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jyl_gw

Pantry . . . Cabinet?

last month
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Walk in pantries get discussed a lot. I thought, why not airtime for the alternative of pantry cabinets?

A pantry cabinet, to me, is i) a built-in cabinet ii) away from the kitchen core work triangle (ice-water-stone-fire), iii) designed to hold a large volume of things both large and small, that may be needed every day or every week but not every minute or every hour, with nothing hidden or lost.

It is an alternative to a walk in pantry and to a free-standing piece like a hutch.

The reason I natter on about pantry cabinets is that they are often more efficient and effective than the alternatives.

Unlike a walk-in pantry, the pantry cabinet does not need to hold a person or two people, and give them room to bend over, squat, turn around. The volume not used to hold a human body can be used to hold pasta and stockpots. This advantage fades if you do, indeed, want to hold bodies, so discerning serial killers endorse walk-in pantries and I certainly won’t argue with them.

Unlike a free-standing piece, the pantry cabinet can be sized exactly to the space available, is securely anchored to the wall without tipping issues, and can be customized for the user’s needs without hiring a custom furniture maker who are more expensive than custom cabinet makers. Lots. More. Expensive.

These virtues allow a pantry cabinet to be placed where there is not enough space for a walk-in pantry and not the right shape/size of space for grandma’s baking hutch. A nook, a corner, even a passageway, the empty space where a laundry chute or water heater used to be.

If you are going to build or have built a pantry cabinet, I recommend against the all-drawer stack that we use in base cabinets. Instead, use doors with rollout shelves. Yes, this requires three actions (open right door, open left door, pull out shelf) instead of one (pull out drawer), but we’ve stipulated the things there are needed daily or weekly, not every five minutes. Have the cabinet insides pre-drilled so that your slides can be easily re-positioned higher or lower. When you switch to a different brand of cooking sake that comes in a taller bottle, just re-position the shelf. Can’t do that with drawers.

A pantry cabinet can be fitted with electrical outlets to become the much-maligned appliance garage, but one that isn’t taking up counter space. Heat and steam-producing appliances shouldn’t be operated in there, at least not with doors closed, but your blender and mixer are fine. Better yet if their shelf pulls out to use them in the open. Better again yet if your cabinet maker builds in pullout workboards to put things on as you use the mixer - or simply to set down grocery bags.

Have you built pantry cabinets into your kitchen? I would like to see people’s creative, useful, lovely, useful, cool, useful pantry cabinets. From Ikea to full-zoot custom, all are appreciated!

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