New! Summer 2012 Article in STUDIOS magazine!
I am thrilled to announce my article “Multifunctional Craft Space Fits the Family” is being featured in the Summer 2012 issue of STUDIOS Magazine.
This article describes the crafting/homework/office station we designed adjacent to an open great room-style kitchen. Like many Americans, my clients wanted an open floorplan since they felt that formal living and dining rooms are a waste of square footage that end up empty most of the time. Since the kitchen table would now become the only table, it was essential to create a space where the kids could color or work on homework projects without impacting dinner time or making the space feel constantly cluttered.
The new space is perfect for homework, gift wrapping, craft projects, and tracking the complex calendar of busy family life. For lots of ideas that could work in your home, purchase the magazine
today. Side bar articles include “Adapting Kitchen Cabinets for Craft Studios” and “Craft Counter Materials”.
The article concludes:
“With the stairs, pantries, craft/homework station, phone, and mom’s calendar all in the same space, it is a family hub. It’s a place where the chaos of family life can be organized and contained, so that the kitchen/great room maintains its own function and is an inviting space for the family.”
Kitcheneering Earns Coveted Angie’s List Super Service Award
- At April 30, 2012
- By Moorea Hoffman
- In Awards and Honors
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Award reflects businesses’ consistently high level of customer service
Kitcheneering has been awarded the prestigious 2011 Angie’s List Super Service Award, an honor bestowed annually on approximately 5 percent of all the businesses rated on the nation’s leading provider of consumer reviews on local service companies.
Review on Angie’s List from Leslie Yellen
“Moorea Hoffman, owner and principal designer for Kitcheneering, provided the highest quality service we could have ever imagined. She is not only a consummate professional, she is also a lovely individual. Moorea’s attention to detail, insight into ergonomics and functionality, and emphasis on individual tastes and lifestyles is unparalleled. We had a complete kitchen design and remodel including wall removal, cabinets, hardware, appliances, flooring, and countertops. We are delighted with our new kitchen and receive rave reviews from all who see it, and especially the fortunate few who actually have an opportunity to work in it. It is the center hub of our home and a room that continually attracts the traffic which always flows smoothly due to the outstanding design and workmanship. We give Kitcheneering and Moorea Hoffman our highest recommendation.”
“Only a fraction of the businesses rated on Angie’s List can claim the sterling customer service record of being a Super Service Award winner because we set a high bar,” said Angie’s List Founder Angie Hicks. “The fact that Kitcheneering can claim Super Service Award status speaks volumes about its dedication to consumers
Angie’s List Super Service Award winners have met strict eligibility requirements including earning a minimum number of reports, an exemplary rating from their customers and abiding by Angie’s List operational guidelines.
Service business ratings are updated daily on Angie’s List, but members can find the 2011 Super Service Award logo next to business names in search results on AngiesList.com.
Angie’s List collects consumer reviews on local contractors and doctors in more than 500 service categories. Currently, more than 1 million consumers across the U.S. rely on Angie’s List to help them make the best hiring decisions. Members get unlimited access to local ratings via Internet or phone, exclusive discounts, the Angie’s List magazine and help from the Angie’s List complaint resolution service. Take a quick tour of Angie’s List and view the latest Angie’s List news.
The Truth About Trash
- At April 27, 2012
- By Moorea Hoffman
- In Appliances, Cabinets, Function, Uncategorized
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Trash Compactors seem like such a good idea – trash condensed to 25% volume requires fewer trips to the garbage cans or dumpster. One quarter volume saves space at the landfill. There are some downsides however:
- The longer garbage is in your home, the more likely there will be odor
- Old trash can attract animals and insects
- Bags can break when trash is compacted, especially with can lids and bottles
- Compactors are difficult to keep clean and sanitary because of bag leakage
- Compacted trash is 4 times as heavy to carry
- Compacted trash takes longer to breakdown in the landfill
My recommendation? A trash/recycle cabinet drawer next to the clean-up sink. These pull out on gliders and have two attached wastebaskets, one for recyclable materials and one for everything else. Enjoy those walks outside!

- Trash/recycle cabinet
The Perfection of Convection
The Perfection of Convection – Expand Your Menu Options!
My clients often ask me about convection ovens. Sometimes, they have had a convection oven for years but never even tried the convection setting. Here is a quick tutorial about how these ovens can make your life easier.
Science snapshot: convection ovens have a third heating element that is wrapped around a fan at the back. Heat flows evenly over all the racks (unlike traditional electric or gas radiant ovens with heating elements just on top and bottom.)
Advantages:
- You can use ALL the racks simultaneously
- You never need to change position of the racks to ensure even cooking
- You can cook a pan of fish, a casserole of brussell sprouts, and a tray of cookies at the same time (as long as all items require the same temperature)
- The aromas and flavors will not mingle because the direction of the airflow is from the front of the oven to the back
- Reduced cooking time or temperature saves energy
Don’t worry about converting a recipe written for a conventional oven. It’s easy! Simply reduce the temperature by 50 degrees or reduce cooking time by 25%. When baking, use the lower temperature option so the dough has time to rise. That’s it, no formula necessary.
Imagine Thanksgiving – green beans, extra stuffing, sweet potatoes, and pies cooking at the same time on all the oven racks. You can add dishes sequentially for the right cooking time and have everything piping hot an ready at once. The convenience, time savings, and lower energy use is well worth the higher price!
To learn more, order Kitchen Appliances 101 at Amazon.com
How to Choose the Right Appliances:
Consider your maximum (not minimum) requirements. Ask yourself, “What is the maximum number of guests I would like to cook for? How many and what kinds of dishes would I like to make? Picture yourself making a celebration dinner with your favorite menu, easily, with minimum time required. This will help you decide key features:
+ How many burners will you need?
+ How close are the burners – do they accommodate your widest saute pan and your largest pot?
+ Do you need more than one oven – what size will work for what that perfect menu?
+ What about options like warming drawers, grills, steamers, or wok burners?
+ Would a convection oven expand your menu options?
To learn more, order Kitchen Appliances 101 at Amazon.com
Does your kitchen need a second sink?
Many kitchens today, especially large ones, are being designed with a secondary sink station. But it’s not enough just to have a second sink, where you place it is just as important. When placed correctly, a food preparation sink is incredibly beneficial. It literally doubles the functionality of a kitchen without adding to the square footage. It also allows multiple cooks to work in comfort simultaneously. And it prevents dirty dishes from getting in the cook’s way or forcing him/her to stop in the middle of a task in order to clean out the sink so it can be used.
Read More»Great Design at Affordable Prices
Most of us have always made purchasing decisions—especially big ones—with a careful eye on getting value for our money. Intrinsic in the idea of value is the intersection between what something costs and what it is actually worth.
It used to be that design was only for the high end of the construction market. Affluent homeowners were clients, modest homeowners were consumers (with all the distinctions between service and product that that implies).
Read More»Greening Your Remodel
“Green” is definitely one of this year’s big buzzwords. And for good reason—the environment has been used and abused without us paying much attention since the Industrial Revolution. It’s past time that we take care of the world that takes care of us.
Okay, enough soapboxing. You are doing a remodel and want to “green” the project. Recycled glass tiles and countertops have caught your eye. Low-VOC (volatile organic compound) cabinets are on the list. You’ve even looked at bamboo or cork flooring. Don’t stop there. Think about your demolition plan.
Read More»Book Review: Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver
- At June 8, 2010
- By Moorea Hoffman
- In Books, Going 'Green'
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In the little free time I have to read, I usually prefer fiction. I enjoy being swept away into another world, far removed from own. While I enjoy non-fiction, it’s not what I turn to for escapism. But I could not resist this book! First, because the author is one of my favorite fiction writers so I knew I could count on an engaging read. Secondly, the book is about something near and dear to my heart (and work)–FOOD!! How to acquire it, prepare it, and enjoy it but, more importantly, how to do these things ethically.
Read More»“First we shape our dwellings. Then our dwellings shape us.” Winston Churchill
“First we shape our dwellings, then our dwellings shape us,” Winston Churchill.
For several months now, I have had the following quote as part of my email signature. I can’t remember where I first ran across it but it speaks to me of much more than just the pleasures of a beautifully designed space. As a designer those pleasures are, of course, very near and dear to my heart but this quote hints at the truth that within the oft-perceived “superficiality” of design is the very real affect an environment has on the people who dwell in it—for better or worse.
Read More»