Photo: Nathan Congleton/NBC/Getty Images
Most of us spend a lot of time in our kitchens, whether we’re preparing meals for the week, doing the dishes or just getting some work done at the kitchen table. But we’d guess that not many of us spend as much time in our kitchens as Ina Garten, the Food Network personality and cookbook author who goes to work in her kitchen all year long.
Several years ago, Garten built a second kitchen in a barn on her property so she could have somewhere to film episodes ofBarefoot Contessa(she toldOprah Dailyall about it in 2021). But Garten’s home kitchen, where she still cooks meals for friends and family, has remained untouched for 25 years—at least until now. Ina revealed her kitchen’s major facelift on Instagram this week, and we’re kind of obsessed with it.
“During the Pandemic, I gave myself a project of renovating my kitchen, which I actually hadn’t done in 25 years!!,” Garten wrote on Instagram. “I built my dream pantry and bought my favorite Lacanche stove plus lots of food photographs and a great view of the garden. It’s so much fun testing recipes in my new kitchen!”
Garten kept around the big glass flour jar (which you can buy a dupe of from Ikea!) you can see in the background of the very first episode of her Food Network show, and she uses it as a makeshift bookend for her display of cookbooks—all of her books are featured, plus some others, likeBuvette: The Pleasure of Good Food, which features recipes from the New York restaurant Buvette, whereGarten recently had a dreamy lunch. She also has a copy ofThe Lost Kitchen, which some fans might recognize as a cookbook from the Maine restaurant of the same name that has its own show on the Magnolia Network.
Above that display, Ina has a simple gallery wall of food prints that include everything from trimmed asparagus to buttery bread. Garten shared that she bought the prints from the Staley-Wise Gallery in New York, but you could probably seek out similarly fun work from a local gallery as well. If you’re determined to find something specific, go digging through the catalogs of AllPosters or Society6—you might find the perfect piece.
No kitchen is complete without plenty of storage, and Garten showed off some of her stuffed shelves in the post. Her open shelving holds lots of baking dishes for all kinds of projects, plus serving trays, pedestals and vases. There’s also a wide variety of plates for all occasions—we’re especially fans of the plates and bowls with fluted edges that seem similar tothis set from Roman and Williams Guild.
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