Numerous Utensils - Organize and
Store Kitchen Cooking Utensils
♦Gather your large utensils. You'll find that you've somehow
ended up with four spatulas, six large forks and three whisks. But you
only need one of each (more just means more to store and more to wash). So
discard, donate or store the extras. If you choose the latter, buy a simple
rectangular storage bin that fits on a shelf in your garage. When a utensil
breaks or otherwise becomes unusable you can bring in its replacement.
♦You can store long utensils loose in one kitchen drawer. If
you like to see exactly what utensil is where, then store them in the open on a hanging utensil rack. This
Kitchen Storage Rail Kit by Umbra
to the left also holds spices
in the wire baskets and uses 10 S
type hooks to hold utensils. Organize.com sells it.
♦You also can
store long utensils vertically in plain sight on a counter in a wine bottle caddy,
flower pot, pitcher or other crafty cylindrical object of the right height.
This is like improvising your own utensil crock. And you may devise a creative
utensil crock. But if you're not creative, lots of stores that sell kitchen
supplies also sell ready-made utensil crocks.
♦You'll also find utensil crocks on eBay, which has both bid
and buy now options. Use this link to go directly to utensil crocks:
See more Utensil Crocks at eBay "Utensil crocks" may also be
referred to as "utensil holders" or even "utensil caddies".
♦Another option is to hang some kitchen utensils on ordinary
hooks or screws inside a cabinet
door. Or use decorative hooks to hang utensils in a row on a wall or outside of
a kitchen cabinet where they'll be handy but not generally
in the way. Just put one utensil on each individual hook or screw.
♦You also can mix and match utensil storage options. For
instance, put the bulk of your cooking utensils in a crock in a back kitchen
counter area. Then hang a few individual favorite utensils on decorative hooks
on the side of a kitchen cabinet that's most handy to where you cook or prepare
food.
|