They are little, rectangular, white and micro-wave safe,
created to be used for single service airplane meals. We bought a stack of them
about 30 years ago at the Pfaltzgraff Outlet in Lancaster County. Finally, after many years of incessant use, they are beginning to crack. We use them for both
micro-wave and as cat dishes. In fact,
if we get pick up one, the cats present themselves with expectation written all over their fuzzy faces. If I put a sandwich on
one and take it out onto the back picnic table, Bob will hop up and come over
to inspect it, just to be double certain the contents are not meant for him.
After all, sometimes,
Fancy Feast© comes on that dish…
There is nothing remarkable about them, but it occurs to me
that they are an artifact of a particular time and place, one now receding in
our collective memory. By our mega-meal standard, these dishes are small. No supersized anything would fit.
Today, not only is the
once flourishing stoneware company Pfaltzgraff defunct, but the reusable nature of the
dishes probably represented, to some clever sales person at a disposable tableware company, a great opportunity.
"Convenient! Fast! Just Throw Those Cumbersome Dirty
Dishes Away!"
As it was, employees had to pack the plates into dishwashers and someone had to put the frozen-whatever back on them, too, before reloading them all onto the plane for microwaving. The airlines had to pay these folks. So, while they were economizing, they got rid of all that staff--people--who represented wages and retirement.
It’s only recently that we’ve collectively begun to wonder where “away” is. We're discovering that because there truly is no “away,” disposable plastic is not only a
false economy--another thing made out of petro-chemicals that will take a thousand years to fall apart--but a burden to our already over-burdened planet.
And, while all this "progress" was transpiring, another whole host of changes
occurred, these along the cost cutting line. Now, on economy flights, you better carry on board anything you
wish to consume, because most airlines, except for the long haul ones,
have dispensed with offering their passengers anything but soda, juice, and a
tiny package of nibbles. If you’re lucky.
My handy little Delta Dishes remain, faithfully
going in and out of the microwave and dishwasher daily as they have for the
last thirty years. They serve as spoon
rests when I’m stove top cooking, as slice of pie plates or cookie trays. All this, and, of course, they are just the right size for a dab
of cat food or a spot of cream for some importunate kitty.
~~Juliet Waldron
American Revolution/Adventure/Romance
~~Juliet Waldron ~ All my historicals : http://amzn.to/1UDoLAi
And, please, if you've got a moment, hop on over to these other talented
4 comments:
I love love, love white dishes of any kind, no matter whether they are vintage or contemporary or disposable. Right now I'm going through a milk glass addiction and have collected many pieces during the past several months. But they don't necessarily have to be milk glass as long as they are WHITE! (My two kitties aren't allowed to use them, however, but please don't tell them!)
Thanks Sydell--(You are such a lady!) I remember GMAs milk glass ...very pretty, a soft to the touch reminder of another time.
What a laugh. I have a drawer full of small containers that dog food came in. They just take up space and I should toss them out, but can't bring myself to do it as they are just the right size for doggie tit bits. And last month I realized it was just about time I threw away all those plastic containers that had been piling up in my cupboard. They all went into the recyclable bin of course. I often long for the good old days when nothing came in plastic or wrappers of any kind for that matter. Milk came in glass washable bottles and bread was bought from the baker and we sliced it ourselves.
We must return to waxed paper and ceramic dishes! I remember after my grandpa died, GMA had to throw away a thousand years of margarine containers that he'd washed, stacked, and saved--for the same reason--but they came in faster than they were used up and so his collection was ever-growing.
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