When Amy posted photos of her kitchen on Not As Good As Pork Cracklins, I couldn’t resist doing the same. We live in an old home (built in 1928) in a Silicon Valley suburb. When we moved in, our kitchen needed a whole lot of work. We ripped out the old electric stove and replaced it with a gas range. We took out the dirty linoleum and replaced it with WilsonArt flooring. We stripped and repainted the cabinets, but decided to leave most of the doors off.
Bowls, bakeware and tupperware on the left side, along with all of the Good Eats DVDs. There’s a reproduction of a Time magazine cover on the wall – it’s Julia Child on the cover. The butcher block holds my kitchen computer, which I use to watch TV and movies, listen to music,and look up recipes. I also have an iSight camera hooked up to the computer – it’s my Kitchen Kam.
On the right are baking dishes, measuring cups, and spices on the bottom, on carousels. I have a huge collection of cookbooks and many of them are on the shelves there. I want to put in built-in shelving underneath the existing shelving. All of my Fine Cooking Magazines are there on top also.
We have a portable dishwasher, which holds an extra cutting board. I do all of my baking-type stuff on top of the dishwasher. It’s got a nice smooth surface.
Here’s the view opposite those shelves.
Our counter on this side of the kitchen is oddly narrow. We replaced the sink and faucet, but it took many, many trips back to Home Depot for them to get the sink right. Quite an ordeal. I keep all of the everyday dishes and prep bowls on the shelf to the right. Near the microwave is the toaster/convection oven and Cuisinart. The panini machine and Kitchen Aid are easily accessible in the cabinet below. I do most of my prep on the Boos block.
These are the shelves near the microwave. I’m overly organized, especially since the cabinets don’t have doors. On the left is what used to be a medicine cabinet. It holds old cookbooks that belonged to my grandmothers and Larry’s mom, plus some kitchen things I found in my grandmother’s kitchen after she died. My favorite is the angel food cake cutter. It’s got a really pretty handle.
I put prepped food on either side of the stove. The rust-colored bowl holds little plastic tasting spoons. I first got them in Austin when I visited Amy one time. Then I ran out, and couldn’t find them anywhere! Amy looked in Austin, I looked here. They were nowhere to be found, until the last time she visited. I now have 3,000 plastic tasting spoons because that’s the only quantity we could find.
The hood was replaced after a bit of a fire soon after we moved in (during a dinner party, no less!). I keep all my wooden spoons and spatulas next to the stove, but they all have to be the same color wood, and the spatulas have to be white or clear. Yes, I’m compulsive.
The pantry is the door to the right of the stove, and the refrigerator is waaay back in the laundry room.
The disadvantage of living in an old house is learning to deal with the quirks of an old kitchen that’s been half-modernized. The advantage is that we have something many Californians don’t have – a basement! Besides holding several hundred bottles of wine, it also holds my grocery store and things I don’t use on a regular basis.
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A proper kitchen! I dream of a proper kitchen. That, and a vegetable garden.
I’ve come off food lately for whatever reason, and your blog is very inspirational! I might link to it?
Makes me want to come visit. I love your house. I miss my friend.
I _like_ your kitchen. I could easily work there.
The tile countertops in particular are handy (except for baking) — it’s great to be able to set a hot pan down anywhere and their resistance to staining is also practical.
Question: Does the grout between your tiles collect stuff & stains? I didn’t have that problem with my kitchen in CA, but I’ve had it in other kitchens with tile counters.
Kevin – thanks! I do like being able to set hot pans wherever I like.
I’m not sure how old the tile is, but so far it stays relatively clean. I’m pretty obsessive about cleaning anyway, so I’m sure that helps. Plus I don’t do any prep work on the tile.
Hooyah, we keep our extra food stuffs in the detached garage out back. So far the rats haven’t got to it, heh.
I went through my doors off phase in my kitchen (some of mine are off now because of a stalled cabinet painting project) years ago. I realized after nearly a year why there are doors on the cabinets. To keep the dishes clean! The dishes that weren’t in daily or weekly use, got all covered in cooking leavenings & dust. Of course, if you’re a vegetarian or vegan this isn’t a problem. Plus, after a while I lose interest in keeping my cupboards as neatly arranged as yours. Mine start out that way, but after I need something in the back, or get a new load of goodies it all goes to hell, quickly.
Biggles
Biggles – you are absolutely right about open cabinets and cleanliness. We put doors on all of the lower cabinets for just that reason. I use most of my dishes enought that they don’t have a change to get gooped up, but some of the less-used thing on top shelves do get that kitchen film (a mix of oil and dust?).
I’m somewhat compulsive about things being neat – even my pantry, which is behind a closed door, is pretty neat.
Now I want tasting spoons; never seen them before, but what a great idea!
Sweetnicks – We finally found the spoons at a Cash & Carry. Restaurant supply stores are a good place to find them too. I love them because when we have people over I like to have people taste stuff. This is a nice and sanitary way to do it without dirtying a bunch of silverware.
The spoons are really a good idea. Ever since I was at Sheri’s using the little baby spoons….I feel totally guilty about contaminating my dishes by tasting off of the cooking utensil…but sometimes you can’t help it…you just want a taste!