Food Dispensers Enhance Kitchen Life
Not only do canisters provide air-tight storage, keeping dry foods fresh, but they can be handily placed at your fingertips for ease of adding ingredients to dishes you’re preparing. How much simpler to handily measure out a cup of flour than to retrieve the original package, often cumbersome or bulky, just to get that
single cup you need. With often-used ingredients nearby, in your work area, you’ll save time, whether cooking, baking, or serving.
Not only are they functional, but canisters exist in numerous sizes and designs. Made of various materials, including ceramic or glass, at one end of the design spectrum, to rubber or acrylic at the other, there’s a product for every taste. Furthermore, the canister’s material will impact its style, another key component in selecting a kitchen canister that serves a purpose and simultaneously adds some flair.
For modern styling, there are clear food dispensers, where the contents contribute to the design. Undoubtedly, a clear acrylic kitchen canister, filled with Spiral Rotini Pasta, will send a different vibe than one with dried beans or flour. Also, arranging three or four canisters, of graduated sizes, together lends eye appeal to an otherwise ordinary space.
For those preferring a boost of contrasting color or wanting to accent hues used in table linens or curtains, dispensers provide not only color, but theme. A set of Southwestern styled canisters, for instance, might be adorned with cactus and mountain scenery while another, entirely different, comes in various fruit or vegetable shapes.
With convenient Internet shopping, there’s no shortage of styles for food dispensers. Kitchen canisters provide a practical storage solution for often used dry foods, help the cook, and “ramp up” kitchen style. They also make a great engagement, bridal, or housewarming gift, sure to enhance any “well dressed” kitchen!
1 Comment to “Food Dispensers Enhance Kitchen Life”
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By arvin198624, January 29, 2011 @ 12:41 am
I have many glass canisters and canning jars. I fill them with grains of all different colors.Yellow cornmeal, white hominy grits, red kidney beans, green split peas, black eyed peas, etc.
http://modernkitchencanisters.com/