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Kitchenware Newswire

Authentic Stoneware for a Touch of Farmhouse Kitchen Style

By Lorrie Baumann

Stoneware from La Manufacture de Digoin has now become part of the extensive range of fine European imports offered by The French Farm. While The French Farm’s product range is centered on fine foods, it also includes cutlery collections by Jean Dubost, handcrafted olive wood utensils from Berard, lavender-scented personal and home care products from Le Chatelard 1802, Jacquard tea towels from Coucke, The French Farm collection of wood cutting and service boards, and now, traditional farmhouse-style stoneware items from La Manufacture de Digoin. “Since we do very well with housewares, I decided to bring in the Digoin line a few months ago. People have seen it in gift shows in France,” said Gisele Oriot, The French Farm’s Founder. “It has been a really old-fashioned line that has had a new look by the new owner of the company.”

The new stoneware was made in a French factory in Burgundy that was founded in 1875 as a family-owned business that specialized in handcrafted pottery and made the kinds of objects typically found in a 19th-century French farmhouse kitchen – the pitcher for the milk, the jug for the cool drinking water, the crock for the pickles. “I’m actually from Burgundy, and we still have my grandfather’s farm, and there was always a brown jug and a jar, and everything was manufactured by the Digoin company,” Oriot said. “It would say ‘Digoin’ on the item. Everything was brown – no red, no yellow, just brown.” Once those farmhouses gained electric power, the need for many of those objects was superseded by refrigeration. Cheap plastics came into those kitchens, and the factory’s business declined. The company was in its last throes when it was rescued by Corinne Jourdain and a group of investors. “Her ambition was to perpetuate a historical expertise and to bring back to former glory those meaningful culinary objects,” according to the company.

For Jourdain, that meant keeping the company’s traditional craftsmanship but updating its sense of style, starting with the addition of colored glazes that would fit into the modern design aesthetic of a contemporary kitchen. “’Let’s do some blue. Let’s do some green.’ She basically took a new look at the whole line,” Oriot said. “This was in 2014. It’s starting to catch on. They’re selling to gift shops and upscale restaurants in France. She’s making it fashionable again.”

Oriot saw the new line for the first time in one of those gift shops when she went back to France on a visit to family there. Then she found out that the factory was nearby and offered tours – and also factory sales. “I went to see the old factory, and it was like magic. There was all this clay, and she had all these beautiful colors,” Oriot recalls. “I took a tour and asked her if she had a distributor in the U.S. She didn’t.”

Oriot placed an order, added the line to her catalog and premiered it at a New York gift show. “We’re shipping everywhere now,” she said. “There is interest in the line.” The collection offered in the U.S. by The French Farm includes a Large and Small Jug, Cruet, Canister with Lid, Vinegar Jar, baking dishes, salad and serving bowls, a utensil crock and terrines like those that French charcuteriers once used in their shops. “The butcher or the charcuterier would bake their recipe in those big brown dishes,” Oriot said. “They would finish the pate and clean it [the terrine] and bake another one in it and sell it by the slice.”

The stoneware is durable and oven-safe, she added. “You can cook in it. It’s very, very strong.”
For more information, visit www.thefrenchfarm.com.

A Family Tradition of Damascus Cutlery

By Lorrie Baumann

Don’t wait until next year to learn about Faneema Cutlery, which makes the knife named the 2020 Knife of the Year at this year’s Shot Show, the outdoor sports show held January 2020 in Las Vegas. Although the natural emphasis in the cutlery that’s displayed at the Shot Show is on hunting knives, the win also threw a spotlight on Faneema’s culinary knives. Sales for Faneema’s cutlery range have now outstripped those for its line of recreational knives, and the company had intended to introduce those to a wider American market at The Inspired Home Show this year, only to be foiled by the COVID-19 outbreak.

Faneema Cutlery specializes in hand-forged Damascus steel knives. They’re designed by Qamar Abbas, a Pakistani native who follows traditions that came down to him from his father, Ghulam Abbas, who learned his own skills during his childhood in Wazirabad, Pakistan, an elite knife-making center for the country. Abbas and his wife Janice, the co-Owners of Faneema Cutlery, had been raising their family in the U.S. for decades when two of their sons approached them with a proposition that they’d like to learn knife-making and then go into business for themselves. After years of apprenticeship, Qamar and Fakhar left the United States to start their own company in Pakistan, where they make knives that they export to the United States. Janice and Ghulam remained in the U.S., where they import and sell the knives to the American market.

The company started three years ago in Texas, where Faneema specialized in outdoor recreational knives, but Janice and Ghulam have since moved to Illinois, where they’ve set up their business outside Chicago and have turned their attention to culinary knives after sales for those took off, Janice said.
“The knives are all designed by us,” she said. “They are all unique. Damascus, by its very nature, is unique. They’re like fingerprints; you cannot duplicate them.”

Faneema Cutlery knives are made of high-carbon Damascus steel that’s relatively easy to sharpen to an extremely sharp edge. They have full-tang construction for balance and durability. Handles for the culinary line are either resin or pakkawood, both common in high-end knives adopted by working chefs. Although they have the quality and beauty that make them stand out, they’re offered at an affordable price point that makes them achievable for home cooks as well as professional chefs.

Because they’re high-carbon steel, they require greater care than a stainless steel knife, and they should never go into a dishwasher. “Damascus appeals to knife aficionados who shop for knives at specialty stores where we hope to feature our knives in the future,” Janice said. “Our knives are popular with men in particular who love to cook and take care of knives. They especially like them for outdoor cooking.”
Faneema offers its culinary knives in sets, most of them anchored by an 8-inch chef knife. “We do have some sets with an 8-inch and a 6-inch,” Janice said. “We do make some 10-inch, but we’ve found that the bigger knives aren’t as popular.”

The company has just brought out a new set that also includes a filet-style knife. “Damascus doesn’t have any give to it, but it has the slender knife that goes to a very sharp point,” Janice said. “All of our knives have a paring/utility knife with a 4.5-inch blade, and we’re going to try to get in a 3.5-inch paring.” Some sets also include a cleaver.

The newest set, FC3124, includes the cleaver, an 8-inch chef knife, 6-inch filet knife, 6-inch chef knife and a 4-inch paring knife, all with pakkawood handles. The five-knife set will retail for $395.
Faneema also has the ability to do custom orders or create custom sets for retailers and can create custom pieces for individual customers. “We can etch or print designs or company logos on the knives, whatever they need,” Janice said. “It takes around three months to create a custom piece.”
For more information, call Janice Abbas at 469.388.7343, email janice@faneema.com or visit www.faneemacutlery.com.

Juicy Turkey, Flavorful Gravy from the SRT

By Lorrie Baumann

The SRT (Special Roasting Tray) from Benno’s Kitchen is the roasting pan for the home cook who’s preparing the Thanksgiving turkey for a crowd who loves a juicy bird but thinks that maybe the best part is the dressing drenched in gravy. It was invented by a home cook who knows exactly how that feels.
Benno Kuttruff describes himself as a hobby cook who used to have trouble basting his turkey. He’d take the pan out of the oven and then ask someone else to hold it while he spooned the pan juices over it. “It’s a little dangerous because everything is hot,” he said. He tried using an American-style turkey baster, but that didn’t work well for him either. “For the nozzle, you have to add water in the beginning,” he said. “Then it splashes.”

He consulted the Internet for answers to his problem. “There was nothing on Google,” he said.
He decided that he’d just have to come up with an answer for himself. He sketched out a design for a slotted tray set over a pan with a stopcock on the side. Juices from the turkey or the lamb roast or the beef drip down through the tray’s slots and into the pan below, where they collect and condense instead of simply evaporating away. When it’s time to baste, the home cook opens the stopcock, which is equipped with a filter to keep it from clogging, drains some of the juices into a cup and pours them back over the protein. When cooking is done, the juices are easily collected to make a base for the gravy. The pan’s special design produces much more of the juice than an ordinary open roasting pan. “After two hours with a big turkey in a regular pan, most of the liquid evaporates,” Kuttruff said. “With the SRT, it doesn’t…. This means that for the turkey, you get a lot of gravy.”

Kuttruff took his sketched design to a friend who fabricates steel. Six or seven prototypes later, after a lot of experiments to make sure that the drain hole was the correct size and the addition of a filter to prevent clogging, and they had a version that’s ready for sale.

After coming up with a model that’s correctly sized for American ovens, Kuttruff had planned to introduce his SRT to the market at this year’s Inspired Home Show, only to see that plan foiled by the COVID-19 pandemic. He did the next-best thing: he videoed his demonstration and posted it on YouTube.


Though the SRT was originally designed for a turkey – it’s large enough to roast a 17-pound bird – its uses aren’t limited to that. Chicken or spare ribs or fish also turn out juicy and flavorful when cooked on the SRT, he says. For salmon, he likes to put some vegetables and a little white wine into the reservoir and lay the fish on the tray. The vegetables add their aromas to the steam that rises to cook the fish, and then after 20 minutes, the fish is done, and the home cook just opens the drain to release the liquid into a saucepan and use it as the base for a flavorful sauce.

When he’s cooking pork on the SRT, Kuttruff likes to use beer as his basting liquid. The beer turns into an aromatic steam that cooks the pork. Kuttruff bastes it during the cooking, so that it comes out of the oven juicy but with a crispy skin. “You just have to open the drain and then you get a monster sauce,” he said.

For more information, email benno@bennoskitchen.com.

Las Vegas Design Center Offers Signature Programs, Expanded Resources for Designers

Las Vegas Design Center (LVDC) will debut a new showroom at Summer Las Vegas Market, Aug. 30 – Sep. 3, 2020 and present two virtual programs in August including its monthly First Friday webinar and the 2020 ANDYZ Awards presentation, according to International Market Centers.

“LVDC continues to grow as the premier designer resource in southern Nevada and the Southwest,” said Cain Brodie, General Manager of LVDC. “We remain committed to providing the trade with a unique, well-rounded selection of key manufacturers and products. And like everyone else, are learning how to adapt to this new business environment.”

Las Vegas Design Center is home to nearly 30 to-the-trade showrooms showcasing  more than 120 product lines. This summer, lighting leader Visual Comfort & Co. will debut a new 2,656-square-foot showroom. The new space will serve as a western hub for the bellwether company and feature its Visual Comfort, Tech Lighting, Generation Lighting and Monte Carlo Fans lines.

Other key LVDC resources include manufacturer’s representative Area West; Capel Rugs; Eastern Accents; European Bath, Kitchen, Tile & Stone; Four Hands; Global Views; Leftbank Art; Phillips Collection and Vanguard Furniture, among others.

Las Vegas Design Center and the California Central/Nevada Chapter of the American Society of Interior Designers (ASID) also will present the 2020 ANDYZ Awards from 11 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. (PT) on Wednesday, Aug. 12. During the virtual celebration, 10 winners will be recognized for their design savvy.

The 2020 ANDYZ awards winners are:

  • Best Residential Bathroom Design: Wendy Glaister of Wendy Glaister Interiors in Modesto, California
  • Best Commercial Design: Jamie Stringham of Interior Dynamics and Laura Fullow of Laura Fullow Designs in Las Vegas
  • Best Custom Furnishings Design: Emily Roose of Emily Roose Interiors in Truckee, California
  • Best Hospitality Design: Karen Buttrum and Casey Clark of MBA Architecture + Interior Design in Reno, Nevada
  • Best Residential Interior Design: Marcio Decker of Aspen Leaf Interiors in Reno, Nevada
  • Best Kitchen Design: Christopher Grubb of Interiors Design Group in Los Angeles
  • Best Multiple Residential Design: Lori Brazier of House of Brazier in Sacramento
  • Best Showroom Design: Michele Youell of Natural Domain Interiors in Las Vegas
  • Best Outdoor Space Design: Christopher Grubb of Interiors Design Group in Los Angeles
  • Best Student Design: Marisol Coria, 2020 Graduate of California State University at Fresno in Fresno, California

The ANDYZ Awards were created in 2015 to recognize exceptional design from interior designers, architects and design students. Interior design projects in residential, commercial and hospitality categories were judged by a panel of ASID board members and by an editorial member from media sponsor Furniture, Lighting and Décor on five main criteria: presentation; innovation/creative use of space; scale and functionality; aesthetics; and overall execution.

Las Vegas Design Center showrooms are open during IMC’s bi-annual Las Vegas Market, the leading home furnishings and gift market in the western U.S., presenting more than 4,300 gift, home décor and furniture resources, allowing for cross-category commerce among these industries. The Summer 2020 Las Vegas Market runs August 30 – September 3, 2020, at World Market Center Las Vegas. For more information, visit www.lasvegasmarket.com.

Date Change for the 2021 Inspired Home Show

The International Housewares Association will hold its annual home + housewares gathering, The Inspired Home Show, in person August 7-10, 2021 at McCormick Place Convention Center in Chicago. The event had previously been scheduled for March 13-16, 2021.

“As the pandemic continued into the summer, we had multiple conversations with our board of directors, exhibiting members and retail buyers, all of whom were experiencing apprehension about the ability to safely convene the industry as soon as March of 2021,” said Derek Miller, IHA President. “While the show continues to be a critical part of their businesses, the health and safety of our industry is our first priority and moving the event to later in the year allows more time for authorities to successfully manage this crisis.”

“On behalf of the IHA Board of Directors, all of whom are exhibitors at The Inspired Home Show, I’m extremely pleased that we were able to find alternate dates for The Inspired Home Show 2021,” said Howard “Chip” Steidle Jr., Chief Executive Officer of John Ritzenthaler Company and 2020 IHA chair. “Given the current trajectory of the pandemic and the ongoing nature of treatment and vaccine development, I can confidently say that this is the best option for our industry right now.”

The decision to postpone the show until August of 2021 has been met with universal support from the home + housewares retailer community. “We spoke to a number of key retailers, both domestic and international,” said Miller. “All of them have been very vocal about their desire to have a face-to-face show in 2021 and are enthusiastic about holding the show later in the year.”

Regarding the 2022 Show, Miller said IHA will survey exhibitors and buyers in the coming weeks to collect current and relevant buying pattern data to determine appropriate timing for future shows.

An FAQ with further information for both exhibitors and attendees is available on the show website, TheInspiredHomeShow.com/DateChange.