Hang Your Pots: Kitchen Organization Tips from Julia Child
When Julia McWilliams married Paul Child in 1946, she hadn't yet
been to Le Cordon Bleu in Paris or revolutionized the way
Americans think about cooking. But Paul knew good food. "His
mother was a great cook," Julia says, "and when we got married,
I realized I'd better get cracking."
Paul, who died in 1994, made it easy by implementing systems in
the kitchen the most legendary of them the giant pegboard in
Julia's Cambridge, Massachusetts, kitchen, which held her 50-plus
pots and pans. Each was outlined with marker so it could easily be
returned to its designated spot. Paul traced the pots on paper
first so he could see what looked good where. "He had a very good
eye for things," Julia recalls.
She recommends a pegboard to anyone who enjoys cooking. "You
want to be able to find and stash everything easily," she says.
"Unless, of course, you're one of those people who like to live
in a mess." Julia, who moved to Santa Barbara, California, in
November, says her pegboard system will follow her wherever she
goes. But not necessarily all the pots. When she moved, she
donated her Cambridge pegboard and copperware to COPIA, a food,
wine, and arts center in Napa, California, and the rest of her
old kitchen and cookware to the Smithsonian Institution in
Washington, D.C.
The Kitchen According to Julia Child
Make sure you have plenty of counter space and that the height
of the counter suits you. "I'm six feet one, so I need tall ones.
Everything has to be 38 inches high for me." "Lighting is very important. I use script lights because I need
ample light over every work surface."Permanently affix a tape measure or ruler to the edge of a
counter so you can quickly gauge the size of pots and dishes. Hang heavy-duty vertical magnet strips on the wall, then attach
knives to them horizontally. "Knives shouldn't be in a drawer
where they knock against each other and nick the blades." Don't buy sets of pots and pans, because you won't use all of
them. Buy each pot and pan for a specific reason.