The most important things in your kitchen repertoire are good knives. In my knife collection, I have three knives: a chef knife that I use for almost everything, a paring knife for small jobs, and a bread or serrated knife for slicing bread or soft fruits like tomatoes. Those last two knives can be any brand really; save the dough for your main knife.
I like Global, NHS, and MAC knives. I have found these to be the most durable, easy-to-work-with and sharpest chef knives; they are priced around $70 to $125 apiece. The NHS is Japanese, made from the same high-carbon steel that samurai swords are made from, so you know it’s one sharp mofo. Make sure they stay sharp, and be sure to tuck your fingers while you chop so no blood is shed. Having a good sharp knife makes cooking and prepping so much easier, faster, and more enjoyable than using a dull, bad slicer. Once you try a high-quality chef knife you will never go back!
After you get this marvelous knife, you need to take care of it properly. When you are finished with it, always wash it, dry it completely, and store it in its knife guard—never leave it sitting in the sink with food crusting on it. If you leave it sitting around, it will start to rust and dull. Also, never scrape the blade side of your knife along the cutting board like they all do on those Food Network shows (my biggest pet peeve ever!). This will dull your knife. However, you can use the backside to pick up chopped veggies. (Alternatively, use a dough scraper to sweep up those veggies.) I have my chef knives professionally sharpened only twice a year because I take good care of them.
For vegan cooking, get rid of your plastic cutting boards (save them for meat products, if using, and keep separate for safety). You want a nice thick bamboo cutting board. I prefer one that is at least 20x15 with a juice groove. Simply Bamboo and Totally Bamboo are great brands.
blissful trick
To keep your cutting board from slipping around, lightly dampen a paper towel or thin dish towel and place it underneath your cutting board.
One large stainless steel colander will do the trick for draining pasta and veggies. I have a variety of styles and sizes of mesh strainers for other jobs: a two-inch with a handle for catching seeds when juicing citrus, an eight-inch with a handle for sifting flour, an eight-inch stand-up for washing/straining grains, and a skimmer, which is essential for blanching vegetables.
left to right: bamboo utensil, Le Creuset spatula, Microplane zester, front: dough scraper, back: citrus reamer, mini mesh strainer, chef knife, paring knife
A good blender and food processor are essentials in a blissful kitchen. I could not survive without my Vitamix. The reason you need both is because the blender is for the more liquid things, like smoothies, dressings, pureed soups, etc., while the food processor is used for more chunky recipes that don’t contain a lot of liquid, such as bean pâtés, pestos, etc. Processors also have cool attachments that help you grate and chop veggies if you are feeling too lazy to cut them by hand. Both of these are a lifetime investment and are worth every single penny. Cuisinart is tried and true—just go for the bigger bowl at 11 or 14 inches. You will be fine with less expensive brands, too.
Throw out Teflon nonstick and aluminum pans. There are toxic chemicals found in the coating on these pans. Replace with stainless steel, cast iron, enamel-coated cast iron, or glass. There are many new “green” companies making nonstick pans that are purported to be nontoxic. I don’t feel like there’s enough research to know for sure if these pans are safe, but they are great to use when making pancakes or crêpes, for toasting nuts, and for things that benefit from a nonstick surface or low-oil cooking. Use your own judgment if you want to try these pans.
Essential pans are a small saucepan, large stockpot, and both large and small sauté/skillet/fry pan. You want to have lids that fit all these pans as well. For casserole dishes, get glass or ceramic/porcelain in a variety of sizes. Pyrex makes a variety of sets that can be your new best friend. You’ll need a large one that’s 13x9 inches, a two-quart one, and an 8x8 inch square dish.
If you don’t already have one, jump in and buy a pressure cooker. Cooking fresh beans will be a snap, and brown rice made in a pressure cooker is heaven on earth. One brand that is great and not expensive is Fagor. Or you can go fancier with Kuhn Rikon. Either way, I prefer them to rice cookers because they have more uses.
Get a variety of utensils in varying sizes with long handles, like a spoon, slotted spoon, rice paddle, ladle, whisk, and tongs. Bamboo and stainless steel utensils are better than plastic ones. When you cook with plastic, the heat is melting the utensils and thus the material’s particles are going into your food. Just be sure not to use the stainless steel utensils on any cookware that can be scratched. For that cookware, use bamboo or one of my favorite tools, the Le Creuset spatula. It can be heated up to 500 degrees F, making it a versatile tool to have in your healthy kitchen. I also like to have a pair of bamboo cooking chopsticks. They always come in handy.
I like to keep glass and stainless steel bowls of various sizes and a dough scraper by my prepping station. The scraper helps me quickly pick up chopped veggies and place them in a bowl to make room on the cutting board for the next chopping project.
Get glass (not plastic) liquid measuring cups, at least one four-cup and one two-cup; stainless steel dry measuring cups that usually come in a set; and a couple of sets of stainless steel measuring spoons.
I like to have both the stainless steel steamer basket that opens up and the bamboo kind that has many layers. Sushi mats come in handy to make…well, sushi—but I also use them as space savers by covering a bowl with a mat, then putting another bowl on top and so on. This is great when soaking both grains and beans in separate bowls.
If your produce is organic, and I hope it is, you don’t need to peel it. Just buy a vegetable scrub brush and scrub it under running water. But for the times that you do need a peeler, it’s good to have a few on hand, both the usual straight kind and the Y-shaped. I find the kind you slip on one finger a bit awkward. As for graters, my favorite brand is Microplane, but the standard box variety will do just fine.
Fun tools to have in your repertoire are a Microplane zester and a citrus reamer. Adding citrus juice (e.g., lemon, lime, orange) and citrus zest is a lovely way to turn a regular recipe into something gourmet. Be sure to lightly zest the outside of the fruit, being careful not to zest into the white parts because that is bitter. You can use the zester to grate ginger as well to make ginger juice.
blissful trick
Store extra citrus zest or grated ginger in a small glass jar in the freezer for up to a month so you have it available for another recipe.
A spray bottle is great to have for putting oil in to make your own pan spray, instead of buying the aerosol stuff from the store. I like the stainless steel kind as opposed to the plastic kind. Personally, I put safflower or grapeseed oil in the bottle, but you can use which ever oil you like.
In your essential baking tools stash include large stainless steel baking sheets, a loaf pan, a Bundt pan, a muffin tin, a mini-muffin tin—go wild! Get what you think you’ll need, and if those silicon types float your boat, then get them too. You can use less oil with those. Make sure you always have parchment (not waxed) paper on hand, and a sturdy rolling pin. Additionally, make sure to get a digital timer or two—don’t trust those winding ones. A metal frosting spatula can come in handy as well. If you don’t trust your oven, grab a thermometer to make sure your oven is not running too hot.
Lastly, ice cream scoopers are really handy for easy scooping, for filling muffin tins and for measuring out cookie dough.