There Are Pandas, and Then There Are Pandas.
And this isn't either of them! The Pandas we're talking about here, are watches, not bears. And what got me thinking about them (again) was a link posted this morning by @cm.rook who pointed a few of us to the very attractive (and not terribly priced) Yema "Rallygraph" Panda which, in it's most traditional arrangement, looks like the one on the left, but can also be had in the version on the right: The model on the left is a true Panda, while the model on the right is called a reverse Panda. The reason for that distinction is clear--Panda bears, only come in the first arrangement. Now at this point, everyone should be thinking about the most well-know Panda, The Rolex Panda, which is actually a Daytona, and among Rolex Daytonas, the most famous of which is the Paul Newman Daytona, which was famous first, because it was Paul's, and second because it sold at auction for $17.8 million (US Dollars). The story of that auction is well-known so I'll only...
Nov 8, 2019
Baking requires very exact ratios and measurement, and volume (cups/ml) is not good enough.
1. Good quality half sheet pans: they can be used not only for baking and roasting, but as an ad hoc prep work surface (on the stove top or elsewhere as "extra counter space") 2. A medium-sized straight rolling pin: my counter space was so small that a large rolling pin was unwieldy. 3. Half sheet Silpats: on top of their intended purpose, multiple silicone mats can be used on your prep surface, switching various ingredients off the minimal counter space if necessary 4. A set of Pyrex glass bowls with lids: they are not only versatile as mixing bowls, but they can also be used for storage. They stack well when unused.
I had a stand mixer but I don't believe it's truly necessary unless you can spare the counter space.
Get a simple, accurate to 1g, tare-capable, metric-capable scale. You need exact measurements, and tare allows you to zero the container out. Bread and professional measurements are given as ratios (baker percentages) and it's easier to do ratio math in metric. Make sure you can see the read out if a bowl is on the scale. Flat so it stores easy (vertically even).
Recommending stainless steel bowls since it is ovensafe (e.g., timballo) and will take a beating. Why 3 minimum? Baking often requires preparing dry and wet ingredients separately, and the third is for whisking eggs and holding other miscellanea. You'll probably want even more bowls to hold individual ingredients for mise-en-place, material is less important here. Stackable so they take less space to store.
Jelly roll pans are simply smaller sheet pans but they are variable-sized. Sheet pans are standardized so you can fit cooling racks and silpats in them. They are versatile, as they can double for roasting veggies or simply supporting ramekins. You want a rolled-edge (less likely to warp) 18-gauge (lower is thicker, less likely to warp) stainless steel half sheet pan since they are literally half (18"x13") the size of a sheet pan (18"x26"). Why 2? You can bake two sheets at a time, or bake one while prepping the next one.
A cooling rack so stuff doesn't get soggy with condensation. And it'll fit in a half sheet pan for storage, since you're storing the half sheet pans anyway.
Plain wood rolling pin for rolling out dough. Handles just get in the way and take up space; yeah, you basically want a dowel (note that hardware store dowels may be treated with chemicals that aren't foodsafe). Like xylian said you can get a smaller one that suits your space.
If you have room for only one whisk then a balloon whisk will whip egg whites to peaks very quickly, and break up flour/sugar clumps well enough to not require a flour sifter (and it's debatable if a sifter is even necessary compared to whisking).
Silicone spatula to scrape stuff, fold ingredients in. It's more versatile than a bowl scraper.
What I didn't list:
A mixer. If you don't have room for a stand mixer then you simply do it by hand. You can make a NY-style cheesecake with a bowl and whisk. It will take longer and you will have sore arms, but it's possible. I do suggest an electric hand mixer for less dense things, as well as dough hooks. But again, you can do all of this by hand. You'll know if you want to dedicate the room for one quickly enough.
Silpats. They fit perfectly in a half sheet pan but honestly never use it for baking traditional things where I want the heat of the sheet to transfer. There are fun applications for a bakeable non-stick surface like Mango Chili Leather http://modernistcuisine.com/recipes/mango-chili-leather/ but consider it also for quick cleanup when working with sticky dough. Easier to bring it to the trash or sink than to clean a stationary surface. Also, very easy to store. I roll mine around my rolling pin.
Pastry/dough scraper. You may want this but it depends on what you're making.
Bread pans, springform pans, Bundt cake pans, other vessels. I don't know what you're making and these take up significant storage space. I bake breads that need a form in a Dutch oven, and I make quickbreads in standard stainless steel pans. Though I tend to gravitate toward breads that don't need a form.