by soisew » Mon Jan 12, 2009 9:47 am
I agree it can be a challenge to decide what to stock in the RV. We all have so many kitchen gadgets...it could fill two houses. The main question to answer for yourself is "how much room do you have". It also depends on how much you cook. If you hardly ever eat out like us -- you'll need more. However, less is always best. Stick to the basics. I'd not get carried away with ever kitchen appliance you own, however there are many ladies that do. Here's a list of what I have onboard:
corelle dinnerware - it doesn't take up a lot of room, is heavy but works for the micro, reg. & convection oven. I have service for 8 because we do end up cooking for a crowd many times but if you don't think you'll be serving many people 4 would do. Once we are on solid ground again I'm taking a set of corelle I have that serves 4.
I use regular corelle and favorite coffee mugs so we actually have 4 corelle, his special once cup and 2 soup mugs.
I do have plastic water/drinking glasses that stack. These will be reduced when I reorganize.
1- 6 qt dutch oven pot, 1 one qt. sauce pan, & 1 two qt saucepan
I've actually gone overboard and have some of my cast iron cookware -- 6 qt dutch oven, 6,10 & 12 " fry pans and griddle. And hubby has his favorite non-stick pan for eggs. I will not be taking these out...I'll take out the other dutch oven instead!
I chose to bring 2 glass pyrex baking pans, one rect. and one square. Metal is lighter but doesn't go well with the conveciton/micro and I do use the combo function
1 pie pan and 2 round cake pans - metal
I small cookie sheet and 1 small pizza pan that will fit in the micro/convect.
2 corning ware casserole dishes with lids, one large and one small
for electric appliances I have had more but I took out most of it -- the basics might be: a toaster, coffee maker and waffle baker. I have had onboard a mini chopper, blender and toaster oven but found I did not use them and the space they took up was ridiculous. I have a large crock pot onboard but I don't use it often enough to justify it, instead I used my 4 qt pressure cooker. (both of them will go out when we move into the house)
Keep the small kitchen tools to a minimun -- set of good knives, wood spoons, spatulas, can opener, etc. RV drawers are small.
I pare, slice, dice the old fashioned way with a knife and cutting board. You can take all the fancy do dads but you may find it is easier to go without.
A few food storage containers -- be realistic and don't take a lot and do yourself a favor and keep the lids on them, nest them smaller inside of large so the lids won't end up lost.
I can't live without my salad spinner so I took out things in order to have it onboard.
Once you start packing your kitchen you'll find out what you'll need and what you don't. And, especially after a few months when you reorganize. Just think basics and what you use all the time & see what fits. Sadly many times what we want onboard just won't fit so we have to change our cooking habits. I fully suggest you keep your counter clutter to a minimum. We have to little of it in an RV that even a toaster gets in the way.
I make sure I have room for everything to be put away when rolling. Anything loose left out is a lethal missle when out on the road. I know people do it but all it takes is a hard stop or swerve, big bump and it all goes airborn unless it is actually screwed down. Sticky mats and the sticky earthquake putty may help but in a large event the forces of energy you'll be subjected to will break everything loose. And that brings up another important point. Try to keep everything heavy stowed low to the floor. In "bad" events the cupboard doors can come open and everything will be on the floor or on the way to your head.
If you should happen to find your cupboards aren't full -- pack them tight to prevent things from moving around. pack in small pillows, foam sheets or paper products to keep things in place. I have my corelle in a large tupperware bowl so they don't bump against anything.