Category: Butler’s Pantry

  • Expanding Wine Rack – Corral Your Collection

    Winestorage

    Have you ever purchased a storage solution, installed the solution, and later found out that you still have one or two items that cannot fit because your needs outgrew your planning?

    Well, we find this a lot– especially when it comes to wine storage.  We discovered this puzzle-style storage until in April’s Los Angeles Magazine.

    Gideon Dagan’s "Puzzle" wine rack will expand your offerings.  Lay the bottles down horizontally, therefore keeping the wine for a longer period of time at it’s proper position.  Made of transparent recyclable ABS polymer and available in orange or amber. 

    If you are in LA, you can snag these at Boom USA at Helms Bakery in Culver City.  The store also has some other neat storage products– some of them we’ve spotted at Fred Segal Melrose.

    What wine storage solutions have you discovered?  Please share.

    John_trosko

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  • Healing Lifestyles & Spas Presents Healthy Kitchen Organizing Tips by OrganizingLA

    New_picture

    Healthy kitchen organizing tips were on the menu recently when John and OrganizingLA provided tips to Healing Lifestyles & Spas Magazine’s Tip of the Day, mailed to subscribers.

    Tipoftheday2 "Do you cook up a tornado for dinner? Is your kitchen cluttered with random "as seen on TV" gizmos, snacks, mail, scribbled post-its, car keys, and, oh yeah, food? Preparing dinner would likely be less daunting if you entered an organized kitchen that was cleared of clutter and focused on food. John Trosko, president of OrganizingLA, a Los Angeles- based professional organizing company, warns against purchasing singular-use gadgets and instead recommends focusing on kitchen tools that serve at least three or four purposes.

    Regardless of the size of your kitchen, creating a "culinary oasis," complete with sections for specific items will help simplify your prep process insists Trosko. "Create a baking center, a breakfast center, a snack zone, a space for spices, baby food, and a roasting department." Don’t forget the family communications center for those quick shopping lists, phone messages, scissors, and a place to store incoming mail."

    Howtoorganizeyourkitchen_3The article continues the theme by quoting Gina Segal, a personal chef and caterer who talked about multi-tasking while cooking.

    For Segal’s tips, check out the article— it’s worth the visit.

    What tips do you have for creating a healthy, happy kitchen?  Please share your thoughts using the comment link below.

    John_trosko_2

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  • Old Hollywood Pantry – Some Quick Fixes for Great Big Results

    Old_hollywood_food_pantry_2 We’ve updated our photo albums.

    Stepping off a a large project in Hollywood, we were able to squeeze some photos out for the blog (with permission of course.)  Check out these before’s and after’s of the food pantry.  It’s certainly a smaller part of the project, but the homeowners were delighted.  More parts of the project coming soon.

    Comments?

    John_trosko

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  • O-Magazine Offers Organizing Tips and a Sweepstakes

    Pavilion_iq770_2If you’re feeling lucky, Los Angeles organizing expert Chris McKenry can help you.

    Chris is part of an advertisement in O-Magazine this month for Microsoft’s HP Pavilion IQ 770 TouchSmart Computer.  Our colleague offers great tips for organizing your kitchen, home office, wardrobe, mail and time– many of those tips includes ways you can incorporate technology into your daily life (like we continue to do) by using the TouchSmart.

    The HP Pavilion IQ 770 TouchSmart Computer helps plan your family’s schedule, manage events and leave personal messages – all at your fingertips, on a touch screen. 

    Here’s a sample Conquer Your Clutter tip we love:

    "Another key to staying organized is keeping items where they are used. You normally don’t leave the milk, fish, and eggs sitting on the dining room table when returning home from the grocery after a difficult day. Think of the mail as perishable and keep those surfaces uncluttered. No matter how tired you are, get in the habit of placing the mail on your desk.

    Record events in your TouchSmart calendar and recycle the invitations."

    To read more of Chris’ Get It Together LA! organizing tricks, check out this month’s O magazine on newsstands now.  You can also read the online version and enter to win a variety of prizes (including a TouchSmart and a visit by a professional organizer), by clicking here.

    John_trosko_3

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  • When is Old-Fashioned Better Than New, Bright and Shiny?

    Carbon_steel_knife

    Even though my mother lives in New Jersey, I still enjoyed a Mother’s Day brunch of sorts, at Betty and Denise’s restaurant, Grub Hollywood.

    Afterward, I lounged by the pool and checked out an old Saveur magazine, and ran across the magazine’s top picks from 2006.  And while the issue may seem outdated, an article about carbon-steel knives still rings true today.

    Professional chefs (and I assume Betty and Denise) swear by carbon-steel knives, but the knives require more maintenance than stainless-steel.  I guess it depends on your personal preference.  Carbon-steel knives have to be washed and fully dried after use.  The knife components develop a dark patina over time.  Some find this patina charming, some say they become downright rusted and ugly.

    Here’s what Saveur says:

    "Yes, stainless-steel blades are bright and shiny, but we prefer old-fashioned carbon-steel knives, which are easier to sharpen and take on patinated character with use.  As the carbon-steel alloy ages, its variegated black and gray blemishes mellow into a soft burnish.  Whether found well-broken in at rummage sales or newly forged from manufacturers like Sabatier, these sharp beauties get us all worked up about slicing and dicing."

    So Saveur calls them a true cook’s find, a "knife with soul."  It got me thinking about how "new-looking" is not always the best in the long run– and that’s not always the thinking here in Hollywood.

    Functional may sometimes be better than the way something looks– and maybe more than "sometimes."  This rings true with knives, as it does with being organized.  There are times, too, when a magazine doesn’t have to approve of a trend for us to have enjoyed it anyway– or the way we enjoy it.

    Any cooks want to chime in?

    John_trosko_2

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  • Guys and Galleys: How Men Organize The Kitchen

    It's hard to pin down time to get an entire room organized.


    But for a room most of us spend time in– the kitchen– it's surprising how little time we spend keeping it all in check. Here's a terrific example of some of our work, circa 2005.

     

     Before OrganizingLA:

     

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    After OrganizingLA:

     

    DCP_1437

    By starting small, you'll find new organizers will work so well in the galley cabinet that you'll want to try sequels in other rooms. It's a perfect ending to clutter with a limited time investment. Study these before/after pictures in a typical condominium kitchen located in the Hills above the Sunset Strip in West Hollywood, California.

     

    Want this look?


    OrganizingLA used Sterilite Ultraseal Dry Food Containers, Old Thompson Stainless Spice Jars as well as labels by the Dymo LetraTAG (in white plastic and black lettering for easy cleaning– easy reading.)  Expandable stairstep shelf organizer at the Container Store.  The 1930's yachting sugar canisters were from the owner's personal collection and discovered on eBay.

     

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    John_trosko_67

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