Churchill Art de Cuisine Nori Rectangular Plates 355x190mm (Pack of 6)
Product Description
The Churchill Art de Cuisine Nori rectangular plate is a rimless, white porcelain plate with softly curved edges, designed to provide a clean, uninterrupted surface for food presentation. Part of...
Specifications
- Box quantity
- 6
- Colour
- White
- Crockery type
- Plates
- Dimensions
- 355 x 190mm/ 14 x 7 ½"
Downloads
Product Description
The Churchill Art de Cuisine Nori rectangular plate is a rimless, white porcelain plate with softly curved edges, designed to provide a clean, uninterrupted surface for food presentation. Part of Churchill's Art de Cuisine range, it is aimed at operators who want a versatile plating surface that works across multiple courses and cuisine styles without imposing a particular aesthetic.
In practice, the elongated rectangular format suits dishes where arrangement and visual flow across the plate matters — sushi, sharing starters, composed desserts, and modern European plating all benefit from the additional canvas the format provides. The rimless design means the full surface is usable, which helps with portions that benefit from spread rather than stacking. Porcelain construction gives reasonable chip resistance for everyday service use, and the white glaze keeps colour contrast clean under both natural and artificial lighting.
Practical points worth considering before ordering:
- Rimless design maximises usable surface area for composed dishes
- White porcelain provides neutral contrast for colourful or delicate plating
- Soft curved edges suit both modern and classic presentation styles
- Supplied in packs of six, practical for building a consistent cover set
- Porcelain construction is suitable for commercial dishwasher use
The plate's proportions suit mid-cover restaurants and hotel dining rather than very high-volume canteen environments where a more robust, standardised plate shape is typically preferable. If your service is particularly heavy on turnover or requires stacking in bulk, it is worth considering whether a more utilitarian format would be a better operational fit.
If you are building a new cover set or extending an existing range and want to discuss quantities or how the Nori format sits alongside other pieces in the Art de Cuisine collection, the team is happy to help you work through it.
Key Features
- Rimless rectangular format provides full usable surface for plating
- Soft curved edges suit a wide range of presentation styles
- White porcelain glaze delivers clean colour contrast for food
- Porcelain construction suitable for commercial dishwasher cycles
- Supplied as a pack of six for consistent table cover sets
Operational Benefits
- Maximises plating space for composed sushi and dessert dishes
- Neutral white finish keeps focus firmly on the food presented
- Consistent pack sizing simplifies cover planning for front-of-house
- Durable enough for daily commercial service without excessive chipping
- Versatile format reduces the need for separate specialist platters
Specifications
- Box quantity
- 6
- Colour
- White
- Crockery type
- Plates
- Dimensions
- 355 x 190mm/ 14 x 7 ½"
- Dishwasher safe
- Yes
- Freezer safe
- Yes
- Furniture shape
- Rectangular
- Material
- Porcelain
- Microwave safe
- Yes
- Weight
- 4.8kg
Downloads
Frequently Asked Questions
- The elongated rimless format works particularly well for sushi, composed starters, sharing plates, and desserts where visual arrangement across the plate is part of the presentation. It is less suited to dishes with a lot of liquid or sauce, where a lipped plate would give better containment.
- Porcelain is generally compatible with commercial dishwasher use, though as with any front-of-house ware, stacking carefully and avoiding overloading racks will help maintain the finish and reduce the risk of chipping over time.
- That depends on your cover count and how quickly plates turn around during service. For smaller restaurants or where the plate is used for a specific course rather than across the full menu, a pack or two is a practical starting point. Higher-volume sites building a full cover set would typically order multiple packs to ensure adequate rotation without shortfalls during peak service.