Would Thomas Jefferson Choose Waterstone, Sub-Zero & Wolf Appliances for Monticello?

Posted on the Clarke Living Blog
www.blog.clarkeliving.com

Jan 9, 2015

From the time he took his domestic servant James Hemings to Paris in 1784 to learn French cookery, Thomas Jefferson made sure that his enslaved cooks were trained to prepare meals in the French manner. According to the official Monticello website dedicated to Jefferson’s iconic home, Hemings passed his skills on to his brother Peter, while servants Edith Fossett and Fanny Hern received years of training from a French chef in the President’s House at Washington. On Jefferson’s retirement in 1809, they returned to Monticello to find a new kitchen that replaced the old one in the cellar of the South Pavilion. The site of meal preparation was now a much larger space. And, instead of preparing all the food at an intensely-hot open hearth, Edith Fossett and Fanny Hern monitored soups and sauces simmering in copper pans on a built-in stew stove like the one they had used in the President’s House. Common in Europe, but relatively rare in the United States, this precursor of the kitchen range had charcoal fires in grated cast-iron openings and could be regulated more precisely than a roaring fireplace.

Fast-forward some two hundred years and it isn’t surprising that when S. Prestley Blake, co-founder of Friendly’s Ice Cream, decided to build a replica of Jefferson’s iconic Monticello as his dream home in Somers, Connecticut, he would want only the best for the kitchen. To create the “new Monticello kitchen” two centuries after the original had been designed, Blake’s chosen builder, Laplante Construction, enlisted the kitchen design expertise of Vartanian Custom Cabinets in Palmer, Massachusetts and Interior Designer Jennfier Champigny of J Champigny Design in East Longmeadow, Massachusetts. Of all the magnificent spaces in the newly built home, Blake’s wife Helen says the kitchen is her favorite.

 

Vartanian Custom Cabinets designer Duncan Lomas worked with company owner Aram Vartanian and the team at Clarke, New England’s Official Sub-Zero & Wolf Showroom and Test Kitchen, to select the best food preparation and preservation appliances available to provide a state-of-the-art kitchen for Blake’s Monticello replica. The result is a stunning kitchen with unparalleled cooking performance provided by a Wolf Rangetop, Wolf Wall Ovens and Wolf Coffee System. Sub-Zero Refrigeration is found integrated into drawers and walls, all clad with magnificent cabintetry with period details manufactured by Vartanian’s skilled craftsmen.

 

The Monticello replica also incorporates Waterstone Faucets in each section of the kitchen. These American-made faucets offer extraordinary design features and superior construction, all handcrafted in California. A Waterstone faucet and matching accessories also top the kitchen island, acting as a jewel on the quartz countertop that appears at first glance to be marble, but offers greater durability and requires much less care.

Clarke is honored to be part of this project and congratulates Laplante Construction, Vartanian Custom Cabinets and Jennifer Champigny, and the more than 70 resources they coordinated, on an exceptional job!

 

For more information on the appliances and faucets used in this project, contact Clarke at 800-842-5275.

 

 

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