Kitchen appliances
are a large remodeling budget item. If you choose high-end, "professional
style" appliances, they may cost as much or more than your cabinets.
We have some suggestions for you to consider and we can help you cut
through the manufacturer hype.
First off, let us bust the myth of professional style appliances.
The key word in "Professional Style" is style. These appliances
are made to resemble the "style" of professional equipment. They
are not the same appliances used in restaurant kitchens. Building codes
do not allow true professional models to be used in private homes.
Pro style appliances resemble restaurant equipment but beyond that
they are more similar to conventional grade appliances.
While they are not true restaurant equipment,
in many ways, professional style equipment is better than restaurant
equipment. Pro style ranges offer bigger burners, more BTU's, heavy-duty
burner grates, heavy-duty oven racks and many of the most useful features
of restaurant equipment. However, in recent years Pro style equipment
has improved on restaurant equipment by making it easier to clean and
maintain. Restaurant equipment is design for heavy use with the expectation
that a crew member will be thoroughly cleaning the equipment at the
end of each day. Pro style equipment has started incorporating design
details that make it heavy duty and quick & easy to clean.
You pay a lot more, in some cases ten times or more than the
price of standard appliances. Pro style appliances typically come in
stainless steel, are often larger, sometimes offer unique features
and in some cases can do something standard appliances cannot. One
thing you shouldn't expect is better reliability. The opposite is often
the case, as reported in Consumer Reports. While pro style appliances
may be stylish, they often don't do anything you can't do just as well
or better on standard appliances. Furthermore, the traditional appliance
manufacturers are starting to offer appliances that incorporate the
appearance and features found on pro style appliances for a much more
down to Earth price.
Pro style appliances are available in larger sizes than standard appliances,
but this isn't always what it is cracked up to be. In the case of giant
commercial refrigerators, they are wider, but they don't necessarily
have more storage space. They trade wide shelves for shallow shelves.
That makes things easier to reach, but it doesn't add any capacity.
In fact, it ends up reducing the amount of space for cabinets and thus
reduces your total kitchen capacity. In the case of an oven,
the added space can be a virtue. Extra space for more dishes or large
items, like a turkey, is nice. On the other hand, a second oven does
the same thing and allows you to set a different temperature in each.
Need extra burners? Two stoves could solve that for less the one
pro style unit.
Now for the upside. In the interest of full disclosure, when I remodeled
my kitchen, I bought a large Thermador range with four high BTU burners
and a large center griddle. It cost more than my first car,
but like my first car, I love it. It has a presence in the kitchen
that conventional ranges do not. I can boil water faster on the high-BTU
burner. Two of the burners can also be set
to ultra-low, allowing me to simmer a sauce all
day without burning. I can easily slide pans
from one burner to another because of the unitized, heavy iron grates.
I can bake 6 dozen cookies at a time. It is a fantastic appliance.
I wish it hadn't cost so much, but it is a pleasure to use.
Our refrigerator was another of the pro-style appliance we chose.
It is a large, cabinet depth, side-by-sdie unit. The reason we chose
it was not because it was pro style, but because of a requirement we
had. We wanted to put cabinet panels on the fridge so it would look
like the cabinetry in the kitchen. There were cheaper models that could
do that, but they weren't cabinet-depth, which meant it would stick
out past the counter by a couple inches. However, that wasn't even
the critical issue. In our case, the refrigerator was to be placed
right next to a wall. This meant the door on one side could not open
more than 90 degrees. Most refrigerators will not allow access to drawers
unless the door opens to at least 110 degrees or more. Out Thermador
fridge was the one fridge we found that could accept panels, was cabinet
depth and would allow us to operate the drawers with the door open
only part way.
We did not select a pro microwave. I looked for a microwave
that could be installed into a wall, like a wall oven. I found none
that was not a high-priced upscale appliance. That may have changed
since I remodeled. But the real point is that sometimes the pro style
models fulfill a need that conventional models do not. You could get
by with a conventional appliance, but if you have a unique requirement,
an upscale model may be the only choice.
One product that concerned us was a built-in coffee maker that used
a proprietary pre-packaged coffee puck. If that company stops making
those coffee pucks, the coffee maker becomes an obsolete museum piece.
We urge people to avoid choosing products that rely on parts,
supplies or anything that is not readily available on the market from
multiple sources.
Bottom line, pro style appliances are not a good value. Their capabilities
alone do not justify the higher price, nor does their reliability.
The reason to choose a pro style appliance is if it fulfills a special
need that conventional models do not. Large units do provide
greater cooking capacity, but adding a second oven, range, dishwasher
or whatever, can do that too, for less money. If the look is the important
factor, manufacturers are offering the pro look on more and more conventional
grade appliances. The size, capacity, appearance and to some extent
features are the unique factors of a pro style appliance. If those
combined factors are important to you, then only a pro style
appliance will do.