Country Life

Top of the range

The market for range cookers is hotting up thanks to a renewed taste for classic kitchens

- Giles Kime

Florence Nightingal­e chose Esse stoves for Balaclava

IN the days when the sole purpose of a kitchen was the preparatio­n of food, slovenly cooks could create the culinary equivalent of Tracey Emin’s bed and their guests would be none the wiser. However, now that kitchens are the vortex of most houses and on show to the world, there’s an incentive to make spaces that don’t only function well, but look pretty hot, too.

Since the 1970s, a popular approach to appliances was to design them out of existence, creating Minimalist ovens, waferthin induction hobs and fridges that masquerade­d as cabinetry. Most had more bells and whistles than you ever knew you needed and the result was kitchens that had all the charm of a laboratory. Recently, however, all that has changed as people have set out to design kitchens with greater character: now, appliances are out, proud and infinitely more charming than their Modernist incarnatio­ns.

Cooks have always been defined by their choice of gadget (robust-looking industrial-style stoves for wannabe Jamie Olivers, 1950s-style fridges for nostalgics, hi-tech wizardry for gastronomi­c geeks) and the more public nature of the kitchen means that these are increasing­ly seen as an opportunit­y for self-expression, not least the choice of cooker.

In the range market, it’s easy to be won over by their histories and associatio­ns. For example, Florence Nightingal­e was so passionate about Esse stoves that she had them installed in her hospital in Balaclava. Inhabitant­s of the Cotswolds warm to the fact that they have their own homegrown range: the Everhot is made at Coaley Mill, Dursley, near where it was invented 40 years ago by the owner of a 13th-century mill that now serves as the company’s showroom.

A recent arrival from further afield is Officine Gullo, the Florentine manufactur­er that creates custom-made visions in burnished brass and copper that are catching the eye of a number of starry customers.

Much of the appeal of these robust-looking stoves is the manner in which they combine the beauty and functional­ity of a Land Rover Defender or a 1950s Ferguson, rather than resembling the product of the deadening hand of a designer whose aim is to distil every element to a few clean lines.

After a decade or two of flirting with Modernist kitchens, cooks find these ranges move with the ages. ‘People are increasing­ly looking at aesthetics in tandem with functional­ity,’ says Laura James of Aga. ‘Greater functional­ity means people can not only invest in a cooker that’s built to last, but one that will keep evolving to meet a family’s ever-changing needs.’

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Everhot 150 in Marine Blue, designed in the Cotswolds
Everhot 150 in Marine Blue, designed in the Cotswolds
 ??  ?? Top: Esse CAT gas cooker. Above: Officine Gullo cooking island
Top: Esse CAT gas cooker. Above: Officine Gullo cooking island
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom