ON OUR KITCHEN

ON OUR KITCHEN

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>When I bought the house, my kitchen didn’t come with much.  It actually came with less than I expected.  The seller was supposed to leave the refrigerator- which would start me off with a refrigerator and a sink.  No cabinets, counters, range, or anything else.  I was sort of excited about this, since I could create whatever I wanted.  Once we got to the final walkthrough, a day before closing, my realtor, lets call him Steve, and I realized that he took that too.  So I started with a sink.

 

Steve was furious.  He called the seller’s realtor and yelled. The other realtor called the seller and he yelled that he wasn’t giving me a cent for it and it didn’t work anyway and he’d call the whole sale off over it.  He had a bit of a short temper.   Steve made a deal with the other realtor (at this point we just wanted to leave the seller out of it and deal with the other three sane people) that they’d each give us $200 to make up for the fridge.  So, Steve got me $200 for it.  Conveniently, Steve also had a new fridge for sale for $400, so I got that the day I moved in.

 

I moved in my circulator, toaster oven, vitamix, kitchen aid mixer, and vacuum brewer to add to my refrigerator and sink.  I was still pretty excited, since I could fully appreciate each piece of equipment as I added it.  I needed some burners though.  Not having a gas line and wanting to not get anything I couldn’t use in the deli, I scrapped the idea of a gas range for now. I thought I’d try an induction burner.  I got a cooktek 1800W one used.  I had heard good things about induction, but was nervous I’d miss the gas.  It took a bit to get used to, but I don’t.   Induction is cleaner, faster, and plenty variable.    I stuck with this for a while.  Then I added a meat slicer, 3500W 220V cooktek burner, an espresso maker,  a 40 lb CO2 tank, and a centrifuge.  I’ll do some individual posts on each eventually.

 

I found out pretty quickly through, that running all this on 60 year old wiring wasn’t going to cut it.  I ran everything through surge protectors and had extension cords going into the basement.  I couldn’t do laundry and make toast at the same time.  Or grind coffee and heat up my espresso maker.  Try making bacon, eggs, toast and coffee – yuck! Here’s how I did it: Preheat espresso maker, unplug espresso maker, plug in grinder,  grind coffee, swap plugs again, turn on espresso maker, pull espresso, try to sip for long enough to have some left with breakfast.  Cook bacon on cooktek, make toast to 75% in toaster oven, put bacon in toaster oven to keep warm, cook eggs on cooktek, plate eggs, heat up toast the rest of the way with bacon, put out food, get ready to eat, wish I had more coffee.  After a while, it bothered me too much, so I got an electrician to run some new circuits, including one for my 220V cooktek.  I got 4x20A 120v circuits and a 220x20A one to the kitchen.  I’ve never been so excited to turn two things on at once.

The electrician was great. He did all the kitchen wiring, put in a few basement circuits, one for the bathroom, and a couple on the third floor in two days. Fast, reasonable (~1800) and clean. One gfci was messed up and he came to fix it the next day. We even went out to have a famous fish sandwich at Armands together and, after a bit of I wouldn’t do this normally but what the hell talk, a beer.

 

The kitchen has come along from when I moved in, but it’s still an ongoing process, and I’m moving slowly to avoid any mess ups along the way (and it’s expensive).  That’s why my circulator and centrifuge live on the floor, and my mixer and blender live in a cabinet and go on chairs or in front of things.  I’ll make more posts as we add equipment and finalize our plans for renovation.

On Removing an Ugly Green

On Removing an Ugly Green

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People love to point out how “quirky” the floors in our house are — “This is so funny! They tiled linoleum around the remnant carpet?!”

Most of the house is pine covered in layers and layers on linoleum (we’re working on it). They’re impossible to clean and I live in constant fear of splinters. I hate them.  Except for these. I really can’t argue for a better floor treatment than trompe l’oeil floral carpet pattern on roll out linoleum sheet. The wall color, however, had to go.

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On Uncovering a Window

On Uncovering a Window

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Our current lighting isn’t great. I’ll admit that. But despite our ceilings being fairly high, our living room always seemed heavy and dark. A few gems left from the previous owners play a major role in this.

The walls are a pale yellow that seems charming at first, but certainly doesn’t grow on you. In a showing of home town pride, they paired the yellow with black above our stone fireplace. They did not, unfortunately, leave behind the smiley face clock that pulled the whole room together. The transom above the one large window in the room has been covered in the plywood — from the inside — and painted to match the walls. The hardware for the heavy floral curtains was covered by a scalloped wooden panel that I threw in the trash the day we moved in. In retrospect I regret not getting a few pictures.

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Luckily, the drilled through the window frame so that we can have this handy, and very safe, outdoor outlet.  IMG_3614

On Finding Pocket Doors

 

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My grandmother lived on old money.  She lived in one of those houses that you see in the movies.  It was an old victorian fantasy land.  She was also a little crazy.  She didn’t like central heating or A/C DC.  She said that it made us weak.  So every chilly Christmas when we visited her, we built fires and heated rooms one at a time.  We really used those pocket doors.  I remember Rupert slamming his head into them over and over again before the brain damage. Those doors were solid.  I always wished I had some pocket doors for my own children to torture themselves with.

 

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