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Cutlery
refers
to any
hand
utensil
used in
preparing,
serving,
and
especially
eating
food. It
is more
usually
known as
silverware
or
flatware
in the
United
States,
where
cutlery
can have
the more
specific
meaning
of
knives
and
other
cutting
instruments.
This is
probably
the
original
meaning
of the
word.
Since
silverware
suggests
the
presence
of
silver,
the term
tableware
has come
into
use.
The
major
items of
cutlery
in the
Western
world
are the
knife,
fork and
spoon.
Traditionally,
good
quality
cutlery
was made
from
silver
(hence
the U.S.
name),
though
steel
was
always
used for
more
utilitarian
knives,
and
pewter
was used
for some
cheaper
items,
especially
spoons.
From the
nineteenth
century,
Electroplated
Nickel
Silver (EPNS)
was used
as a
cheaper
substitute;
nowadays,
most
cutlery,
including
quality
designs,
is made
from
stainless
steel.
Plastic
cutlery
is made
for
disposable
use, and
is
frequently
used in
fast
food or
take-away
outlets
and
provided
with
airline
meals.
Two
forms of
utensil
combining
the
functionality
of
various
pairs of
cutlery
are the
spork
(spoon /
fork)
and
knork
(knife /
fork).
Cutlery
has been
made in
many
places.
In
England,
the
industry
became
concentrated
by the
late
16th
century
in and
around
Birmingham
and
Sheffield.
However,
the
Birmingham
industry
increasingly
concentrated
on
swords,
made by
'long
cutlers'
and on
other
edged
tools,
whereas
the
Sheffield
industry
concentrated
on
knives.
At
Sheffield,
the
trade of
cutler
became
divided
with
allied
trades
emerging
such as
razormaker,
awlbladesmith,
shearsmith,
and
forkmakers
becoming
distinct
trades
by the
18th
century.
Before
the mid
19th
century
when
cheap
mild
steel
became
available
due to
new
methods
of
steelmaking,
knives
(and
other
edged
tools)
were
made by
welding
a strip
of steel
on to
the
piece of
iron
that was
to be
formed
into a
knife or
sandwiching
a strip
of steel
between
two
pieces
of iron.
This was
done
because
steel
was then
a much
more
expensive
commodity
than
iron.
After
fabrication,
the
knife
had to
be
sharpened,
originally
on a
grindstone,
but from
the late
medieval
period
in a
blade
mill or
(as they
were
known in
the
Sheffield
region)
a
cutlers
wheel.
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