Glossary
Lazy Susan
A lazy Susan is like a merry-go-round which guarantees convenience in the kitchen. The fundamental design is a round platform mounted on a base which allows the platform to rotate 360 degrees. The name is American and was first used in 1917 by Vanity Fair magazine. As a result of the British word "dumbwaiter," the term is still not universally used just yet. A Lazy Susan may also be any small object included in cabinets to enable easy access to small items like spice jars simpler and stress- free. A table sizable tabletop version is available to enable people seated in a table access dishes revolving around the Lazy Susan without the need for passing them from person to person.
The Corner kitchen cabinets can have awkward dimensions making a lazy Susan a reasonable inclusion for improved accessibility. Some corner lazy Susan can even come with a cutout incorporated into one side looking like a missing pie piece. The purpose of this is so the cutout can be easily arranged when the doors are shut to make sure that the space is efficiently utilized even though there isn't enough space to accommodate a full disk shape.