Butter Dish – EAPC
The EAPC Butter Dish holds a quarter-pound stick of butter.
Early American Prescut (EAPC) Tableware includes items often part of a condiment set, such as butter dishes & domes, creamers, cruets, jam jars, marmalades, salt & pepper shakers, and sugar bowls.
The EAPC Butter Dish holds a quarter-pound stick of butter.
Dimensions: 7″ long x 3.25″ wide x .75″ high*. Holds 1/4 lb.Interior 5.75″ x 2.75″ Part Number: part of 705 and 705C Catalogs: Rim: Known…
Dimensions: 5.75″ long x 2.75″ wide x 1.75″ high*. Holds 1/4 lb. Part Number: part of 705 Catalogs: Rim: Known Colors: Crystal, Frosted Other Names:…
Dimensions: 5″ long* Part Number: part of 705C Catalogs: Rim: Known Colors: Chrome Stainless Etched or Plain Other Names: Part of: Butter Server Notes: Made…
While you may see this EAPC Butter Server in online listings with both a Butter Dish Lid and a Handle, the boxed set only includes the Butter Dish Base, Butter Server Handle, and Butter Knife.
Dimensions: 7″ long x 4.75″ high. Part Number: part of 705C Produced: Anchor Hocking Rim: Known Colors: Chrome Stainless Other Names: Part of: Butter Server,…
The EAPC Creamer was listed in the Sugar & Creamer Set in Anchor Hocking’s 1961-62 catalog, then sold separately beginning in the 1964 catalog. Later creamers have a different spout that shallower and less defined.
The EAPC Cruet was included in several Early American Prescut multi-piece sets. It is one of the longest produced items in the EAPC line.
EAPC Cruet Pitchers can often be found in the wild without a stopper. Of course, you can always use a cork, an olive oil spout, or a weighted flip-top bottle pourer as a replacement. Just be sure to choose one that fits a bottle with a 3/4″ opening.
This is the top of a Cruet. You can often find stoppers that sit loosely in the pitcher, rather than creating a good seal. Unfortunately, that’s because they’re missing the plastic gasket that surrounds the glass. I’m still trying to find a solution to fix stoppers with broken or missing gaskets. If you come up with one, let me know.
The glass base of these Salt & Pepper Shakers is the same as those in the Salt & Pepper Shakers with the Round Metal Lids.
These EAPC Salt & Pepper Shakers have Round Metal Lids and were sold in sets of two. They were also included in several other sets.
These Small Salt & Pepper Shakers were sold in sets of four and packaged in gift boxes. Presumably one would set one pair at each end of the table or on TV trays.
The EAPC Sugar is one of the most common EAPC items Anchor Hocking made because it was sold singly, by the dozen, and in many sets.
Anchor Hocking only listed this EAPC Sugar and Creamer Tray in the Sugar & Creamer Set. I have not found any listing for it by itself.
This bowl is the bottom of the Sugar. However, it’s also a nice-sized bowl for layered deserts, parfait, pudding, etc. So you might want to collect more than one to use as dinnerware.
This is the lid for the EAPC Sugar Bowl. It also fits the Flower Basket to create a covered trinket dish, or candy jar.
Anchor Hocking first introduced the Syrup Dispenser in 1967 along with the Breakfast Set. I’ve seen it with several different colored spouts, but only white or off-white in the Anchor Hocking catalogs. It doesn’t hurt to have several to hold a variety of syrups. You can even use them as shakers for red pepper flakes or Parmesan cheese if you replace the spout with a shaker lid.