Fitted and Kitted
Ruby Tandoh and Deborah Sugg Ryan are on the hunt for the ideal kitchen, with suggestions from the last 100 years of kitchen design.
The kitchen is at the heart of our homes - and lives. Food writer Ruby Tandoh and design historian Professor Deborah Sugg Ryan agonise over what to have in their imaginary dream kitchen - and take advice from 100 years of archive.
From sooty caverns with no electricity or running water, to sleek utopias of marble and technology, and everything in between - kitchens have come a long way in the last century. But questions of who uses them, how much space they should take up, and where to store the latest gadget continue to plague us.
With contributions from kitchen designers Johnny Grey and Amanda Hughes, as well as architectural historians Lloyd Alter and Professor Barbara Penner, we discover that the advent of the fitted kitchen was in the crucible of war and disease.
Through the marketing of the 1930s and 1950s, the kitchen became a site of scientific precision for the British housewife. Then the cooks and sitcoms of the 60s and 70s made it more about personal expression - Fanny Cradock cooked on TV from her own home, Delia whipped up a curry, and The Good Life showed another version of middle-class aspiration.
Today, Jamie Oliver, Nigella Lawson and Nadiya Hussain offer busy people speedy and tasty meals, effortlessly thrown together in a beautiful, open-plan kitchen that dominates family life. Never mind if you want to shut the door on the mess and noise of cooking - or washing up…
So why does the kitchen of the future never arrive and what can 100 years of archive teach us about how we cook and live today?
Also featuring Dr Kevin Geddes, expert on TV cooks, and Lulu Grimes of Â鶹Éç Good Food. With thanks to Rukmini Iyer, chef and cookbook author.
Presented by Professor Deborah Sugg Ryan and Ruby Tandoh
Produced by Leonie Thomas
A Whistledown production for Â鶹Éç Radio 4
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- Sat 15 Jun 2024 20:00Â鶹Éç Radio 4