HELPFUL KITCHENS.
To-dav's bride owes a great deal to the people who have made her kitchen eo easy to deal with. There is no surface which holds duet, there is no surface that cannot be cleaned with the sweep of a duster, there is no surface -which needs long polishing. Her jugs have good pouring noses, her kitchen produces and re-absorbs everything she wants from a pastry board to a mincer, and its window has washable curtains.
The bride of to-day, if she has to face more work than her mother foresaw when she started on her journey to the altar (and this remains the most exciting form of travel), is, at ahv rate, rid of a whole clump of wrong notions. (a) That the kitchen need ever be in a horrid state of ugliness. (b) That she need ditto. (c) That meals can only be produced by a series of processes which are all unseemly. (d) That she cannot look as crisp as a radish and as clean as cream while she is producing a meal. We are left with a kitchen which looks as bridal as the bride, and a bride who looks as practical as the kitchen.
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume LXX, Issue 35, 11 February 1939, Page 15
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200HELPFUL KITCHENS. Auckland Star, Volume LXX, Issue 35, 11 February 1939, Page 15
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