A tureen is a serving dish for foods such as
soup
Soup is a primarily liquid food, generally served warm or hot (but may be cool or cold), that is made by combining ingredients of meat or vegetables with stock, milk, or water. Hot soups are additionally characterized by boiling solid ing ...
s or
stew
A stew is a combination of solid food ingredients that have been cooked in liquid and served in the resultant gravy. A stew needs to have raw ingredients added to the gravy. Ingredients in a stew can include any combination of vegetables and ...
s, often shaped as a broad, deep, oval vessel with fixed handles and a low domed cover with a knob or handle. Over the centuries, tureens have appeared in many different forms: round, rectangular, or made into fanciful shapes such as animals or wildfowl. Tureens may be ceramic—either the glazed
earthenware
Earthenware is glazed or unglazed nonvitreous pottery that has normally been fired below . Basic earthenware, often called terracotta, absorbs liquids such as water. However, earthenware can be made impervious to liquids by coating it with a ce ...
called
faience, or
porcelain—or
silver, and customarily they stand on an undertray or platter made ''en suite''.
Etymology
The tureen as a piece of tableware called a ''pot à oille''—a Catalan-Provençal soup—came into use in late seventeenth-century
France. Alternative explanations for the etymology are that it is related to the earlier word ''terrine'', a borrowing from the French for 'a large, circular, earthenware dish'
[''The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English'' (Oxford 1995: 9th edition; ed. Thompson), p. 1503] or that it is named to honour the French military hero
Marshal Turenne.
History
The tureen's prehistory may be traced to the use of the
communal bowl, but during the reign of
Louis XIV it was developed from a practical covered serving vessel into one of the most richly ornamented centerpieces of the formal apparatus of dining. This period also saw the old practice of dressing the dinner table with every dish at once (''
service à la française'') superseded by the new practice of separate courses at meal time (''
service à la russe)'', each ''
entrée'' entering from the kitchens with an air of ceremony.
Soup remained the first course of most meals, from the king's table to the peasant's, and the soup tureen on its serving platter provided the opening ceremony. Tureens naturally tended towards the impressive; the world's record auction price fetched for a single piece of silver was achieved by a silver tureen made in 1733 by the Parisian silversmith
Thomas Germain, sold at
Sotheby's New York, 13 November 1996: at US$10,287,500, tripling the former record.
Silver tureens
Most seventeenth-century French silver tureens were melted down to finance the wars of Louis' late years and may be glimpsed only in paintings. The ornate silver tureens of that period figure in ''buffets''—still life of silver and game—by artists such as
Alexandre-François Desportes, or in more modest
still life
A still life (plural: still lifes) is a work of art depicting mostly wikt:inanimate, inanimate subject matter, typically commonplace objects which are either natural (food, flowers, dead animals, plants, rocks, shells, etc.) or artificiality, m ...
, such as the painting by
Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin (''illustration''), which is dated 1728 but depicts a silver tureen of
Baroque
The Baroque (, ; ) is a style of architecture, music, dance, painting, sculpture, poetry, and other arts that flourished in Europe from the early 17th century until the 1750s. In the territories of the Spanish and Portuguese empires including t ...
form of the first decade of the century.
Eighteenth century
During the mid-eighteenth century, tureens in appropriate naturalistic shapes, such as tureens in the form of a head of cabbage, were popular. The
Chelsea porcelain manufactory produced tureens in the form of rabbits: a Chelsea sale catalogue of 1755 advertised a "Fine tureen in the form of a rabbit as big as life."
Écuelles and saucières
Tureens are most practical for serving about six people. In eighteenth-century France, a small individual covered standing bowl on a small platter, essentially an individual tureen, was called an ''écuelle'' (also anglicised to ecuelle). It could be lifted by its twin handles and drunk from directly. The shape was used for other purposes; it is often found in
toilet services, where its purpose is uncertain. Its modern descendant in
tableware is the two-handled cream soup bowl on matching plate. A small covered dish for sauce, called a ''saucière'', could also take the form of a small tureen; it might be integral with its platter (''illustration right''), for ease in handling and to contain drips.
File:Ecuelle and saucer, Chinese figures (1 of 2), France, Chantilly, c. 1735-1740, soft-paste porcelain - California Palace of the Legion of Honor - DSC07669.JPG, Chinoiserie ecuelle (matching saucer not shown), France, Chantilly porcelain, c. 1735–1740, soft-paste porcelain
Image:Musée de la faïence-20-saucière.jpg, A faience ''saucière'' in Rococo taste, factory of the Veuve Perrin, Marseille, c. 1760–80
File:Tureen, 1752-1756, Chelsea Porcelain Manufactory, England, porcelain with enamel - Art Institute of Chicago - DSC09771.JPG, Tureen, depicting a rabbit, Chelsea porcelain, England, porcelain with enamel
File:ChelseaSwanTureeen.JPG, A swan tureen, Chelsea porcelain, England
Image:tureen.jpg, A Sèvres porcelain
Sèvres (, ) is a commune in the southwestern suburbs of Paris, France. It is located from the centre of Paris, in the Hauts-de-Seine department, Île-de-France region. The commune, which had a population of 23,251 as of 2018, is known for it ...
tureen, 1782, once owned by John and Abigail Adams
File:State Gifts Tureen.JPG, Bicentennial Commemorative tureen painted with red, blue, and gold. Gift of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip of the United Kingdom, 1976
Collections
John T. Dorrance, a member of the family owners of
Campbell's Soup, assembled, starting in 1966, the largest representative collection of soup tureens, which has been donated to the
Henry Francis DuPont Winterthur Museum
Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library is an American estate and museum in Winterthur, Delaware. Pronounced “winter-tour," Winterthur houses one of the richest collections of Americana in the United States. The museum and estate were the home of ...
.
See also
*
Terrine (cookware)
Notes
References
Further reading
(Getty Museum) "Casting Nature: François-Thomas Germain's ''Machine d'Argent'' 2006
{{Authority control
Serving vessels