By From Real Simple magazine
Eagle-Tribune
October 22, 2006 11:57 am THE DAILY COOK For you, an efficient setup is all about access and speed - quick in, quick out. Strategies: * Keep necessities within easy reach. Make a place in the hot zone (around the stove and the sink) for the essentials: oil, vinegar, knives, cutting board. Move special-occasion cookware, like a fondue pot, out of cabinets in the zone. And ask not where ingredients and tools fit; ask where you will be using them. Keep the basket of potatoes near the cutting board, sugar and flour near the stand mixer, and your best-loved pan on the front burner. * Use under-cabinet space. Under-cabinet lighting strips (attached with screws or double-stick Velcro) keep the focus on the onions at hand. A battery-operated version won't dangle a cord or steal an outlet from the microwave. An under-shelf cookbook holder pulls down when you need it and folds back up when you don't. * Put the walls to work. Put up racks or pegs to keep favorite utensils, the dinner recipe, pot holders and dish towels in plain sight. Products to consider: * Under-cabinet cookbook holder that flips up out of the way when not in use. * Pull-out recycler with two bins on a sliding rack. * Wood cookware rack storage stand to keep pot lids tidy in cupboards. * Under-the-cabinet light fixture. THE SUNDAY COOK When you're too busy on most nights to cook, one weekend session - making dinners in bulk and freezing portions for weekdays - reduces daily stress. Strategies: * Keep essentials front and center. In this case, essentials means stackable storage containers, large plastic mixing bowls and other tools of the bulk cook's trade. * Invest in equipment. Where others might station the toaster, the Sunday cook has a food sealer - just the thing for turning blanched green beans, fish fillets and muffins into future instant meals. A scale is useful for weighing ingredients, which some cooks consider a faster and more reliable way to measure for bulk recipes. A calculator speeds the doubling and tripling of recipes. * Organize the freezer. Make designated sections (prepared meals, vegetables, desserts). Use dividers, baskets or multilayer ice caddies to keep containers neat and accessible. Same-size holders take up less space overall. And be sure to label everything. Products to consider: * An apron with a pocket for the timer, the calculator or your cell phone. * Erasable labels that won't come off in the freezer, microwave or dishwasher. * Freezer storage baskets - one deep, one shallow. * Food sealer. THE ENTERTAINER If you're a cook who enjoys performing before an audience, all the kitchen's a stage. Create an illusion of effortlessness that belies a tightly organized support system behind the scenes. Strategies: * Set a mood. Using clear vases for a theatrical display of fresh herbs or beautiful bowls for picture-perfect produce will whet guests' appetites while signaling that this is an occasion. Install a dimmer to bring the lighting down to party mode, and if you entertain regularly, consider built-in speakers to keep the music flowing through the kitchen. * Use glass cupboard doors for display. Glass-front cabinets can showcase what you love most, whether it's your best china or a ceramic-cow collection. * Keep party gear handy. Create a place for platters and trays - with dividers to maintain order - so you don't have to hunt for them while the bruschetta turns soggy. Give candles, place mats, and other table toppers a dedicated drawer. Use an index-card box to store recipes, past menus, friends' food preferences or wine labels. Products to consider: * 18-inch tray dividers in chrome with clips and screws to fix them in place. * Spring-loaded dividers for drawers. * Nesting boxes * 60-minute kitchen timer, which can be useful for pacing the evening. For example, when it rings, it's time to warm the rolls.
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