cast iron oven with the brick inner lining gave more control over baking. French influences meant that what were termed 'made up' dishes now entered English cuisine.The introduction of the pudding cloth for boiled puddings, both sweet and savoury, was a great step forward and very popular. There was also the introduction of the wooden hoop for cake baking, which made possible the use of a softer, more liquid mix for cakes.
Copper pans had replaced the clay cooking pots and black forged iron skillets and fire place cauldrons, on the new kitchen ranges. Wooden trenchers were no longer used, pewter and silver being the main serving and eating dishes.
By the end of the century the pewter and sometime even the silver was being replaced by the new china dinner and tea services. Chinese porcelain had started the trend, being the ultimate status symbol for the serving of tea from the middle of the 17th Century.
By 1800 no family with any aspersions to gentility or the upper classes was without its full china service, sometimes specially commissioned in English or French porcelain.
The Georgian Era dates between 1714 and 1830 The later Georgian dinner table was by 1800 very colourful with its porcelain hand painted, dinner service and mirror plateaux. These had become very fashionable by the mid 18th Century.
Starting out with elaborate 'parterres' -
Before long these gave way to coloured decorated porcelain coming from famous factories, both in England and abroad, including Minton, Sevres and Meissen. This type of centrepeice not only reflected light from the table candles but held small individual sweetmeat dishes. Made in silver or decorated china, one for each guest containing small bowls of flowers, sometimes fresh, some in wax or sugar paste.
These later evolved into the small ceramic posy bowls which eventually, along with the china figurines, moved from the table to Victorian mantlepieces, and 'What nots'. When the table fashion moved on, larger central flower arrangements became popular for upper class dining. Although the elaborate centre decorations were still popular for grand Royal dinners and State Occasions.
One plateaux used by the Prince of Wales in 1811 ran the whole length of the tables set for 200 people. In 1817, at a banquet again for the Prince Regent, the famous French Chef Careme created a "Tableaux en Plateaux" which included the ruins of Antioch, a Syrian Hermitage, a Turkish Mosque and a Chinese Hermitage. The French Chef Careme, used a variety of materials to construct these pieces from lumps of lard, to spun sugar.



