Our kitchen has been gutted down to the studs. There is a coating of dust on everything, and I mean everything, in the entire house! WHAT a mess!! So far, the plumbing is in and so is the electric, and now we wait five days for the inspection. (grrr)
Living without a kitchen (and esp. the sink) is challenging to say the least!
We have the refrigerator in the living room, and a microwave and a toaster hooked up in a spare bedroom, and we prep food in the bathroom, but really, it's the pits! Anyone else go thru this? What did you do for food. I'd love to eat out three meals a day, but that's not gonna happen. I need some suggestions on how to feed us until we have a kitchen again.
Oh, any time I read a post about this I get anxiety because I lived through a gut to the studs (kitchen, laundry, bath, dining room and a computer/spare room...and rebuilding the stairs between the two levels of our home). We moved out of the house for this, for three months, but when we moved back in we still did not have a functioning kitchen for quite awhile, but my refrigerator was in so I could store cold items.
I set up a little work station in my dining room (an old door on saw horses) with basic kitchen implements, a microwave, a cutting board, salt/pepper, and a plastic tub to put dirty dishes. Below the work station were plastic totes with dish towels, dry foods like cereal, dish soap, toaster, etc. When I did dishes, I would head to the bathroom with the plastic tub to get my water and do the dishes.
Lucky for us, we moved back in when the weather began to get nice so we grilled a lot. I did quite a bit in the microwave. Within a month of moving back in I had my stove (but no kitchen sink), so that gave me a bit more flexibility. We ate lots of grilled meats, baked potatoes, salads and sandwiches! Breakfasts were mainly cereal, toaster waffles, toast and fruit. We ate out plenty.
This was a horribly stressful experience. I said I would never do it again. But now that I have some distance on it, and I am in love with my new rooms, I probably would do it again. I think kitchen remodels are like giving birth. Horribly painful, but somehow we put it all past us and do it again.
Here is my kitchen and laundry now (they are adjacent to each other on the first floor of my 1903 home):
http://spiredesigngroup.com/project14.html
http://spiredesigngroup.com/project18.html