Welcome to the second corner of my kitchen. The pantry.
Before we get to that I'd like to tell you a little story about a young girl. A girl who grew up in Nutley, New Jersey. The daughter of Polish parents, this ambitious girl became a model, a housewife, an author, a television host and then head of an empire. All based on her impeccable taste and ability to take every day tasks and elevate them to art.
Then she went to jail.
As you have probably guessed by now, that little girl was me.
In 1979 I shined as "girl modelling slacks" in the Robinson's department store flyer. That alone should be proof enough that I'm telling the truth. The jail thing is a bit hard to explain but suffice it to say you don't wanna get between me and the last full fat buffalo milk Greek Yogourt on sale.
So let's talk about that Martha Stewart now. She may not know anything about how to utilize a Chinese throwing star in a yogourt emergency, but she has a pretty adequate handle on good design.
When I first started thinking of redoing my kitchen I immediately thought of Ikea cabinets because EVERYONE uses Ikea cabinets. They're inexpensive, well made and easy to install. I knew I wanted Shaker cabinets. But when I looked at the Ikea ones in person they weren't exactly what I wanted.
And if I was going to pay absolutely nothing for my kitchen cabinets, I was not going to compromise! And that's exactly what I spent on these cabinets by the way. Nothing.
I knew going into this kitchen renovation that I was going to work as many deals as humanly possible to get my dream kitchen. I could guarantee the cabinets would be featured in a 5 page spread in Canadian Living Magazine as well as be seen on my blog from now until I get a new kitchen. Which I imagine will be around the time evolution actually eliminates the human baby toe.
My kitchen designer Carol Reed suggested the Martha Stewart line of cabinets at Home Depot for two reasons. Because they're really good cabinets and because the Home Depot is very blogger friendly and open to this sort of exchange. Carol was right on both counts. In case you don't remember Carol and I've never met. She designed my kitchen over the Internet.
I went with the Martha Stewart Ox Hill cabinets in the colour "Picket Fence". In layman's terms those are shaker cabinets in white. I knew I wanted a big pantry and after some configurations and reconfigurations Carol and I decided the best place for it was on the left side of the kitchen where it would be seen from the dining room.
Take a look at the pantry corner and I'll explain some of the details as we get through the post.
The thing about this pantry is Martha Stewart doesn't make one like it. She does however make cabinets and drawers so we Frankensteined together a mixture of base, upper cabinets and drawers to create a stunning pantry. And I don't use the word stunning loosely. Mainly I reserve it for tomato seedlings and Lladro figurines.
To make the cabinets look more like a separate piece of furniture, and well ... like a pantry I did a couple of things. First off, I had the base stepped out from the rest of the base cabinets by 3 inches. This broke the line of cabinets and differentiated the pantry from the rest of the bases.
Then I had the upper portion of the pantry (the drawers and the upper cabinets) stepped back from the front of the base cabinets they sit on by 5 inches. The whole effect is a sort of breakfront that turns what could have looked like cabinets stacked on top of cabinets, into a pantry.
I keep two wood crates in the bottom. The one on the left is filled with baking stuff like flour, sugar, baking soda, chocolate chips, vodka. The crate on the right is filled with dry pasta type things. Penne, rice, asian noodles, sake.
The drawers. The drawers on the other hand hold far more important things.
Behold the spice drawer of my dreams. And if you don't dream about spice drawers you are not livin' large ladies. Not. Living. Large.
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Because of the depth of the upper cabinets (22") and the lack of height from my ankles to my neck I had to figure out a way to make all of the items accessible without having to permanently attach a folding stool to my shins.
Enter the laziest of all the ladies. Susan. The lazy susan seems like it should be an easy thing to find in any number of stores. Do not be fooled. Miss. Lazy Susan is as rare as hair on a turtle.
I searched and searched for a lazy susan and couldn't find anything. I found a few flimsy plastic ones but that was about it. Ikea did have some at one point but they were a specialty item that they carried once and they were gone.
Even if I had found lazy susans in a store chances are I never would have found one large enough. I wanted it to be big enough to fill my entire cabinet so I wasn't wasting any space.
So I made my own lazy susans. 4 of them. I'll be showing you how to do that in an upcoming post. I know. Super-exciting, right? Live. Ing. Large.
On the inside of one pantry door, I put up stick on chalkboard paper (which I got at Dollarama years ago) to act as my chalkboard. I've had a chalkboard in my kitchen for 15 years now and I wasn't about to give it up just because I had no cabinets.
The final thing I did to customize the cabinets into a really great pantry was have a piece of marble cut for the upper portion to rest on. This piece cost around $200 to have cut to size and the edges slightly rounded.
It's Pink Tool belt's favourite part of the kitchen. Along with looking great, it gives me somewhere to put my jars, cans, or glasses when I'm going through the cupboard.
The marble is honed Carrera ...
... which matches the honed Carrera marble on my island which you've caught tiny glimpses of but haven't seen in its entirety.
And which you're not going to see now. I told you. One corner at a time.
Now if you'll excuse me, my ankle monitor is makin' me rashy and there's a sale on Greek yogourt.
Laura
I love the lazy Susan and you really cant find them anywhere! Looking forward to the tutorial!
Elizabeth
You had me at the Robinsons catalogue. I modeled for them too!
Barbie
LOVE it! I love your latches too! I have silver ones and searched the world over for them! Mine are a pain in the butt though and not as cool as yours! I didn't think I would but I LOOOOOVE the gold color! burnished looks best! My latches are a bit different and are really hard to open....I see yours are a bit different. I will put "those" in the next house we build! I also love that your cabinets are full-overlay MUCH less expensive than inset and look great! So love the pantry idea! LOVE LOVE LOVE it! Now I really want to re-build! LOL
One more thing! I have to love the fact that you mentioned Lladro figurines! I haven't met many people who appreciate Lladro! All my italian relatives have them and I am so envious....but cannot afford :( at least not the ones I really want!
Dianne
Hi, I'm the Dianne with the electric toothbrush for cleaning idea. So you know, Spices are the world to me. I had my kitchen builder add a hidden space of about 4 inches at each end of my island with doors on the ends. On one end, where the cookery is done, is where the spices are kept. I used the same rounds as you with the magnets on the bottom. Bought really cheap Dollar Store cookie sheets and screwed them to the inside wall of the hidden cabinet. Voila - all my spices with labels on top sticking to the metal sheets.
On the other end I keep my bottles of olive oil from around the world and favourite balsamics and flavoured vinegars. DANG, I wish I knew how to send you a picture of it.
Anyway, you have given me a great idea. A chalkboard would fit nicely on the inside of the door at each end. One for menus and the other for shopping lists. THANKS!!!
One of my favourite oils comes from my daughter who lives in a tiny village 100 km west of Barcelona. She manages to get a gallon or so to me each year right after it comes off the presses at the village co-op. XXXXtra Virgin and the sweetest, freshest, lightest oil in the world. We use it like the Catalonians do -for everything - butter for our bread, potatoes, veggies, salads, cooking.
Here is an original Catalan staple: Take a thick piece of fresh crusty bread, smoosh half a paste tomato all over it till the bread is pinkish, drizzle olive oil, then sprinkle some salt and pepper on it. DEE-LISH!
Karen
Hi electric Dianne. Sounds good! Pretty much anything smooshed on crusty bread is good to me though, lol. ~ karen!
Beth W
I forgot to say that I like that you have your eclectic glassware shelf in there too - it'd be great fun to choose one for a cuppa
Karen
Thanks Beth! I love so many different cups and mugs that I've never, ever managed to have a matching set, lol. My favourite coffee cups are always ones without handles, but they're hard to find! ~ karen p.s. STOP trying to get me to print stuff on wood. It's taken a month for me to get off of that kick, lol.
Shauna
The marble piece really does set the whole thing off. LOVE.
SuzyMcQ
I'm too busy in the garden to read ALL the comments, but did anyone ask about your hardware...knobs, pulls, etc?
Michele preece
Oh I have been soo smug for the last two weeks, everytime I looked at my spice drawer; you see my sister told me she was jealous of it, how perfect it was. Now I have spice drawer envy, it's not perfect at all, I've now seen perfection and mine is way below par, improvements will have to start.
Ella
AMAZING!Great work!
elisa
This is like a strip tease and I'm about to put a 20 in your G-string to see the whole thing!
michelle r
Love the pantry and the marriage of the different cabinets (ahhh..diversity). And the hardware just seems to go well with it all. But in fact Susan is not lazy at all, so how about the Lazy Fella......just saying
Mindy
I went through the same lazy Susan hunting nightmare. I ended up finding two plastic ones at Goodwill and bought them because I couldn't find anything else. Anxious to see how you made them.
Melody Madden
That spice drawer is incredible .... jealous!
Olga
I think you made a good choice going with MS cabinets instead of IKEA. Even though IKEA kitchens are beautiful, their odd measurements of cabinets makes everything more complicated. You don't need to complicate your life! lol Plus, I think having "Martha Stewart" logo in your cabinets is very appealing as well. It's like a reminder that once in you in the kitchen you should turn yourself into Martha.
Leah Laurent
I saw the Lazy Susans at Ikea and bought 4 because I knew they would go away and I would never find them again!
jeannie B
I love it. Such a beautiful pantry. And I love the marble. I only have a big, square, marble, floor tile that I pull out, to roll out my pastry on. Your kitchen Karen, is stunning. I look forward to seeing the whole thing.
Sabrina
I'll add to the accolades already pouring in...love it! I did a redo last year - repurposed someone's old cabinets into my kitchen - new for me :) But really, I only have a kitchen because it came with the house. I admire all your menus and cooking adventures, truly, but I am more gourmande than gourmet chef; maybe someday when I grow up....
I did have a question, though. At the bottom of the wall on the left of the pantry, is that a register or a cat door? Since you now have a radiant floor, I'm really wanting that to be a door. I cut one into my living room which my cats think is great (the litter box is in the sun room next door) so long as it is propped open. They are completely confounded if the flap is down. It was supposed to be a stroke of genius. Go figure.
Cheers,
Sabrina
Olga
I think it's Karen's detachable folding stool.
Debbie
Curious, what does fish feet and your Mother think of your kitchen? So far I love it.
Debbie
Auntiepatch
Take note Martha; you're loosing money here. Karen's way ahead of ya!
Rondina Muncy
Very functional. While I applaud you making the lazy-susans, I found the best ones at The Container Store when I turned the hot-water heater into a pantry. They are clear and made by Romanoff Products of New York. They have a nice deep lip around the parameter.