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New Classics: Kitchen Accessories

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Design-savvy products to keep your kitchen current and cool

Give your kitchen a little love this spring with some fresh tools and accessories from the market’s top designers. Here, we’ve rounded up five of our favourite new kitchen accessories to keep the hear of your home current and cool.

Coffee Carafe

Rise and Shine

 This new kitchen accessory is sure to add a vintage touch to modern kitchen designs. Made of thermal shock–resistant borosilicate glass, the Pour Over Carafe by Yield allows for easy handling and superior heat retention. Not to mention, its emerald hue makes a modish display piece on countertops. $110, at Easy Tiger Goods.

Kitchen Scissors

Keep It Classico

If you’re seeking a high-performing kitchen tool, this is it. From slicing a pizza to chopping fresh herbs, the Alpen 8″ Italiano Classico kitchen scissors offer a luxurious and ergonomic design that’s safer and easier to handle than a knife. Home chefs will especially appreciate the clever centre tool for cracking lobster shells. $109, at Ciselier

New Kitchen Accessories, 2023

Fruit Full

Designed by Ettore Sottsass, the ES15 Sottsass Twergi Centrepiece in Yellow is part of Alessi’s instantly iconic Values collection. At its base, a dash of yellow enhances the lime wood’s naturally sunny undertones. $440, at Studio Brillantine.

Knives Block

Knives Out

This new kitchen accessory boasts old-school style. The Bistro Knife Block by Bodum features hundreds of tiny plastic rods that fit any of your big or small knives. Its matte silicone casing serves a stylish and functional purpose, preventing slip on messy, wet countertops. $50, at iQliving.

Pepper and Salt, New Kitchen Accessories, 2023

Lightly Seasoned

MENU’s Bottle Grinders in Sand Ceramic are designed by Norm Architects and shaped to cleverly trick the user into engaging with the design in a playful way. Long lasting ceramic and silicone pair wonderfully and reflect the studio’s knack for soft minimalism. As for kitchen tools that marry functionality with style, these twins are every minimalism lovers dream. $269, at AAVVGG

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The East End neighbourhood is more than just a place for families to buy homes—spend a day discovering all of the dining and design options Leslieville has to offer

Known for its plentiful cafes, vintage shops and red brick semis, Leslieville is a great place to walk around for the day. Use this itinerary to hop from hidden gem restaurants to design destinations, starting and ending on Gerrard Street East. From a cult-favourite sourdough pizza spot to a gallery filled with Canadian artists and a place to pause for a mindfulness moment—consider this your guide to the perfect walkable loop of the ‘ville.

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