Kitchen Cabinet Accessories
If you Google "kitchen cabinet accessories" you will see a list of companies selling these accessories. All the options are there, but which are worth getting and which will hardly be used?
I have no axe to grind, but I've had experience and made observations. What I offer is opinion only, but educated opinion.
There are 3 manufacturers of kitchen cabinet accessories that I know make quality products. There are probably others, but these are the 3 I'm familiar with. They are Rev-A-Shelf, KV (Knapp & Voigt), and Hafele (pronounced "Hey Fella"). Anything you buy from them or their distributors will be good quality.
Kitchen pantry cabinet You will see a variety of elaborate pull out systems for your kitchen pantry cabinet. They're expensive, and heavy when they get filled with cans of food, and they're expensive. And oh yea, did I mention they are expensive? You can spend half as much by buying an empty cabinet and putting 5 pull-out trays plus 1 stationary shelf in the box. The 5 pull-outs should be spaced evenly from the floor to about your shoulders, and the stationary shelf should go above them. Put light-weight items (like paper towels, napkins) up high. Tell your cabinet source to use heavy duty, 100 lb., ball bearing slides on the sides of the pull-outs. This arrangement will give you more flexibility than the standard organizer, make it easier for you to access things, and save you a considerable amount of money (so you can afford to buy more kitchen cabinet accessories).
Upper (wall hung) cabinets There aren't very many kitchen cabinet accessories made for upper cabinets. If you have a corner cabinet, you can use a lazy susan in that one. The only other thing that makes any sense is a spice rack mounted to the inside of a cabinet door near the stove. Your call. I would only do it if the door opens far enough (more than 105 degrees) so that the rack doesn't partially block your access to the inside of the cabinet. That eventually will get annoying.
Base cabinets (the ones under the counter tops) Get as many drawers as you can. They're more expensive than 1 drawer over a door, but everything comes out where you can see it. If the money isn't an issue, this is a no-brainer. Get large drawers near your stove - for pots and pans. Make sure they are on heavy duty, ball-bearing slides. If you recycle (most of us do these days) have a pull-out with 2 or more containers attached.
There will usually be a drawer above the garbage. Don't use it for anything that might hold odors.
A lazy susan is a good idea for a corner cabinet, and they have blind corner pull-outs for blind corner cabinets - also a very good kitchen cabinet accessory to consider.
A tilt-out sponge tray at the sink is a nice feature. But don't put sponges in there without wringing them out first. Excess water will warp the wood, even though there's usually a metal tray to hold the sponges.
Things I don't like include:
appliance lifts - you consume an entire base cabinet for one "Mix Master" (not a good use of space), and you have to be Charles Atlas to lift the thing.
Racks on doors - they partially block access to the interior of the cabinet, and if you put anything with any weight on them, the hinges will eventually loosen and your door won't work properly until you adjust the hinges.
Pull-outs that rest on drawers - like an ironing board or a cutting board. If they're resting on a drawer, and you're applying downward pressure by cutting or ironing, how long before the drawer isn't sliding properly?
Bend a drawer slide, and you have a major bill for a carpenter to replace the slide. Who needs the extra headache?
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