Home Organization: What it means for Your Album Getting Yourself Organized: Start With Your Pantry
Posted: Sunday, November 13, 2011
by Heidi DeCoux
Clear Simple Marketing and Clear Simple Living
Do you want to save money, time, and lower your stress level? Put your home organization skills to use in your kitchen’s pantry and these things can happen. When you know what you have stored in your pantry, what you need, and how to best use your pantry all of these things can happen.
A successful pantry is made up of two components: an organized pantry and a good system for stocking it. You need to develop good habits when it comes to your pantry and home organization. If your stocking and organization habits are bad now, a little guidance can change that!
Are you thinking an organized pantry would be great, in fact A PANTRY would be great! Just because you have a small kitchen, or your kitchen doesn’t contain a traditional pantry closet, does not mean you can’t have this important storage space!
Your pantry doesn’t have to be in your kitchen. Any space that is dry, and temperature regulated can serve the purpose. Small space demand creativity. Find unused space in a linen or coat closet.
Home Organization Concentrated in Your Pantry…
1. Empty out your pantry space. Clean off the shelves, line them if needed. Discard food that has expired. Take a good look at what you have. If you have been compulsively buying one item, but didn’t notice your stock growing in a messy space, you may have far more than you could ever use before it expires. If this is the case consider donating these extras to a food pantry.
2. Sort your food into categories. Keeping like items together will help you find things faster, and help you visually inventory what you have. Examples of categories are breakfast cereals, soup, baking goods.
3. Use a layout that makes sense. After school snacks for the kids should go on lower shelves, where they can reach them. Baking supplies you only use three times a year should be in a harder to reach place.
4. Make the space you have count. Get the most in by using your vertical space. If your shelves are adjustable, great! If they aren’t look for products like can risers to use all of the height in your closet. 10-12 inches of dead air in between your shelves is just plain wasted space. Measure your shelves and invest in a couple great baskets for items that tend to flop around and create messes on traditional shelves. The big offenders? Bags of chips and other snacks, bags of pasta, beans, and flavor packets.
What Do I Put In My Kitchen’s Pantry?
Now that you have cleaned out your space and organized what you already have, how do you know what else you need? Look at what you buy regularly. If up until now you had no home organization in your pantry don’t start out with the goal of a pantry stocked for a year of meals. Take it slow, changing habits doesn’t have to be hard if you do it right.
Start with a back-up of each of the non-perishable items you buy regularly at the grocery store. If you were going to buy one can of beans, buy two. If you are starting from scratch give yourself time, a little planning and coupon use can go a long way to stock your pantry. When you pull something out of your pantry add it to your grocery list, you’ll need to replace your stock.
Habits That Need Changing…
If you had been in the habit of shopping without a list, or jamming things in to your cabinets with no plan, an organized pantry can seem like a lot of work. And if you don’t put some effort into changing habits you may not be successful at getting organized. Here are some quick tips to help you get off on the right foot:
· Change one thing at a time. If you have just reorganized your entire closet and are adjusting to a new system there it might not be the time to build a new habit in the kitchen too.
· Get everyone on board. Getting everyone who uses the pantry to buy in will make changing habits in your storage much easier. When everyone puts things where they belong you won’t have to spend time re-shelving what others have done. It will lessen the chance of you burning out and giving up!
· Give yourself time. Like most home organization once we decide to make the change we want everything perfect right away! Keep In mind changing habits takes about 30 days. Stick with for a month and you will find it gets easier and easier to keep organized.
Home organization saves you time in your home. When you know what you have in your pantry it is easier for you to plan meals, shop, and cook! You save money because you aren’t wasting food that gets shuffled to the back or bottom of shelves.
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