Instructions
Look for a table with a lid that lifts or slides to reveal a trough or bin beneath it. Check the dough trough for an unfinished, painted or tin interior and look for a tapered, rectangular or curved shape along the bottom of the exterior of the trough. Some dough tables resemble small dressers.
Examine the wood for signs of wear and check the top of the dough table for evidence of use in kneading dough and forming loaves of bread.
Check the construction details such as pegged joinery or old screws. Antique screws have specific thread characteristics based on age.
Become familiar with the variations from rustic to more refined styles of dough tables or petrins. Some tables started out as dough boxes and had legs added later, while others boast drawers, turned legs and decorative skirting details.