Victorian Kitchen from the 1830s Uncovered in U.K.

Victorian kithcen.jpg
Daily Mail / Cascade News
The preserved Victorian stove is just one piece in a huge kitchen hidden for decades in the basement.

To all those who own estates in North Wales, try rummaging through your basement. You might find a perfectly intact Victorian kitchen from the 1830's, complete with a cooking range, pots, pans, antique fire extinguishers, a spit for roasting pigs and enough tables and benches to seat a team of twenty servants.

According to the Daily Mail, Archie Graham-Palmer and his wife Philippa discovered the hidden kitchen when looking through the home they had inherited and moved into earlier this year. The basement had become a dumping grounds to store family junk, and these belongings quite literally piled up, blocking the door to this cavernous kitchen.

Victorian yo.jpg
Daily Mail / Cascade News
Pots, pans and other cooking utensils remained unused for decades.

The home, built around 1800 and bought by Graham-Palmer's forefathers at an auction at the Wynnstay Arms Hotel in 1830, has been passed down generations, and in fact, the kitchen appears to have been used in World War II as a kind of safe haven from air raids. But no one bothered to tell the current owner.

The kitchen comes with a cookbook of recipes that require a team of servants to successfully pull off, leading us to believe that Chef Grant Achatz must be salivating somewhere in Chicago. At his restaurant Next, Achatz and his team spend three months crafting food from a uniquely specific place and time -- turtle consomme and pressed duck for their concept Paris 1906 and tom yum soup and catfish in caramel sauce for Tour of Thailand -- before completely scrapping it for another. Chef, we want to see you do Victorian-era potted meats, whole pig, jellies and some kedgeree. You have the culinary equivalent of the Dead Sea Scrolls to guide you.

Estate Victorian.jpg
Daily Mail / Cascade News
The kitchen was hidden in this estate, surrounded by 50 acres in Wrexham, North Wales.

The pictures bring up a lot of questions: Are those irons on the stove? Were those for clothes or for grilled cheese sandwiches? Is that a hand-cranked spice grinder? Is wood or coal used to heat up those stoves? Now that Graham-Palmer and his wife have decided to preserve it, will someone cook there? Can Achatz? And then can we eat there?

My Voice Nation Help
30 comments
ElizabethMD
ElizabethMD

WOW, thats incredible! How I would love to go through that old kitchen! I bet the quality after being airtight like that is incredible!

gellet6
gellet6

Hello,  Welcome to The British Food Depot where you can order all your favorite English and British foods online right here in the USA. We serve Expats and lovers of British Food from all over the USA. The British Food Depot is your fast and convenient store offering the lowest priced British foods online. 

printer ink
printer ink

ultimate a new trand may be start of this antique iron, nice news

Gracie10934550
Gracie10934550

my best friend's mom makes $77 an hour on the computer. She has been out of job for 9 months but last month her check was $7487 just working on the computer for a few hours. Read about it here MakeCash7. com

Mary Foster
Mary Foster

This is amazing! I wonder if loosing a kitchen is like loosing 20 bucks? you forget about it in your pocket and when you finally clean up you run across it.  lol

Moray Coulter
Moray Coulter

I can see how they overlooked the kitchen, I mean look at the building, it's not like they'll be short of filled-up storage-rooms. I'd bet a copper skillet that they've got another kitchen operating somewhere so they haven't been living off pizza delivery for 170 years. What I'm flummoxed by is why the range appears to be on wheels?! Maybe they just trundled it from room to room and eventually just mislaid it, "Dang, now where did I put down that two-ton stove?"

Frbl549
Frbl549

wow , that is so kewl..a find of a century, if one is so inclined to be a good cook... 

Rob Ray
Rob Ray

Kitchen untouched since the 1830s uncovered!

NekoWai
NekoWai

I bet those cast iron pots are well seasoned!

kidbookratings
kidbookratings

Oh great.  Another place to prepare tripe and jellied eels.  Yum.  English food is the best!!

pinkyboo
pinkyboo

Dude it's in wales not england. It's a whole other country full of roast lamb, leeks and cheese and mustard on toast.

Lady Delynn
Lady Delynn

That is just too cool! I'd love to find a hidden room full of antique items, I might sell a few things but I would keep and incorporate most things just for the visual coolness factor, I adore old things, they just look amazing!

Lisa Lutman Evans
Lisa Lutman Evans

wow, betcha the last owner is like damn i could have sold it for more. i want the cook book!

Valarie Martin
Valarie Martin

It wasn't lost... it was just well-preserved. Sort of like my garage!

Chode
Chode

why did the author have to mention that asshat atchez homo in this article?

Curious
Curious

This room has an exterior window...and while i know this house looks to have many windows, am i to believe that, in dang near 200 years, no one washed that window and thought "Now time to wash the inside, how do i get in there?" or peeped through there and noticed this 'hidden' room...?  Hard to believe. 

eB
eB

@Curious: says right in the article that the kitchens were used for shelter during the war, so we're talking about decades of misuse, not centuries.

Catie  Goodall
Catie Goodall

and now michelini doe it al for a dollar.......

Catie  Goodall
Catie Goodall

and now michelini does it all for one dollars.....

John
John

"Gordon Ramsey was, in fact, available for comment, but the comments were unprintable."

Barbara Aresco
Barbara Aresco

Okay, this is so cool! Don't understand how you overlook a whole KITCHEN, but still totally cool!!

fivesisters
fivesisters

My mother used to use a curling iron on my hair that was heated on the stove.  Burned my ear a few times..

Spencer
Spencer

Yes, those are clothes irons. Back before the invention of electric irons, an iron was, quite literally, a lump of iron that you heated on the stove and pressed your clothes with.

rumtopf
rumtopf

I found one of these irons in a field near my childhood home :D It were all rusty.

ElitheMonkey
ElitheMonkey

Wow... how much stuff do you have to have to lose a KITCHEN???

Nelson Click
Nelson Click

Great point!  I laughed heartily.  I sort of have an answer for this and that is the old Victorian mansions in England have become what Mark Girouard (an expert on British Victorian mansions) has called "stranded monsters".  They were built specifically for a way of life that no longer can exist.  There are lots of rooms in these huge houses built for purposes that are no longer required.  One house had a room just for ironing newspapers. It's easy to understand that in these houses there are rooms that the owners themselves rarely ever enter into.  I have a three bedroom house and once the kids left one bedroom is closed off and we never go in there.  I dusted it last March and I haven't been in there since and this is October.   

Now Trending

From the Vault

 

©2013 LA Weekly, LP, All rights reserved.
Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places Los Angeles

    Voice Places

    Find everything you're looking for in your city

  • Happy Hour App

    Happy Hour App

    Find the best happy hour deals in your city

  • Daily Deals

    Daily Deals

    Get today's exclusive deals at savings of anywhere from 50-90%

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    Check out the hottest list of places and things to do around your city