There’s a wide variety of great kitchen tools everyone should have, but certain equipment is very important for homesteading. Start building your homestead kitchen today by making sure you have these seven essential homestead kitchen tools.
Estimated reading time: 10 minutes
Top 7 Tools for Your Homestead Kitchen
You want to have reliable and versatile equipment in a kitchen where you will be doing a lot of cooking, baking, experimenting, canning, and preserving. Here are some of our favorite tools to save time, money, and effort as we make old-fashioned meals from scratch and try new recipes.
1. Cast Iron Dutch Oven and Pan
This one’s a no-brainer. Cast iron cookware has been around for centuries and is still widely used today.
It can be used in the oven, stovetop, BBQ, or campfire. If properly cared for, your cast-iron cookware will likely outlive you! Yup, you can pass them down to your kids and grandkids.
Cast iron skillets, dutch ovens, and griddles were used by pioneers and frontiersmen over one hundred years ago. They'd bake homemade bread, hardtack, and simmer venison stew in their Dutch ovens.
The best cast iron dutch ovens come with a lid with three little feet on it. When you flip it over, it works as a griddle. You could use it on a propane cooktop, a regular oven, or even on a bed of coals in a campfire.
Use it to make your favorite big batch three bean chili recipe, or even a large pot of black bean and ham soup.
Classic cast iron cookware is the ideal style for a homesteading kitchen instead of Le Creuset or any of the colored and enameled brands. Yes, the enameled brands are pretty, but they aren’t ideal for cooking over open flames since it marks up and blackens the paint.
Wagner and Lodge are my go-to brands for homesteading cast iron. Both companies have been around for over 100 years, and many people have passed down their cast iron through the generations. If you don’t have any cast iron and are put off by the steep price tag, watch for sales to get a great price online.
2. Stand Mixer
Don't have a stand mixer yet? Get one! A standard stand-mixer comes with basic attachments like the whisk and dough hook, but you can get dozens of other pieces for it.
The Kitchen Aid brand stand mixer has so many attachments it’s basically an all-in-one kitchen appliance. In addition to the standard pieces included with the base model, here are just a few of the other attachments you can get for a stand-mixer:
- Pasta roller
- Meat grinder
- Sausage stuffer
- Juicer
- Sifter + Scale
- Slicer/Shredder
- Spiralizer
- Grain Mill
- Ice Cream Maker
- Food Processor
With such a wide range of uses, the stand mixer is a time-saving multi-use appliance in any homestead kitchen.
And while you're at it, remember to pick up at least one good-quality apron. We received a couple of aprons from the good folks over at Rush Order Tees - fully adjustable, sturdy, and with enough pockets to hold all sorts of kitchen tools.
#3. Chef’s Knife
Every homesteader's kitchen should have a great chef’s knife. A good quality chef's knife kept properly sharpened makes the job easier whether you're chopping and slicing fresh game meat, vegetables, or even fruit for pie.
When picking a knife, look for one with a single solid piece of steel from end to end. Also, watch for one with the handle wrapped around the blade. Some knives have the blade inserted into a handle piece, but I always found these tend to snap easily. If you put too much pressure on the handle, or the knife is of poor quality, the handle can snap while applying downwards force.
My favorite knives are Global brands and not too expensive. I personally have a 9" chef's knife and a 6" utility knife, and they've both lasted several years at this point. And it's easy to keep a sharp edge on it. If you do invest in a good knife, make sure you have a sharpener or whetstone to keep it sharp.
And by the way, have you had a chance to check out Lehman's Hardware Store ? This is one of our favorite sites for quality, Amish-made homestead kitchen supplies, tools and more at great prices!
#4. Blender/Vitamix
So this one is a bit controversial. Because the original homesteaders didn't have blenders. Yet a blender, especially a Vitamix is perfect for a modern homesteading kitchen.
The Vitamix is the Cadillac of blenders. They’re so powerful you can use them to make flour, nut butter, hot soup, and even your own non-dairy milk. For homesteading, the Vitamix is definitely worth the investment.
One word of warning though - they use a lot of power. So if you're living off the grid, like my parents are, you might have to stick to the old mortar and pestle, hand-grinders, or even potato mashers instead of a Vitamix!
#5. Vacuum Sealer
Anytime you’re preserving, freezing, or storing food, you should have a vacuum sealer. By removing all of the air from your packaging, vacuum sealers greatly increase the shelf-life of your food.
Use a vacuum sealer for sous vide, the practice of sealing food, and then cooking it in water at a carefully controlled temperature. Or you could use it for simply marinating some meats.
As an added bonus, vacuum sealing your food helps increase your storage space efficiency. So if your homestead pantry is filled to overflowing and you don't have space in your root cellar, this could be just what you need.
#6. Food Dehydrator
A food dehydrator is a small countertop appliance that does exactly what it sounds like. They’re incredibly versatile in the kitchen and perfect for drying out meats, making dried fish at home and preparing produce to preserve through the winter.
Whether you’re making game meat jerky, hardtack, or simply drying out some herbs and berries from your garden, a dehydrator is a must-have. (And while you're at it, take a look at getting a fermenting crock. They sure do come in handy and will soon get their own entry in this list!)
#7. Kitchen Scale
Kitchen scales make following the recipes quite a bit easier. This is especially true when you have to be very precise. For example, if you’re pickling or making a brine, you often need to use a ratio of salt to water weight.
The kitchen scale lets you measure by grams or ounces, making it easier to calculate the ratio and ensure you have the proper amount of ingredients.
For any recipe that requires ingredients by weight, not volume, you’ll need a kitchen scale. And if you're outfitting an off-grid homestead kitchen, look for a rechargeable kitchen scale. Or even an old-fashioned non-electric one.
When you're stocking a homestead kitchen, make sure you have these seven essential tools. They all have multiple uses and will be ideal for preserving, canning, or drying your harvest while also giving you the ability to create your own base ingredients from scratch, like flour or butter.
Do you already have all of these items? Then keep some of these items in mind as gift ideas for an aspiring homesteader on your gift list.
You might also like...
LIKE THIS POST? SAVE IT TO YOUR FAVOURITE PINTEREST BOARD FOR LATER!
This post is part of the Homestead Blog Hop #294!
Jennifer Smith
Definitely would not be known as a homesteader - but I so enjoyed your post:) Looks of good recommendations - and several that I have added to wish list/want list/desperately need list!!:)
MeLissa
Thanks again Blake for another great article... the only things I have to add are this:
A pressure canner. I was so scared of pressure canning for so many years, but now I’m so in love with mine! Always make sure whatever you are canning has as low of a fat content as possible. The fat is what can become rancid causing spoilage the most.
Also a tip..... if you don’t have a vacuum sealer, place the plastic (bag) in a sink of water to get most of the air out and use a chip bag sealer.
For dry storage, if you don’t yet have a cup bag sealer, I’ve used my flat iron before with a piece of cloth between it and the Mylar.
I hope these help. ????
Sarita Harbour
Hi Anne!
As the mom here, I agree with you about the canner. But my son Blake, who is a great cook and foodie (and the one who wrote the post) thinks the hand blender edges out the canner. However, that could change over the next year depending on what our commercial/grocery-store food supply situation is through the fall and winter!
anneinthekitchen
Usually, I don't find the items in posts like this to be essential (like the banana hanger). However, if I were to make a list it would line up almost exactly with yours. I do rank my pressure canner above my blender, but that is just personal choice. Thank you, for sharing great information!
Terry Mack
Loved this post-Sarita.
I've all these items except vacuum sealer. Can you suggest me the best brand of vacuum sealer?
Sarita Harbour
Hi Carol - thank you for the comment - and glad you find our posts useful! And I know what you mean about the dehydrators - the Excalibur is said to be the best, but it IS expensive.
Sarita Harbour
You can always try using a cookie sheet on the back window of your car or truck on a sunny day - an old friend taught me that trick!
Lisa
Hi Sarita!
Great list! I've been wanting a solar food dehydrator, but haven't had the time to make one and don't want to spend the money on a new one. We don't live off grid but I hope to someday.
Thanks for stopping by to visit my website!
Carol L
Thanks for the list! I actually have ALL of the items. I am a bit of a cast iron-aholic, having over 40 pieces of it. I go to antique stores and buy up all they have! I have a few WagnerWare and Griswold, both were so beautifully made, and much better than Lodge, which you can only find new now. Both are out of production, so you have to find in either antique or thrift stores if the previous owner didn't know what a gem they had. Lodge is nice, but the others have such a smooth surface, compared to Lodge. If you cold compare them together, you'd see.
I have the KitchenAide, the Vitamix and the other items mentioned, I do have three wonderful pieces of Wusthof knives, a chefs, a paring, and a bench. I'm so afraid of sharpening, though: worried I'll ruin them! I have an inexpensive food saver, and dehydrator, but am eyeing a stainless steel one on Amazon. It is NOT Excalibur, which are supposed to be so great, but E has begun making cheaper plastic, and even the SS ones have many plastic parts now. Unfortunately, the one I'm eyeing is made in China, but it is ALL SS, and has many great features like lower heat options for herbs and items that should not be dried at high temps.
Although I'm not off grid, and live within 30 minutes of a large metro area, in a smaller rural-ish area of Oregon, I'm hoping to have systems in place that will be helpful during my regular, yearly power outages. I am also having companies come and give me options for a whole house generator, making me, hopefully nearly off grid.
Thank you for the great posts that are really helping me become less and less reliant on the systems that we take for granted that will fail eventually.