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An Organized Pantry
by Monica Resinger - Plantldy98@aol.com
Description: Tips for organizing your pantry so that you can access food items more quickly and easily.
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One night I was making burritos for dinner. I went to grab refried beans out
of the
pantry and couldn't find any. Later, while cleaning out the pantry, I found
some. If
the pantry had been organized to begin with, I would have been able to find
the
refried beans and save my husband a trip to the neighborhood store, saved
money as refried beans at the neighborhood store are not cheap and lots of
frustration. Another problem with a cluttered, unorganized pantry is waste. I found
spilled flour, noodles, Jello and cornmeal packages.
So, in an effort to improve myself and knowing what I had done in the past
wasn't
working, I put some thought into how I could create a better system. Here's
what
I came up with:
ASSIGN A HOME TO EACH ITEM
Assign a home to each different type of item. For example, have one shelf for
cereals, another for canned foods, another for spices and another for
prepared boxed meals such as macaroni and cheese. If you have to, you can split up a
shelf for two different foods. Be sure to keep multiples of foods together so
you can see at a glance how much of something you have.
GET RID OF DEAD SPACE
Make sure your shelves don't have too much ‘dead space'. Dead space is
unused space which is usually found above what you are storing. For example,
when I was putting my canned food away on the canned food shelf, I noticed I
couldn't stack two regular sized (about 15 oz.) cans one on top of another,
but there was a lot of empty space above the cans (dead space). So I adjusted the
shelf up a couple of inches so now I have room to stack two regular size cans
and there is less dead space. This made a tremendous difference--I could now
get all canned foods onto this shelf rather than have them scattered
throughout the pantry.
CREATIVE CONTAINERS
Find canisters or other holders for noodles, flour, sugar, rice, popcorn or
other
food that comes in plastic or paper bags. I used to store the opened bag of
rice
(or other plastic or paper bagged food) right in the opened bag (closed with
a
twist-tie) which always lead to spills. Now I use canisters, empty coffee
cans,
glass jars, and other containers to hold these items for no mess. If you use
pretty glass jars (which you can find at thrift stores), you can store
noodles, rice,
split peas or other attractive food in them and display on your counter to
save
pantry space. Finally, put taller items in the back. This makes finding
things
easier.
The effort you put into organizing your pantry can be very rewarding. It will
save
you time, frustration and money. It is so nice to be able to open the door
and see
everything organized (or just being able to see everything without a can
falling on
your head or toes).
Monica Resinger is a loving wife and doting mother of two
who
enjoys gardening, painting, dancing and homemaking. She is also the owner of
Homemaker's Journal E-Publications; check out her fun and helpful
e-publications for homemakers here: http://homemakersjournal.com.
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