15.12.08

best idea EVER

the thing i hate most about renting is that i can't redo my kitchen.

there is a whole host of things i can whine about regarding my kitchen, and i promise i will whine about every single one of them at some point. but the worst issue we have to deal with is space. i know, we live in new york. but it's a gigantic brownstone, and i had hoped for more. this is a kitchen in which you can only open the refrigerator door 60 degrees because it bumps the oven. it makes me insane, and we can't use our left veggie drawer. grrrrrr.

when we first moved in, it was an incredibly depressing room. the cabinets, of which there were (blessedly) lots, were a horrible dark cheap wood. there are no windows in the room, so it was really claustrophobic. the counters are black, and it was difficult to see inside any of the lower cabinets to get the pans we were constantly using.
that photo makes it look much nicer than it was.

the even bigger problem was that my new roommates were kindred spirits. we drool over issues of bon appetit. we just had an enormous thanksgiving feast with two roasted turkeys and about 30 side dishes for our friends because we were jealous that our families got to cook on the actual holiday. we use this kitchen constantly, and we were giving each other bruises trying to use the cabinets.

so my ingenious solution was to get the things we needed most often into a spot where we could grab them at will. for the best idea EVER (in practice, i swear it has been), i give you....
a very blurry photo of pegboard!!!

this has revolutionized the kitchen, and i did it all myself on the cheap. i got a piece of pegboard from the hardware store down the street (these dudes love my by now), a set of a bunch of hooks, and just screwed it into the wall.

however, a DIY warning!! this job took some serious help from friends, because pegboard is heavier than you expect and you need someone to hold it while you drill.

also, i screwed the board in flush with the wall and then promptly realized that it needed spacers behind it, or the hooks couldn't get in. whoops. luckily, like any normal 25 year old girl, i always have wood shims (little skinny wedges that break easily, for filling gaps and shimmying things up by degrees to the height/thickness you need them) lying around my house. you know, right next to the tv remote and the handheld jigsaw, like anyone else. (if, by some odd turn of luck, you do not have shims lying around or the $2 and inclination to buy them, you could even use some thickly folded cardboard.) anywhoodle, i grabbed a few and screwed through them, giving me enough space between the wall and the board to hang the hooks.

all said and done, i only put about 16 easily-filled screw holes in the wall (pots are heavy, so you should anchor the boards well), spent about $40, and after slapping a coat of light blue paint on the ugly peg board, we now have a kitchen that is significantly less horrible to cook in. 4 out of 4 roommates agree: best idea EVER.

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