My kitchen design hinges on this simple method (in 8 sketches)Plus, a rich, salty hot chocolate to make for the holidays.We’re entering peak cooking-for-crowds season, so here is a (thorough!) behind-the-scenes look at how our kitchen layout came together—Part One. Prepare for extremely detailed sketches, hand-written notes on sketches, and labels for every inch of storage. Plus, a hot chocolate recipe from my friend’s excellent new cookbook that hits all the right flavor notes. And if you’re still searching for a thoughtful gift (for yourself or a loved one), click this special link and receive 20% off an annual subscription to Homeward. I’ve designed or collaborated on the design of more than 10 kitchens, but have never worked on a from-the-ground-up layout of my own. As soon as it became clear that I was going to have the chance to design exactly what I wanted in our Ojai kitchen, a feeling of paralysis seeped in. Dreaming up kitchens for other people or test kitchens for my business was much easier than designing one, with a free hand, that I’d be using all the time. There was no excuse if it turned out poorly. This kitchen, I realized, would hold up a mirror to myself—I’d see all of my wrinkles and blemishes and have to confront them. The kitchen is the most dynamic room in the house. It’s the place of solitude where you can hunch over a bowl of cereal while scrolling the news; the locus of mundane scheduling conversations; the spot where guests congregate; and, yes, the juncture of all cooking. Designing a space that can support all of these functions while also looking inviting and beautiful is like prepping a turducken. Each part may be great on its own, but you have to layer it all together, then stick it in the oven and pray that it turns out. For the Ojai house, I worked closely with Bestor and Reath. After we all figured out the layout of the house, they collaborated on the general disposition of the kitchen, pantry, and eating areas—for which there are several. Just off the kitchen, opposite the pantry, is an oval table with banquette seating and a few chairs. On the east side of the house is a patio with two chairs and ottomans for Tad and me to have breakfast or an evening drink. This patio is flanked by a long planter, where many of the herbs and vegetables will grow. On the south side of the house, there will be a covered upper terrace with a dining table and an open lower terrace with an outdoor cooking area. These peripheral features influenced the design of the kitchen itself. Next it was time to drill down into how the kitchen would be used and how it would function best. You’ll make yourself crazy if you try to think of every scenario, so I aimed for a handful of our most common uses and identified the areas, or “zones,” where they’d take place. ... Subscribe to Homeward to unlock the rest.Become a paying subscriber of Homeward to get access to this post and other subscriber-only content. A subscription gets you:
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