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I have some exciting news: we’re expecting a new addition. No, not a baby. A new KITCHEN! Demo starts on Monday and in (hopefully) six weeks or so I’ll have a brand new space to work in. I’m excited…and totally petrified.

SIX. Weeks. Without. A. Kitchen. You guys, I bake for a living. It’s gonna get interesting up in here really fast.

If you’re thinking about a kitchen remodel or even in the planning stages (or still in the dreaming stage) I wanted to share my experience with you. Hopefully we can learn something together! Here are a few things I’ve learned just about planning a remodel:

Tip #1: Before you even schedule any appointments, think about what you want and need.

What works for you in your kitchen? What doesn’t work? Do you just need new counters to spruce it up? New lighting? Or do you need new cabinets? Maybe you want a new layout. Think about everything you want and make a list. I started a pinterest board to keep track as I went.

Let’s look at my kitchen as it is now:

Kitchen Before 1

(BTW, that is the cleanest it’s been…ever.)

Kitchen Before_2

Besides the cabinets and counters, my kitchen needs some dramatic redesign. Remember, I work in my kitchen and bake in there every day. My goal is for a usable space with more storage and more counter space. The problem: tight quarters. We couldn’t make the kitchen bigger unless we pushed out the house, an expense we can’t manage.

Here was my list of must-haves for my kitchen:

  • Create a peninsula with an overhang so Jordan has a breakfast eating area instead of an ugly Ikea table.
  • Add counters and cabinets in that empty space. Why it’s empty? I have no idea.
  • Move the refrigerator so that I don’t have to feel Jordan jam herself through the dining room door one more time while I’m hunting for food in the refrigerator. I’ve been hit with that door so many times, it’s unbelievable.
  • Update the lighting: as much as I love that 1980s style light box, it’s gotta go. (#sarcasm)
  • Make it all clean lines and bright so I can easily photograph in the kitchen.

What would be on your must list??

In order to accomplish the above, I knew I needed help.

Tip #2: Find a good team of people to help you.

Obviously, a kitchen remodel is huge. Even if you don’t bake for a living, the kitchen is probably the central hub of your home. Being without it for any length of time is scary. You want to be sure that the people you hire will get the job done right and fast.

There are a few ways to go when you’re hiring a kitchen remodel contractor. You can do it all yourself, you can coordinate and hire the contractors and subcontractors, or you can hire a company that will do it all for you. Option 1 is not an option (we are the least handy people EVER). Option 2 wasn’t very appealing to me because I barely have time to clean my house let alone be a project manager. We went with option 3: we hired a company to do it all for us.

If you’re in the Sacramento area, you might recognize the name Kitchen Mart, Inc. They’ve been around for over 30 years and they handle everything on your remodel, from design to demolition to installation. I pretty much hired them and they handle it all. They have no subcontractors – everything is in house – so you know it’s going to get done on time and on budget. They do everything from cabinet refacing to custom cabinetry, full service countertop fabrication, and they work with you to find the design you want. (Pssst, they do bathrooms too!)

After our initial consultation we got to go to the Kitchen Mart showroom and actually see what our finished kitchen will look like. That was the kicker for me – I’m a very visual person. Just seeing something written, or even sketched, makes it hard for me to visualize the finished product. I got to see what my kitchen is going to look like, and I fell in love instantly.

KitchenMart (2 of 3)

That’s Lianne Wiig-Von Eschen, our designer. And that up on the monitor? Is our proposed kitchen design!

Here’s a sneak peek:

Kern Final - View 1

We are moving the refrigerator down next to the pantry, adding a continuous counter and cabinets to a new peninsula, and getting new lighting.

Connect with Kitchen Mart: Web / Facebook / Twitter / Houzz

Tip #3: Shop, shop, and shop some more.

KitchenMart Before (10 of 10)

I had it a little bit easier than most people starting on a kitchen remodel. I’ve had this pin on my pin board for years and that’s exactly how I wanted my kitchen. White marble counters, white cabinets, and a beautiful sea foam/tealish backsplash. I knew I couldn’t afford marble (and I’d totally wreck it) so we decided to go with quartz. I found one that looked like marble, DuPont Zodiac Coarse Carrara to match the custom white cabinetry (the white cabinet shows the color, but it won’t have the arch).

I shopped for days to find the perfect tile backsplash. I spent hours looking for the one in that pin. Then I walked into Emser Tile in Sacramento and it was on the wall of one of the displays. The clouds parted and angels sang…and then I found out it had been discontinued and the wall was getting demoed the next week. (#saddness) Luckily, while we were looking around at Emser Tile, I found another subway tile I loved: Lucente Cascade.

Tip #4: Appliances

A huge part of a kitchen remodel expense involves appliances. Can you keep any of your current appliances? Doing so will save you thousands of dollars, no joke. I’m sticking with stainless appliances, a new stainless sink, and my Delta faucet (which I love, and it’s fun to watch guests try and figure out how to turn on). All of my appliances work perfectly fine, but we are getting a new refrigerator and stove. Because of my job we really need two refrigerators and I splurged on a double oven range since I couldn’t fit double ovens anywhere without sacrificing cabinets.

 

Tip #5: Plan, plan, plan.

If there is one thing I’m good at, it’s planning for something. Since I’m not doing much for the actual remodel, all of my planning is going towards figuring out how to work, bake, and eat for 6 weeks without a kitchen. I’ve set up two staging areas: one for work/baking and one for everything else. My house is a disaster. Tomorrow we are going to grill an the contents of our local Costco to freeze for quick meals. I ordered a toaster oven for baking and our refrigerator is in the garage in it’s new (permanent) placement. I’ll keep you posted. Two dumpsters are sitting in my driveway and demo starts Monday. Wish me luck!! 🙂

My current Crazy for Crust kitchen:

Crazy for Crust Office Kitchen

Follow along with my remodel on instagram using the hashtag #cfckitchenremodel!

Thanks for reading!

5 Tips for Planning a Kitchen Remodel

Disclosure: I am working with Kitchen Mart on my kitchen remodel and posting about them for a discounted fee. DuPont is providing us with countertops and I am receiving a discount on backsplash tile. All opinions are 100% my own. Thank you for supporting the brands that make Crazy for Crust possible.

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Dorothy Kern

Welcome to Crazy for Crust, where I share recipes that are sometimes crazy, often with a crust, and always served with a slice of life.

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92 Comments

  1. Omg I cannot wait for the 6 weeks to just pass and be done, for your sake 🙂 And of course to see your new beauty!! I am soooooo happy for you! As a food blogger, getting a new kitchen is like better than getting an engagement ring all over again I think 🙂

  2. Oooohhhh how exciting, Dorothy! I’m so jealous!! I’d love to update my kitchen – it’s over 30 years old and is in desperate need of a new look, but my hubby and I are still undecided as to whether or not we want to move in the next couple of years, and I can’t justify dropping thousands on the kitchen of my dreams, if I have to do it again if/when we move! I can’t wait to see the progress of your new space!

  3. I LOVE how they show you a picture of the finished product! I’m a very visual person too. Looks like it is going to be amazing when it’s all done 🙂

  4. Looks like it’s going to be beautiful. Just try to hold it all together for a little longer and you’ll love it.
    xoxo

  5. After being self employed for forty years I lost my job due to illness. So what does a type A personality – who actually LOVED what she did for the past forty years do with her life and time?  Oh – I know – she tears out her 11 year old kitchen !  My friends and family all think I lost my mind.  Maybe I did, but the sink and cabinets just didn’t work for me, and actually hurt me to use every day. Bending over and getting on my hands and knees to get a pot or pan just didn’t work for me.  And I agree about the lost mind comment – I also watch HGTV every day – some times for hours.  And then I met the Kitchen Cousins at a local Home Show.  WOW, Just what I needed to spur me on with my kitchen envy project.  It’s taken me two years of dreaming, planning, shopping and hard work to complete the kitchen of my dreams. I did it all – total with appliances for 8,000.
    I purchased my farm house sink just before I lost my job.  My son bought me the beautiful faucet for Christmas.  Next I purchased an Ikea kitchen….. Wow, what a process that was.  After all the visits to the local store – sitting down with staff to complete my order – the day arrived when 158 boxes arrived at my front door !!! And I didn’t order any upper cabinets !  After four days of myself, my husband and my adult daughter attempting to put together one blind corner cabinet – I knew this just wasn’t going to work for me.  I also learned that I had 20 plus back ordered items.  Then after three weeks of waiting for these drawer fronts to arrive – I learned that Ikea was coming out with a brand new kitchen line after many years – AND – my drawer fronts were no longer going to be manufactured, and they could not find any in the entire country!  So off we went with our 158 boxes, one stove top, one wall oven, and one dishwasher, in the back of my husband’s truck and my Kia. Four hours later I got the return completed and my money in hand.  To make a very long story short – 8 months later, another cabinet order and the appliance find of a lifetime on Craigslist, my kitchen is almost done.  All I have left are my four large reclaimed wood shelves, and my glass tile back splash.  I could not be happier.  A lot of tears and many many laughs later, I have an extremely lovely kitchen.  Thanks to the Cousins suggestion I put my fears aside and went with reclaimed wood counter tops.  I LOVE them.  They bring such warmth and interest to the space.  And I have no fear that they will go out of style.  My only regret would be the fact that not having the kitchen for so long – one tends to go for the fast food route. Now 15 pounds heavier, at 64 I have some extra pounds to get rid of, LOL  

    1. Wow. What an ordeal! I can’t imagine that Ikea delivery. I told my husband about your comment and the look on his face! He hates it whenever I say “honey, let’s go to IKEA!” because it means he’s got hours of work ahead of him!