EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
Thank you, that's great information. I really appreciate the link too!!!!
Don't know if it's the best, but it sure works for us:
I added a 12x22' room on the back of my garage for an 'auxiliary kitchen'. We actually used it as the main kitchen for about 4 months while gutting the main kitchen down to the studs and rebuilding.
Now, it's my meat cutting room. I started by knocking a hole in the back garage wall big enough to put a set of double 30" doors. Cut the existing floor to tie in drain plumbing.
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Then poured a slab for the room. Built a flue for a wood cook stove also, as I couldn't figure a way to get one in the main kitchen layout.
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Framed it up. Lumber is off my place, as is all lumber used here. Hole in the back wall is for window AC unit that will run the walk-in cooler yet to be built.
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Found a used cooler door mounted in frame. Set that into wood framed opening. Rest the cooler is 4" of foam on walls/ceiling, with white fiberglass panels on the inside for a nice washable finish. Floor is tile, with drain in center.
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Mounted some big eye bolts in the ceiling, and it will hold 3 hogs, or a full cow/etc. Finished room is about 6x6.
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Space to the right of the cooler is a floor-ceiling shelved pantry for canned goods. Main room is tiled with center floor drain, tiled 4' up the walls, so I can hose the entire thing down. Put a 30 gallon electric water heater under the cabinets, and ran a hose connection off it so I can hose everything down with hot water (nice). Put a used wood cook stove out there.
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View to other side of room. Work counter, Corian tops (bought some from salvage yard and built the tops myself) Commercial 2 compartment sink (Craig's list), dishwasher for running canning jars (out of the main kitchen). Door/drawers not finished yet in this shot. We use a 3x5 stainless table in the center for cutting.
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When not in use for meat cutting/canning, we keep two chest freezers in there on caster bases. They can be rolled out in the garage when the room is needed to work.
For chicken processing, I built a "Whiz Bang" plucker this past year (after years of hand plucking, one of my least favorite jobs). Does a GREAT job.....30 seconds, you have a completely plucked bird.
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