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• Home Organization
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Time Management
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ARTICLE
5 Tips for Organizing Your Food Pantry
It can be a cupboard in your apartment,
a shelving unit in your garage, or a separate room in your
house. Whatever it looks like, a pantry acts as a functional
space for storing canned goods, baking supplies and anything
you just HAD to buy during that last triple coupon offering at your
local supermarket. With the winter months quickly approaching, it
is a perfect time to start stocking up on non-perishable food items
and creating an organized area for them. All the squirrels are doing
it. Why not you?
Here are 5 easy ways to help your
‘inner squirrel’ get the food pantry organized for the winter…
Use Helper Shelves
Helper shelves double the horizontal
space in your pantry, offering more space for canned goods,
boxes, bottles, etc. They often come in 3-4 different widths
and heights-—some are width-adjustable. Helper shelves can be
found in the same aisle as other kitchen organizing products and
purchased at general stores like Target or in specialty stores
such as The Container Store.
Helper Shelves = Saving Space
Group ‘Like-Foods’ Together
Group foods and/or products by type,
brand, or ethnicity for easy retrieval. For example: Put
all canned fruit in one area, brownie mixes on another part
of the shelf, and all spaghetti sauce jars and boxes of pasta on
a shelf separate from the other two. Now go to your pantry and gather
ingredients for tonight’s lasagna dinner. How quickly did you locate
the pasta and sauce? Probably, pretty darn fast since they’re now
grouped together in one place...
Grouping ‘Like-Foods’ Together =
Saving Time
Keep it Neat and Orderly
Place cans/jars/bottles on shelves
with labels facing front. Line up boxes with their ‘spines’
facing front (like library books) or facing forward depending
upon your space limitations. This way you can scan the shelf quickly
and find what you need in a matter of seconds. Disorganized shelves
are a big time, money, (and food) waster.
Orderly Shelves = Saving Time and
Money
Take Inventory
Before you go to the supermarket, take
inventory of your pantry shelves. Helpful Hint: Line up
your cans/jars/bottles from the back of the pantry shelf to
the front edge with labels facing forward. Depending upon their
size as well as the size of the shelf, you may be able to line
them up 3-4 deep. When you need a can/jar/bottle, take it from
the front. When you see you have one left (hugging the back wall
of the pantry), it’s time to put that item on your shopping list.
Taking Inventory = Saving Money
Rotate Your Food
How many times have you found cans
or boxes of food languishing behind an extra large cereal
box? You don’t know how long it’s been there and you’re not
planning on serving botulism for dinner, so that old can of peas
you unearthed is money down the drain. Whether you line them up
one in front of the other or stack them, it is important to rotate
your boxes/cans/packages of food. If you usually buy cans of tuna
in bulk and stack them 6-high on your shelf, don’t pile five new
ones on top of an old can. Put that remaining can in the fridge and
stack the new ones behind the old stack. You can take it a step further
by dating your canned/boxed goods. It takes a bit of work but it’s
worth it. Even non-perishables can perish…
Rotated Food = Saving Money
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Editors/Publishers:You are granted permission
to publish the above article in its entirety provided that the
following 'footer' is
included after each article:
Article by Stacey Agin Murray, professional organizer and owner
of Organized Artistry, LLC. Visit http://www.organizedartistry.com for
your FREE e-list of 'Top Ten Tips for Organized Living.'
A courtesy copy e-mailed
or snail mailed to the address below is appreciated.
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