Mom's 1961 kitchen
I think the man is eating an apple, which makes sense since the kitchen appears so non-functional.
When I was five, we moved to a home built in the 1930s with the original kitchen. With a month, Mom had the kitchen gutted. In its place rose maple cabinets with white ceramic pulls, matching white Formica countertops, a steel Tappan electric cooktop, and a steel Frigidaire electric double wall oven (the kitchen had a gas line, since the range that came with the house was an old white gas model, but mom elected an electric cooktop).
The pieces de resistance were the garbage disposal and the KitchenAid dishwasher (thanks to Unimatic for the photo of a similar model) with custom panel to match the cabinet. I remember neighbors coming over to admire the first dishwasher and first disposal they had ever seen outside of an appliance store (this was an upper middle class neighborhood where most houses were built in the 1930s, and the kitchens were in various stages of remodelling---or often still original).
An enclosure was built around the 1950s GE refrigerator, which my father referred to as a "fridgidare", using the brand name as a common noun. Oh yeah, the garbage disposal was a "disposall", again using a brand name as a common noun.
Mom was doing stainless steel before it was big.
PS: don't ask me how well the Pots & Pans (Utility & Utensil) cycle worked. Because Mom misplaced the instruction manual, she was afraid to use that cycle since she didn't know what the button would do (hello? how about calling KitchenAid or the appliance store?) so for FOURTEEN YEARS, we used only Rinse & Hold or Full Cycle. NEVER used Utility & Utensil, EVER. But everything came out clean cuz it was a KitchenAid! Of course, only Cascade powder would suffice for this workhorse of a dishwasher. We moved away from that house 14 years later and I do not know how much longer the dishwasher kept going....or what happened if the new owners pushed the dreaded Utility & Utensil cycle button.
