Decluttering Blueprint - Step 3 - Organizing Your Kitchen
By Pam Woods
If your kitchen isn't living up to your expectations, give it a makeover for convenience and pizazz using the
steps below.
- Take stock of your kitchens purpose. Is it for cooking, baking, eating, and storing food? If so,
move all the items that are unrelated to the purpose of your space (such as papers, magazines, tools, etc.) to
other, more appropriate rooms of your home.
- Identify the major categories of items to be kept in your kitchen. For example:
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- Cookware - skillets, saucepans, stew pots, and lids.
- Bakeware - cookie sheets, pie pans, cake pans, and muffin pans.
- Appliances - coffee maker, toaster, food processor, bread machine, and mixer.
- Kitchen tools - vegetable peeler, egg slicer, thermometer, cork screw, manual can opener,
box grater, cutting board, rolling pin, strainer, and sifter.
- Utensils - spoons, forks, spatulas, tongs, whisks, pastry brush, and grilling utensils.
- Dinnerware, glassware and flatware - plates, bowls, cups, glasses and silverware.
- Pantry items - spices, herbs, dry goods (flour, noodles, etc.), canned and bottled items
(soups, Worcestershire sauce, etc.), and vinegar and oils.
- Refrigerator and freezer items.
- Cook books.
- Under the sink items - waste basket and cleaning products.
- Sort everything in your kitchen into the piles that represent the major categories identified in step
#2. Start with all surface items, and then move to the objects stored in drawers, cabinets, and your
pantry. If you have an extraordinary amount of items to sort, you might want to get a large box for each
category so your piles don't get mixed up.
- Weed out and organize each category. Be determined to eliminate everything but the items you love
and use. Reduce multiples of any single item and dispose of old, seldom used and unwanted items by pitching
them, giving them to someone else, selling, or donating them. Then put the remainder of items into sub
categories, i.e. when organizing pantry items--put all spices together and all dry goods together, etc.
- Decide where to store each category. Consider the size of each category, how frequently you will be
accessing each category, and where in your kitchen you will be using each category. For example, put dinnerware
close to your dishwasher and cookware close to your stove. Then, double check your plan - is there convenient
and sufficient storage space available for each category?
- Purchase containers, space saving fittings and accessories to make your kitchen as convenient and
pleasing as possible. Many kitchens suffer from a shortage of space so using items such as the following
will maximize your space and make it more functional.
-
- Pull out cabinet organizers make it easy to keep like things together and provide easy
access to items in the back of your cupboard. (Available at many home improvement stores.)
- Steel expanding shelves double space in your shelf area. (Available at Bed, Bath and
Beyond.)
- Wall rack systems free up counter space and make it easier to grab needed utensils when
cooking. (Available at Stacks and Stacks, IKEA or home improvement stores.)
- Put all items into their new container and/or space. And, enjoy your reward...a kitchen that
functions well day in and day out!
Please check back soon for the next installment of the Decluttering Blueprint.
Pam N. Woods is co-author of a bestselling book, Create the Business Breakthrough You Want: Secrets
and Strategies from the World's Greatest Mentors; endorsed by Ken Blanchard & Dr. Stephen Covey. She is a
respected authority on personal effectiveness who has mentored hundreds of executives, managers and professionals
over the last three decades. Now, through her business, Smart WorkLife Solutions, she is helping individuals
at home and at work to declutter their space, their schedules and their lives.
Pam's website is a resource with information and services to help a diverse population of individuals organize
their office, home and life. If you want to save time, boost productivity and reduce stress visit the Smart
WorkLife Solutions website today at http://www.worklifecoach.com.
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