If you love looking at the tools for cooking and baking and kitchen tasks, you are going to love this post!
Along with a delightful visit with family from the East Coast and some from near Sacramento and Vallejo CA, the third week in February, we visited Napa and had lunch at Grace's Table, which I highly recommend.
After lunch we went the fairly short distance to CIA at Coppia, a combination culinary school and museum. The whole building was fragrant with the smell of pizza baking, thanks to some of the students at the Culinary Institute of America class being held that afternoon. Upstairs, too, is the Chuck Williams Museum, which houses over 4,000 culinary items. Chuck Williams is one of the founders of Williams-Sonoma, a long time purveyor of all kinds of culinary tools and machines and some ingredients. My Kitchen Aide mixer was a purchase from them at a time when I really didn't have money for such an extravagant purchase, but I really needed that mixer to allow me to grow in my baking skills. It's been over 40 years and it still works and I still bake!
All of those 4,000 items seemed to be displayed either in the body of the museum space or in additional display cases in the hallways near the culinary academy and downstairs near the restaurant and wine bar. It was a bit overwhelming!
There were dozens of rolling pins,
Hung one the wall are many dozens of tools to crimp dough and cut wavy lines of dough, even a double-wheeled one.
Some had wooden handles, some metal and the shapes of the handles differed, too. I wonder if the tops of some of the handles were used to shape pie dough. Looks like there are leaves and stars and maybe a fish.
Egg beaters were another set hung on the walls. There were also stand mixers, but I don't remember seeing one like mine...these were older ones.
One of the things that first catches your eye when you enter the museum is a wall hung with dozens and dozens of copper molds, many of them very intricate. I'm not sure how some of them would release the elaborate configurations on top. Many of them were probably used for gelatin and cold mousses, but even these would have been difficult to unmold. Bet there were tricks for removing the contents.
In cabinets around the room there were so many other items of interest, from toasters
and waffle irons
to casseroles and soufflé dishes
Sets were a big thing, from mezzalunas to pie plates
and copper double boilers





































