The kitchen is my favorite room to declutter! This room accumulates things that don’t belong there more than any other room in the house!
The kitchen and food preparation used to be in a separate room, hidden in the back of the home and food was transported to the dining area. Today the kitchen is often the heart of the house open to the living room, sunroom, dining room and even play area. The kitchen is a source of total nourishment. We gather there, we cook and we eat there. Regardless of whether your style is ultra-modern or an old country kitchen, they still have the same needs as an uncluttered, clean space with adequate lighting and ease of movement.
In the kitchen especially, the food, storage methods and tools all contribute to your health and the health of your home. Let’s discuss organization as it relates to healthy living. If you are wealthy, you have a staff who can keep your kitchen organized. Many of us need fundamental and automatic organization because we do our own cooking and serving. An organized kitchen can save plenty of time as well.
Furniture that functions well is essential to an organized kitchen. Cabinets, dresser and armoires can add surface and storage space to a kitchen. Walk-in pantries are wonderful but we don’t always have the space. This is when those pieces can really come in handy. The top shelves can hold special ingredients along with measuring cups and food preparation staples. The bottom can be used for towels and dishcloths, place mats and food wraps.
Tables work for food preparation, casual dining area and storage or display. If the table has shelves, all the better. Taller tables can be used for a quick breakfast. Counter stools are handy for the quick breakfasts and also to sit while you chop vegetables and fruits. Step stools, especially cute and original ones like a library ladder or a vintage look are always nice in a kitchen. Folding chairs can be stored in a nearby closet, pantry or hallway by hanging them on the wall and offer additional emergency seating.
To declutter your kitchen begin by following these steps:
- Clear your counters.
- Leave the small appliance you use regularly on the counter like the toaster, can opener and canisters.
- Evaluate everything and if you do not use it daily (like the waffle iron), put it away.
- Mount your television set if you watch it. Put it in a different room if you do not.
- Find a cubby hole for mail and school papers and establish a weekly ritual to sort and disburse.
- Make sure you wash your dishes immediately after eating, run your dishwasher nightly. Empty your dishwasher first thing in the morning before dirty dishes can stack up.
- Designate containers. Cooking utensils, fruits and vegetables all can be placed in baskets and stored on the shelves of an island or bakers rack that is open and can easily be seen.
- Clean as you go while cooking.
- Place several garbage bags at the bottom of the can so you don’t have to search when you empty the garbage.
- Rotate your dishes so you don’t use the same dishes over and over.
- Write the purchase date on your herbs and spices.
- Hanging cookware on the wall can be attractive and save time.
- Have twin trash cans for easy recycling.
- Add a bookcase to the kitchen for your favorite cookbooks.
- Place a magazine rack near the kitchen table for breakfast reading and establish a ritualized time to empty it out.
- Fruit stands and cake stands are handy for storing fruit decoratively.
- Hang some of your collections on the wall. Cookie cutters, platters and cups all double as display.
Don’t just throw things on top of your refrigerator, it is okay to put things there, but plan it so it looks nice like baskets, flowers, boxes, something that looks pleasing besides a mishmash of whatever you need to get off the table tops.
Convert a kitchen closet into a pantry. If the kitchen is small, put a glazed glass door on to open up the space. Other options for the door are screen or to paint a door with chalkboard paint and leave notes or allow children to create art for you there.
Your pantry should have good lighting. Under cabinet lighting works nicely in a pantry. Use the pantry floor for storage space too. Basket, paper towels, jars and water bottles can utilize this space that is often ignored.
There are so many clever ways to add organization and storage to a kitchen. You are almost always rewarded with time saved and frustration avoided when you know where to find something and everything is in its place!
Bonus Time!
While you are in the kitchen…
Get rid of processed foods! Yes, you heard me…everything with a label on it! This will get the most harmful clutter from your kitchen.
My ideal kitchen would be without BPAs, GMOs and anything processed!
Now, go take a look at your kitchen! What can you throw in the dumpster to make your kitchen work for you?
Next time….. The Living Room!
I’d love to hear your results after you get cleaning and organizing!
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