| 
 No more smashed frosting, cracked 
crusts or capsized casseroles.You 
can take your culinary creations anywhere 
with this portable food safe.You 
can adapt the design to accommodate 
two pie plates, a deep casserole dish or 
a 9 in. by 13 in. baking pan. If you’re a 
bread baker, size the safe for two loaf 
pans with a pull-out cutting board on 
the bottom.Whatever you’re toting, it 
will arrive in style and in one piece!  
Pine’s a good choice for wood 
because it’s easy to work and light in 
weight.Acrylic doors allow for peeking 
and the brass handle is an easy grip. 
Total cost: around $35. (Note: The following how-to contains specific instructions 
for the food safe pictured here.)
 
The four sides are wide so you may 
have to glue up some stock. Plane the 
material to 5/8-in. thickness and mill to 
width and length (Fig.A). I like to cut 
the parts about 1/16-in. long so each 
box joint protrudes about 1/32 in. It’s 
better to sand the pins flush to the sides 
than the sides flush to the pins! Once 
the box joints are milled (Photo 1), take the two side panels and make the 
dadoes for the two sliding doors. The 
acrylic I used came a little under thickness 
so it worked well to make the 
dadoes right at 1/4 in. Next make the 
dado for the upper sliding tray. Now is 
a good time to finish sand the inside 
surfaces.
 
Gluing and clamping all four sides at 
once takes four hands; here’s a better way: Dry clamp the four sides, pull the 
top off the sides and brush glue onto the 
mating surfaces of the exposed pins. 
Replace the top and clamp (Photo 2). 
Make sure the top is square to the sides. 
When dry, flip over and repeat the gluing 
process with the bottom panel. 
When the glue is dry, you can sand 
the joints flush. Cut the tray bottoms 
from 1/8-in. hardboard. The 
upper tray bottom is wider than the 
lower tray because it needs a lip to slide 
in the side dado. Cut and attach the 
rim boards.
 
Your hardware store can cut the 
acrylic doors for you. If you choose to 
cut them yourself, use an 80-tooth, carbide- 
tipped triple chip design or a finetooth 
steel plywood blade. To remove 
saw marks on the edges of the acrylic, 
use a sanding block. The wood trim 
on the doors serves as a finger grip and 
is attached with epoxy. Scuff the acrylic 
with sandpaper and tape off any place 
you don’t want smeared with epoxy. Peel off the tape when the epoxy is still 
semisoft.
 
Stain and finish to your liking.Add 
the handle and you’re ready to go. 
Cutting List
  
Fig. A: 
  
 | 
 | 
 Click any image to view a larger version. 
  
1. Routing box joints with a dovetail jig is 
very fast (this one is by Keller).The jig is 
easy to set up, reliably accurate and can 
also be used to make dovetails. 
  
2. Clamp up the box using cauls to clear 
the protruding pins.Taping the cauls in 
place makes the job easier. For easy 
cleanup, line the corners with masking 
tape to catch glue squeeze out. 
 |