Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Truth Time
The last day of the month and how did we do on our grocery spending?
Let me start out by saying( because it will make me feel better, ‘mkay?) when a lot of blogs have a Boost Your Pantry Month/Week or a No Spend Month/Week they tend to stock up before hand. Just this past month one blogger in particular stated that she was stocking up in December so as not to go over her hundred dollar limit in January. I maintain that this is cheating. Some say it is good planning but I digress….
We didn’t stock up ahead because we didn’t know we were going to try to do the twenty dollar limit. We just decided and headed out.
So of course we ran out of stuff along the way.
Plus I always check the weekly sale paper for good stock up prices and they had several this month.
I’m not going to pass those up especially when it’s stuff we need now.
Well the first week of the month we went and spent $21.96 On potatoes , oil (on sale) and eggs and sinus meds and coffee. (all these things we were out of)
Pretty good.
Then we ran out of fiber. So $12.88 was the next week. (outrageous but needed)
We decided to go back and pick up more eggs since the store had them on sale 3 dozen for $4.00.
We also picked up a few other things to get us on through the month. Our total was $10.01
Charlie got sick with a sinus infection so he picked up orange juice and Epsom salts. $4.76
We ran out of dry dog food. I use it to supplement the rice and bread for much needed nutrients. The bill was $8.23.
The store ran a sale on corn meal which we were completely out of. We picked up four bags for $8.66 total.
On the way to help Dad move we stopped and bought disposable bowls for the lunch that I packed. I know PAPER! But I didn’t have enough of my own bowls to serve everyone. So sometimes you have to make exceptions. But I will be adding a few extra ceramic bowls to my collection as I find them cheap. So next time I’ll be prepared and no more buying disposables! Cost $3.99.
The last week of the month we ran out of shortening and margarine. Charlie stopped on the way home and bought those plus bananas for $12.97.
The local store also put canned green beans back on sale 3 for $1.00. We bought three flats last time they ran it for that price and still had two whole flats plus three cans from the third. But that is a great price for around here and we can’t buy the seeds and the lids for the jars to can our own that cheap so we purchased four flats on Friday for $20.26.
Which means we went way over but like I said it wasn’t set in stone. Plus a lot of it was stock up sale items and just things we ran out of but needed.
Our total including the initial shopping trip at the first of the month was $103.72.
We’ll see if we can’t beat it this next month.
***********************
On another note, we received our utilities this past weekend. Our gas bill this time last year ran us a little over a hundred dollars. This year with the wood stove and limiting our use of the bedroom gas heater our bill was 11.42! Yay!
By unplugging our energy drainers like the coffee pot, tv, cell charger, etc., we lowered our electric as well. Last month our bill was 173.45 on 29 days. This month our bill was 150.54 on 32 days-more days on the meter and it was less! Amazing how just remembering to unplug something that isn’t being used and turning out a light when you leave the room makes such a difference!
We will continue to see how low we can get it this next month since Charlie adjusted the temperature on the refrigerator. Curious to see what impact that will have on the bill. I love my side by side but it is by far the biggest energy eater we have. And yes, it is an energy efficient appliance; purchased in 2010. But the difference in the bill between it and our old not-suppose-to-be-energy-efficient-because-of-it’s-age model is astounding! The old one is still running and being used in the shop to hold water. Our bill out there for the month was 32.96. That’s the frig and two chest deep freezers. Doesn’t sound too bad to me.
Anyway, we will see and I’ll let you know!
Good luck to you if you are trying to lower your utilities too!
Have a great day!
Until next time……Kristi.
Monday, January 30, 2012
Happy Monday to you!
Thought I'd show you a nifty wood rack that Chuck built and Zach helped put together.
Here it is place.
(Note: Yes, that's osb board for the floor. We will put down flooring in the spring once we can take down the stove. It doesn't have to be pretty now to be useful now.)
The guys on the roof patching a few places.
Zach nailing in a shingle.
This is what Bud did the entire time they were hammering up on the roof. He couldn't figure out who was knocking on the roof. (smile)
On a totally different note, you can tell we are nearing the end of the month. The shelves in the frig are looking rather bare. Ha!
But the door is still full of condiments, go figure.
But the door is still full of condiments, go figure.
Have a great day!
PS. This is what you do after all that hard work:
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Homemade Tornado Potatoes
I love Tornado Potatoes. Different resteraunts call them different things but basically it's a spiral cut potato or thinly sliced potato deep fried, seasoned with cajun, barbecue or ranch seasoning, topped with cheese and/ or bacon bits. Really good!
Above are my potatoes that I prepare at home. I scrub a potato (don't bother peeling it) and slice it long ways and wide width as thin as possibe with a vegetable peeler. ( hey, it works for me)
Deep fry them and season with creole seasoning.
We top with cheese, or cheese sauce or nacho cheese sauce from the dollar store. ( they have a nacho cheese sauce in a squeeze bottle at Dollar General that is very close in taste to what our local eatery uses. It's located down their dollar isle. Think it's called Mr. Moo )
Then sprinkle on bacon I cooked and crumbled or we cheat and buy real bacon bits for salads.
Then drizzle with Ranch dressing.
Yummy! Perfect if you are craving take out!
You can experiement with different toppings on these and go for something different say taco or chili for a few starters. Lots of ways to use these. They are great alone. They taste just like potato chips but cheaper!
Happy eating!
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Just a Few Sewing Notions
A few sewing projects completed.
First up, a plastic bag (plarn) rug. I'm using it as a placemat outside underneath the dog's food bowl.
A reversible swiffer cover. I have the name brand of these a Mr. something or other (smile). I paid five dollars a piece for them. They are washable and work fine but sometimes you just need something smaller. These homemade swiffer covers are made from the Sugar n Cream yarn $1.77 at Walmart. It doesn't take a full roll. I believe I will have enough between two rolls to make three covers. Plus you use one side and flip it over and get twice the usage over Mr. Shiney Head!
I didn't make these but snagged them at the 50% off sale at goodwill. More napkins for my paper free kitchen!
Lastly, this is my new tote bag. I'll use this more in the summer time but wanted to get it done early. It's made out of Sugar n Cream Seaside. I'd love to make another one of these but smaller to use as a purse.....hmmm.
Until next time, Kristi.
First up, a plastic bag (plarn) rug. I'm using it as a placemat outside underneath the dog's food bowl.
A reversible swiffer cover. I have the name brand of these a Mr. something or other (smile). I paid five dollars a piece for them. They are washable and work fine but sometimes you just need something smaller. These homemade swiffer covers are made from the Sugar n Cream yarn $1.77 at Walmart. It doesn't take a full roll. I believe I will have enough between two rolls to make three covers. Plus you use one side and flip it over and get twice the usage over Mr. Shiney Head!
I didn't make these but snagged them at the 50% off sale at goodwill. More napkins for my paper free kitchen!
Lastly, this is my new tote bag. I'll use this more in the summer time but wanted to get it done early. It's made out of Sugar n Cream Seaside. I'd love to make another one of these but smaller to use as a purse.....hmmm.
Monday, January 23, 2012
Quick Update
Taking a few minutes to show you a few projects we completed a while back. Proof that we haven't been completely lazy lately. Though we have spent a few days on the couch being sick over the course of the last couple of weeks. It's this crazy up and down weather we've been having. We finally all seemed to kick it in time to work at my father's house this past weekend. He needed help moving out. Charlie and his dad took the tin off the trailer( it looked brand new) and they also took the rafters off. We had intentions of making another wood shed with it but I think it would be nice to build a shed to park the boat under. We have it tarped but the water pools in the tarp and ends up dumping a lot of water in there anyway. It's such a pretty boat (can you say that about a boat?) that we'd like to keep it that way.
Here is a pic of Daddy's trailer. They already took the metal off the top before I could get a pic. ( Charlie's mom and I were busy moving stuff from inside and I mean a lot of stuff!) (smile) I'll post a pic of his new house once it's completed.
****
One of our back projects we completed the week after Christmas. We needed to expand our wood shed. Here's how he did it.
Took the tin off the side of the shed.
Made it into the roof of the lean-to.
View from the back.
*****
Charlie made me a new knob for my skillet lid. The original black plastic one broke. He turned this on the lathe and made it out of food grade white plastic called delrin.
Have a great day!
Until next time, Kristi.
Friday, January 20, 2012
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Picture Thoughts on Off-Grid
I promise to slack up about off-grid living but thought this was a neat comparison:
Off-grid yester year.
Off-grid today.
Have a great day!
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Snack Time!
This was featured on Eat at Home, submitted by Someone Left the Cake Out in the Rain.
I halfed the recipe. And it still made a large batch. I used American Honey for the bourbon. It was all I had in the house but it made it so sweet! Really, really good!
Bourbon Bacon Caramel Popcorn
9 strips of bacon
2 1/4 cups of unpopped kernel corn
1 c butter
2 1/4 cups brown sugar
1 c maple syrup
1/2 c bourbon
1 tbl vanilla extract
1 t salt
1/2 t baking soda
Vegetable oil
kosher salt
Directions:
Fry bacon and set aside.
Put 3 tbl of oil in a large pot over medium high heat.
Add 3 kernels to the pot – when they begin to pop, add 3/4 c of popcorn (you’ll be making three batches), cover and shake pot occasionally, so popcorn doesn’t burn.
Remove pot from heat once popping has slowed, place popcorn in a large bowl.
Repeat for remaining batches.
Heat oven to 250 degrees.
Crumble bacon over finished popcorn.
In a large pot, bring butter, brown sugar, and maple syrup to a boil, stirring constantly.
Reduce heat and simmer for 5 minutes, then remove from heat.
Stir in bourbon, vanilla extract, salt and baking soda and mix. Be careful, the mixture tends to take on a life of its own and might over flow.
Pour caramel mixture over bacon and popcorn mixture.
Toss to coat evenly.
Spread mixture over three baking sheets covered in parchment.
Sprinkle each tray with kosher salt
Bake for 1 hour, stirring the mixture every 15 minutes.
Remove from oven. Cool for 1 hour.
I halfed the recipe. And it still made a large batch. I used American Honey for the bourbon. It was all I had in the house but it made it so sweet! Really, really good!
Bourbon Bacon Caramel Popcorn
9 strips of bacon
2 1/4 cups of unpopped kernel corn
1 c butter
2 1/4 cups brown sugar
1 c maple syrup
1/2 c bourbon
1 tbl vanilla extract
1 t salt
1/2 t baking soda
Vegetable oil
kosher salt
Directions:
Fry bacon and set aside.
Put 3 tbl of oil in a large pot over medium high heat.
Add 3 kernels to the pot – when they begin to pop, add 3/4 c of popcorn (you’ll be making three batches), cover and shake pot occasionally, so popcorn doesn’t burn.
Remove pot from heat once popping has slowed, place popcorn in a large bowl.
Repeat for remaining batches.
Heat oven to 250 degrees.
Crumble bacon over finished popcorn.
In a large pot, bring butter, brown sugar, and maple syrup to a boil, stirring constantly.
Reduce heat and simmer for 5 minutes, then remove from heat.
Stir in bourbon, vanilla extract, salt and baking soda and mix. Be careful, the mixture tends to take on a life of its own and might over flow.
Pour caramel mixture over bacon and popcorn mixture.
Toss to coat evenly.
Spread mixture over three baking sheets covered in parchment.
Sprinkle each tray with kosher salt
Bake for 1 hour, stirring the mixture every 15 minutes.
Remove from oven. Cool for 1 hour.
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Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Whistle While You Work
There seems to have been a sudden shift in the subject matter on here. That’s because there has been a sudden shift in us.
I talk a lot about saving money now , saving on electricity, going off-grid(on some things, not everything!) J
I’m going to repeat myself here and say we were well on our way to being debt free by the time Charlie turned 35. Then the business derailed us, or rather, we allowed ( taking ownership here), the business to distract us from that goal. Along with making wants into needs, placing them on credit cards for instant gratification. This didn’t happen yesterday. It happened several years ago and we’ve been coasting ever since. In denial I suppose or disappointed in ourselves for being so close to the finish line and then detouring and never crossing it.
We know the tricks of tightwadding. It isn’t something we have to relearn. Once you’ve done it you will always have the know-how. What we lacked was motivation.
Slowly over the past few months, seeds were planted in our minds. We did not make resolutions , although we did sit down together as a family and discussed goals we would like to accomplish this year. The change just happened to coincide with the beginning of the new year. A large part, truth be told, probably being that the first two months are always constant bills. Everything falls due at once. Those once-a-year costs attack January and February with a vengeance. .
For us it is the following:
Property taxes
Membership for insurance
Safety deposit box fee
Life insurance premium
Auto insurance premium
House insurance premium
Annual vaccinations for the critters
Termite station inspections
Income tax prep fee
Along with hospital bills still pending from Charlie’s allergic reaction
Lab fees associated with it as well.
Plus the regular monthly bills, mortgage, utilities, cell phone bill, etc.
They say fear is a great motivator, well I’m here to say that so is disgust. Disgust is what I’m feeling. I’m tired of paying “the man“. Granted that some of those bills will never waiver. We can’t eliminate them all. But if we paid off our house and credit card bills, then that money could be saved. We are lucky to have paid off our shop. Both our vehicles are paid for as is the boat. But there is still work to be done. And a nest egg to build. We are tired of working for the money and ready to make the money work for us! We have gotten serious about it once more.
A few things that we are doing to work toward our goal:
We are burning wood instead of using the gas wall heater. We do use the one back in our bedroom to knock the chill off before bed on the coldest of nights and then turning it back down before hopping in bed. A warm comforter helps as does a snuggle buddy. J Zach’s room is upstairs so all the heat naturally goes up there. We actually have to worry about his room getting too warm. Luckily he is cold natured. J
I’m making everything form scratch that I possibly can. Chuck provides the meat for the freezer. And we buy lots of beans and rice. Stocking up when things are on sale helps too. Drinking water or kool-aid at supper. (We have given up tea. Charlie can only have the decaffeinated and it’s three dollars a box and for some reason decaf never goes on sale. If I can find it at the discount store I buy it but otherwise it’s water at supper.)
Not using paper products in the kitchen keeps expenses down too. And it isn’t any more work. I’m washing dishtowels anyway, might as well toss in cloth napkins.
I only wash when I have a full load now. I line dry all the clothes. Having the wood stove helps with this. I can wash and dry four loads of clothes in one day. The wood heat draws the moisture right out. In the winter this allows me to put them away the same day just like those using electric dryers. In the summer time they go on the outside lines.
I have been using a rain barrel to help fill up my washing machine on the initial fill up. The rinse comes directly from the meter as always.
Turning off lights during the day. I only turn on the lights when we are in school or I need one while cooking. I also unplug anything that isn’t being used and has a light. For instance the coffee pot and my cell charger. I also unplug the tv and dvd player. Anything that has a remote is never truly off, it’s on standby and drawing energy. Ka-ching! Ka-ching!
I’ve started making half of the dog and cat food. I still buy dry food but I use dried out bread, corn bread, and/or biscuits, then a layer of dry food, then I drizzle homemade water and flour gravy, seasoned with beef bouillon and liquid smoke, over the top of it all. The gravy tastes great! I’m using up the beef bouillon instead of tossing it, Charlie can’t have it anymore due to his allergy to beef. Big Dog, Bowie, loves this concoction. He even eats the new dry food I bought that he didn’t like. The cat prefers her dry food plain and her gravy on the side. Buddy is a little more picky. He gets a light sprinkle of cheese on his( he loves cheese and it adds extra calcium although this might be a problem in older dogs as they sometimes become lactose intolerant and should limit milk products. At any age dogs should have limited milk products. It’s hard on their digestive tracts- as told to me by our vet.)
We will once again be having a garden this year. ( I missed it last year. I missed a lot of things last year.) We will also be firing up the boat to restock our fish in the freezer. Once our blackberry bushes start bearing we will have homemade jelly.
We’ve implemented a “twenty dollar a month for groceries act” as a guideline. It isn’t set in stone so don’t freak out on me. We are mainly able to do this because we have food storage to supplement, plus his harvesting our meat during the season.
The twenty dollars a month puts things into perspective. For example, I’m willing to drink water at supper as opposed to $3-a-box tea so I can buy our $3-a-pack toilet paper. Priorities are a wonderful things, am I right about it? Ha!
It’s quality time together cutting wood. It’s playing board games instead of being scattered about the house playing on computers or watching tv alone. It’s eating stove popped popcorn that tastes better than microwave popcorn.
I’m not going to lie, it isn’t always fun. It means more work for all of us, but not so much that it isn’t worth it.
And in every work that he began in the service of the house of God, and in the law, and in the commandments, to seek his God, he did it with all his heart, and prospered. 2 Chron. 31:21
"God is a kind Father. He sets us all in the places where He wishes us to be employed; and that employment is truly our Father’s business’. He chooses work for every creature which will be delightful to them, if they do it simply and humbly. He gives us always strength enough, and sense enough, for what He wants us to do; if we either tire ourselves or puzzle ourselves, it is our own fault. And we may always be sure, whatever we are doing, that we cannot be pleasing Him, if we are not happy ourselves."- J. Ruskin
Have a great day!
Motivated and moving forward in 2012!
Kristi.
Labels:
frugal,
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self-sufficient,
tightwad
Monday, January 16, 2012
Watch Your Language!
Over the holidays I was discussing people going "off-grid" and my interest in learning more about it and how they are faring at it. Later, a friend wanted to know if we were going anti-government. At first, I laughed about the misconstruction but over the next few days I was still puzzled over what I had said to make them think that in the first place.
About a week later, while cooking supper, I was going back over the conversation in my mind once again.
Then bing, bang, BOOM!
Words came in a thread. I began piecing them together. Off grid, grid, coordinates, location, off, off the map, hidden, bunker, survivalist, radical, BINGO!
I was talking about going off the power grid and they were picturing off the map, as in can’t find a trace of me, hiding in a bunker with enough ammo to start a small militia! Then I did laugh, at my ignorance. It took me that long to come to that conclusion! I could see clearly in my mind's eye what I meant when talking to our friend, but conveying it was a little murky.
We aren’t environmentalists, extremists, or even greenies, though I do tend to think of myself as an accidental greenie, of sorts.
I’m not seriously going off-grid. We aren’t set up for it. We do not live in an area with constant wind, so a wind mill would be out of the question. We don’t have a creek with a constant flow of water so a water wheel wouldn’t work . But it would be so neat if it would! Could you imagine having that as a backup in a power failure instead of a gasoline powered generator? Because with a generator we would always be caught without gasoline at eleven o’clock at night. Trust me on this one.
Actually I was interested in off-grid on a more subtle basis instead. Using a spoon to mix batter as opposed to using it’s electric counterpart. Hand kneading dough instead of using a dough paddle on a mixer or a bread machine. Little things.
Why, when it seems like a penny is all your saving,? Well a penny adds into a dollar sooner or later. You’d be surprised how much appliances pull on the meter. And this is one area I can control.
Let me give you an example on the control factor: Let’s say I go to our bank that holds the mortgage on our house, walk right up to John, our loan officer, and say, “ You know John, our house this past month has kept itself neater it seems. I only had to dust occasionally, that creaky floor board didn’t creak as much , and that leaky faucet seems to have healed itself. I’d say that deserves a reward. So how about lowering our house payment this month?”
John of course is standing there blinking at me. One blink, two blink, three…..mentally he is wondering if they changed the date of April Fool’s Day without telling him.
“Ok,” I say, “then how about waving our interest on it this month?”
Again, with the blinking. John is now pondering what fishing hole would yield the most fish this afternoon, having tuned me out after my first suggestion.
What I’m getting at here is you can’t change that mortgage payment. It’s set. As is your car loan and any other loan you have out there in the ether. They do not fluctuate. But we do have expenses that fluctuate. Variable expenses. Namely utilizes. Anytime I can do a manual operation of a task as opposed to the electrical operation, I am saving electricity. Which translates into lower electric bills and less money going out the door.
One other reason, personal reason, for wanting a backup, is that our service isn’t what it used to be. Twice last year our power was off for over 20 hours at a stretch, that’s twice we had to restock the refrigerator for food safety. The eggs, mayo, and meats had gotten warm, had to be thrown out, and that is a waste. Most of the smaller outages happened when there was no weather factor to increase the problem, like high winds, rain, or lightening. Right before Christmas the power went off twice in the same week at the same transformer!?! The company is no longer independently owned and things that are worn out aren’t getting replaced; they are getting patched instead. Apparently there just aren’t enough funds to get things back to the quality they used to be. Which brings me back to off-grid. Whether to have it solely as your supply or just as a back up seems to be not such a "radical" idea after all.
Have a great week!
Kristi.
PS. Every time I think of a bunker, I picture the Teletubbies house.......
Just saying..........
Moving forward in 2012!
Friday, January 13, 2012
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Found this recipe last week and tried it. Had to put my own spin on it to use up peas and half a can of tomatoes out of the frig. It was really good!
Had to pass it along.
This is the original recipe as I obtained it from Doing My Best for Him blog.
Tamale Pie
1 lb. hamburger
1 pkg. taco seasoning
1 can corn
1 can black beans
1 can pinto beans
1 can tomatoes
2 Jiffy corn bread mixes (sweet cornbread mix)
Cheese
Brown hamburger, drain, add taco seasoning. Add veggies and beans. Place in casserole dish and cover with cheese. Mix cornbread batter according to directions and pour over casserole. Bake as directed for corn bread.
Here's how I made it:
I used ground turkey and cooked diced onion with it. Seasoned it with a little seasoning salt and then added homemade taco seasoning.
I didn't have black beans or canned pinto beans so I used black eyed peas leftover from New Years' Dinner the day before(rinsed and drained).
I used one can of whole kernel corn, drained. And a half can of diced tomatoes, drained. (left over from salads)
I followed the recipe for the remainder except the sweet cornbread mix.
I made up a" from scratch" version for that and sweetened it with maple syrup. It made the whole house smell good.
Cornmeal Muffins
2/3 cup corn meal
1 1/3 cup flour
(for a total of 2 cups of grains)
3 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
Mix with fork or sift together.
Mix
2 eggs, beaten
2/3 cup milk
1/3 cup maple syrup
1/2 cup shortening, melted
Add liquid to dry ingredients. Stir to mix. Bake about 30 minutes at 400*. Time approx. just watch closely around twenty.
Happy eating.......Kristi.
Had to pass it along.
This is the original recipe as I obtained it from Doing My Best for Him blog.
Tamale Pie
1 lb. hamburger
1 pkg. taco seasoning
1 can corn
1 can black beans
1 can pinto beans
1 can tomatoes
2 Jiffy corn bread mixes (sweet cornbread mix)
Cheese
Brown hamburger, drain, add taco seasoning. Add veggies and beans. Place in casserole dish and cover with cheese. Mix cornbread batter according to directions and pour over casserole. Bake as directed for corn bread.
Here's how I made it:
I used ground turkey and cooked diced onion with it. Seasoned it with a little seasoning salt and then added homemade taco seasoning.
I didn't have black beans or canned pinto beans so I used black eyed peas leftover from New Years' Dinner the day before(rinsed and drained).
I used one can of whole kernel corn, drained. And a half can of diced tomatoes, drained. (left over from salads)
I followed the recipe for the remainder except the sweet cornbread mix.
I made up a" from scratch" version for that and sweetened it with maple syrup. It made the whole house smell good.
Cornmeal Muffins
2/3 cup corn meal
1 1/3 cup flour
(for a total of 2 cups of grains)
3 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
Mix with fork or sift together.
Mix
2 eggs, beaten
2/3 cup milk
1/3 cup maple syrup
1/2 cup shortening, melted
Add liquid to dry ingredients. Stir to mix. Bake about 30 minutes at 400*. Time approx. just watch closely around twenty.
Happy eating.......Kristi.
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
A Little Motivation from PS22!
Moving Forward in 2012!
(BTW if you haven't watched these kids on YouTube yet, they are awesome! In my personal opinion the videos in the auditorium seats like above have the best sound quality to fully appreciate their talent and the man that helps them find their voice.)
Love to you all on this Tuesday morning!
.....Kristi.
Monday, January 9, 2012
The Rooster and The Hen
Depression-era poem:
Said the Little Red Rooster,
“Believe me, things are tough!
Seems the worms are getting scarcer
And I cannot find enough.
What’s become of all those fat ones?
It’s a mystery to me.
There were thousands through that rainy spell,
But now, where can they be?”
But the Old Black Hen who heard him
Didn’t grumble or complain,
She had lived through lots of dry spells
She had lived through floods of rain.
She picked a new and undug spot;
The ground was hard and firm,
I must go to the worms,” she said.
“The worms won’t come to me.”
The Rooster vainly spent his day
Through habit, by the ways
Where fat round worms had passed in squads
Back in the rainy days.
When nightfall found him supperless
He growled in accents rough,
I’m hungry as a fowl can be;
Conditions sure are tough.”
But the Old Black Hen hopped to her perch
And dropped her eyes to sleep
And murmured in a drowsy tone,
“Young man, hear this and weep.
I’m full of worms and happy
For I’ve eaten like a pig.
The worms were there as always
But, boy, I had to dig!”
Said the Little Red Rooster,
“Believe me, things are tough!
Seems the worms are getting scarcer
And I cannot find enough.
What’s become of all those fat ones?
It’s a mystery to me.
There were thousands through that rainy spell,
But now, where can they be?”
But the Old Black Hen who heard him
Didn’t grumble or complain,
She had lived through lots of dry spells
She had lived through floods of rain.
She picked a new and undug spot;
The ground was hard and firm,
I must go to the worms,” she said.
“The worms won’t come to me.”
The Rooster vainly spent his day
Through habit, by the ways
Where fat round worms had passed in squads
Back in the rainy days.
When nightfall found him supperless
He growled in accents rough,
I’m hungry as a fowl can be;
Conditions sure are tough.”
But the Old Black Hen hopped to her perch
And dropped her eyes to sleep
And murmured in a drowsy tone,
“Young man, hear this and weep.
I’m full of worms and happy
For I’ve eaten like a pig.
The worms were there as always
But, boy, I had to dig!”
Friday, January 6, 2012
Thursday, January 5, 2012
To Be or Not To Be Green, That Is the Question
My sis-in-law, Heather, gave me a book at Christmas about “going green”. As she handed it to me she said it sounded like me. I was skeptical. For one, I don’t like the term “green”. I think it’s over used. It’s become a fad. Companies over use the word to market their wares and use that slogan to sell it under false pretenses. Sort of like when foods boast “no trans fat” on the front of the package in an attempt to sound healthy; they are hoping you don’t notice that it’s 6,000 calories per teaspoon. (Stepping down slowly now……as not to tip that soapbox.)
I decided to give the book a try. And not long into the book I realized this girl knows what she’s talking about. She hooked me when she warned of companies green washing you; using the slogan to save the planets resources but not really doing so. (one smart cookie)
Further into the book I caught myself saying, “I already do that.”, “I have that product” , and thinking I'm doing ok at this but then came the words“I never knew that.”
There is a lot about carbon dioxide emissions in there that I never realized before. For instance, I learned that burning natural gas releases around 320 pounds of CO2 annually. And that the average American is responsible for about 22 tons of emissions per year. I always thought industrial giants were the culprits but as it turns out personal activity accounts for more than 30 percent of all emissions in the United States.
Wow!
I would like to say that all our trash cut back, composting, and cutting out paper products in the kitchen is purely honorable but mainly it’s for selfish reasons. One reason being, I want to save money and the less we use that has to be tossed the less has to be bought and replaced. Meaning more money staying in the house than leaving it. Especially when it’s leaving for convenience items like paper towels or paper plates. Sadly, the bigger reason for our switch is just pure laziness. In my old age I don’t want to have to run to the store when I suddenly discover we are out of milk. Now I can just mix up more powdered milk. Or if we are out of paper towels I can just reach for a dish towel or cloth napkins. The homemade cloth pads are such a convenience; no taking stock constantly to keep from running out or , heaven forbid, being caught unaware.
Granted, in my laziness I’m saving three milk jugs a week from ending up in the landfill, that just happens to be a plus in my favor.
I’m learning more areas where I can make do and use what I have on hand for convenience and to recycle at the same time.
I love these scrubbies.
They are cheap and really useful in the kitchen.
I recently ran out because I forgot to pick up another package of them while at the store.
I was in need of a scrubbie but was too lazy to run to the dollar store to pick up more just for that particular cleaning job.
I looked around and remembered a crochet project of dishtowels using left over yarn and plastic bags for the centers to use for scrubbing dishes. I had plenty of plastic bags so I crocheted up about five scrubbies in just a few minutes sans the yarn. I didn’t need them to be pretty just useful. I made them in varying sizes to see what would work best for me.
They ended up working great and can actually be cleaned out better than my store bought versions. Food particles aren’t trapped in it as easily and that means better sanitation.
I’ve used them for washing dishes in the kitchen and made a few for the bathroom to use in scrubbing the vanity and shower. I’ll never go back to the store bought again.
I used to save plastic bags to use as garbage bags but because we generate less garbage now and compost more, bags were coming out our ears around the house. I’ve since made up several balls of plarn to make more scrubbies out of and even made an outside door mat.
I admire those that are trying to remove their carbon footprint and if everyone would just change one habit it would greatly improve things for future generations. If dinosaurs had used plastic water bottles we’d all be digging up prehistoric relics in our backyards today. Those things don’t’ break down. They’ll tell a lot about us in millenniums to come. You’ve heard of the iron age well we will be known as the plastic age. And the proof will still be here to prove it.
Just food for thought.
If you would like to read more about going green and learn more ways of reducing carbon dioxide emissions the book is entitled: Green Chic- Saving the Earth in Style. by Christie Matheson.
Disclosure: I received no compensation for reference to this book. All opinions are my own.
I decided to give the book a try. And not long into the book I realized this girl knows what she’s talking about. She hooked me when she warned of companies green washing you; using the slogan to save the planets resources but not really doing so. (one smart cookie)
Further into the book I caught myself saying, “I already do that.”, “I have that product” , and thinking I'm doing ok at this but then came the words“I never knew that.”
There is a lot about carbon dioxide emissions in there that I never realized before. For instance, I learned that burning natural gas releases around 320 pounds of CO2 annually. And that the average American is responsible for about 22 tons of emissions per year. I always thought industrial giants were the culprits but as it turns out personal activity accounts for more than 30 percent of all emissions in the United States.
Wow!
I would like to say that all our trash cut back, composting, and cutting out paper products in the kitchen is purely honorable but mainly it’s for selfish reasons. One reason being, I want to save money and the less we use that has to be tossed the less has to be bought and replaced. Meaning more money staying in the house than leaving it. Especially when it’s leaving for convenience items like paper towels or paper plates. Sadly, the bigger reason for our switch is just pure laziness. In my old age I don’t want to have to run to the store when I suddenly discover we are out of milk. Now I can just mix up more powdered milk. Or if we are out of paper towels I can just reach for a dish towel or cloth napkins. The homemade cloth pads are such a convenience; no taking stock constantly to keep from running out or , heaven forbid, being caught unaware.
Granted, in my laziness I’m saving three milk jugs a week from ending up in the landfill, that just happens to be a plus in my favor.
I’m learning more areas where I can make do and use what I have on hand for convenience and to recycle at the same time.
I love these scrubbies.
They are cheap and really useful in the kitchen.
I recently ran out because I forgot to pick up another package of them while at the store.
I was in need of a scrubbie but was too lazy to run to the dollar store to pick up more just for that particular cleaning job.
I looked around and remembered a crochet project of dishtowels using left over yarn and plastic bags for the centers to use for scrubbing dishes. I had plenty of plastic bags so I crocheted up about five scrubbies in just a few minutes sans the yarn. I didn’t need them to be pretty just useful. I made them in varying sizes to see what would work best for me.
They ended up working great and can actually be cleaned out better than my store bought versions. Food particles aren’t trapped in it as easily and that means better sanitation.
I’ve used them for washing dishes in the kitchen and made a few for the bathroom to use in scrubbing the vanity and shower. I’ll never go back to the store bought again.
I used to save plastic bags to use as garbage bags but because we generate less garbage now and compost more, bags were coming out our ears around the house. I’ve since made up several balls of plarn to make more scrubbies out of and even made an outside door mat.
I admire those that are trying to remove their carbon footprint and if everyone would just change one habit it would greatly improve things for future generations. If dinosaurs had used plastic water bottles we’d all be digging up prehistoric relics in our backyards today. Those things don’t’ break down. They’ll tell a lot about us in millenniums to come. You’ve heard of the iron age well we will be known as the plastic age. And the proof will still be here to prove it.
Just food for thought.
If you would like to read more about going green and learn more ways of reducing carbon dioxide emissions the book is entitled: Green Chic- Saving the Earth in Style. by Christie Matheson.
Disclosure: I received no compensation for reference to this book. All opinions are my own.
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Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Homemade Hamlets
I loved Burger King's Hamlet sandwiches. Then they took them off the menu. Blah!
Only one thing to do..... make my own.
Here's how I made them:
First I needed a roll.
Homemade Dinner Rolls
Mix:
1 pkg yeast (2 ¼ tsp )
¼ cup warm water
Microwave for one minute:
1 cup milk
3 Tbsp butter
Let cool until tepid.
Add to yeast mixture:
1 egg, beaten
2 Tbsp sugar
¾ tsp salt
1 cup flour
Milk and butter from above
Mix in 2 cups of flour, one cup at a time.
(For a grand total of 3 cups of flour)
Flour board. Knead 6-7 mins. Until elastic and soft and a slightly sticky ball.
Put ½ tsp of vegetable oil in bowl. Add in ball and flip to coat top with oil. Let rise. (1-1 ½ hours)
Lightly flour board. Shape into 12 rolls. Let rise 30-45 minutes on lightly greased cookie sheet. Bake at 350* 20-25 minutes until golden brown.
Then I took honey deli ham and put in aluminum foil folded in a packet with a little maple syrup drizzled over. Just a little because once the ham warms up it will release it's yummy juices and mix with the syrup. Producing a sweet ham. Toss this in the oven for a few minutes until good and hot. (Say the last 10- 15 minutes of cooking time on the rolls.)
Then scramble some eggs.
Build your hamlets and add a slice of cheese.
Wrap in aluminum foil or place back on cookie sheet that the rolls were cooked on and top with foil and toss back in oven for a few minutes just to rewarm the roll and melt the cheese slightly.
SO GOOD!
Happy Eating!
I came up with these on the first morning that Charlie went hunting by himself.
Zach got cinnamon rolls on his hunting day, so Charlie needed something special for his time too!
The days following this, they had to make do with pancakes. I can't spend all my time cooking! (smile)
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Excuses, Excuses
Just a note to say I am sorry for not answering your comments. I have tried but for some reason ( atmospheric pressure, invisible force field, approaching cold front, etc. ) it won’t let me.
I do appreciate your comments and I will answer them all, even on the older posts, once the bugs are worked out. Thanks again!
Recipes will resume tomorrow, so come on back!
With much love………..Kristi.
Moving forward in 2012!
I do appreciate your comments and I will answer them all, even on the older posts, once the bugs are worked out. Thanks again!
Recipes will resume tomorrow, so come on back!
With much love………..Kristi.
Moving forward in 2012!
Sunday, January 1, 2012
Ready, Set, Go!
I’m not much on resolutions. I don’t stick to them. Usually they are too broad when I make them that I don’t keep it up.
But I do love a challenge and this year I thought I’d challenge myself instead of making unrealistic resolutions.
I wanted to do something small but significant.
I wanted to do something that we are interested in. That step is important. You know, why say you’ll take up oil painting if you don’t even like to draw or you hate the smell of paint. Just saying……
So since we are trying to be more self reliant and we are trying to purchase less non necessity items, plus generating less garbage to pack our landfills, I challenge myself to be paper towel free in 2012.
I know that doesn’t sound like much.
We are already using cloth napkins and I use cloth cleaning rags, plus I use homemade cloth pads. But we still keep paper towels around for really dirty cleanups or to catch grease when frying.
I’m thinking that I can cut up old t-shirts and use those plus keep a bucket under the kitchen sink and use Dawn dish liquid to cut the grease and launder on laundry day. I’m hoping that works and I’m certainly going to give it a try. Considering the last package of paper towels I purchased cost $16.87, I’m willing to give it a big try. (Yep, you read that right. I wouldn’t have paid that but I didn’t notice until I looked at the receipt when we got home )
I’ll keep you posted on my progress; succeed or fail I’ll document it here.
I think after a good try at it, say three months. I’ll try adding another challenge or if the first one was a fail I’ll retry it for another quarter or replace it altogether with a new one.
So make a list of challenges for yourself ,they don’t have to be the same as mine, and lets try them together this new year.
Ready, set, GO!!!!!!!
Edited to add:
I signed up for the 23 Day Frugal Living Challenge at Frugally Sustainable. I’m number 473. It all begins on January 6, 2012. I don’t know what to expect from it but I’m excited!
But I do love a challenge and this year I thought I’d challenge myself instead of making unrealistic resolutions.
I wanted to do something small but significant.
I wanted to do something that we are interested in. That step is important. You know, why say you’ll take up oil painting if you don’t even like to draw or you hate the smell of paint. Just saying……
So since we are trying to be more self reliant and we are trying to purchase less non necessity items, plus generating less garbage to pack our landfills, I challenge myself to be paper towel free in 2012.
I know that doesn’t sound like much.
We are already using cloth napkins and I use cloth cleaning rags, plus I use homemade cloth pads. But we still keep paper towels around for really dirty cleanups or to catch grease when frying.
I’m thinking that I can cut up old t-shirts and use those plus keep a bucket under the kitchen sink and use Dawn dish liquid to cut the grease and launder on laundry day. I’m hoping that works and I’m certainly going to give it a try. Considering the last package of paper towels I purchased cost $16.87, I’m willing to give it a big try. (Yep, you read that right. I wouldn’t have paid that but I didn’t notice until I looked at the receipt when we got home )
I’ll keep you posted on my progress; succeed or fail I’ll document it here.
I think after a good try at it, say three months. I’ll try adding another challenge or if the first one was a fail I’ll retry it for another quarter or replace it altogether with a new one.
So make a list of challenges for yourself ,they don’t have to be the same as mine, and lets try them together this new year.
Ready, set, GO!!!!!!!
Edited to add:
I signed up for the 23 Day Frugal Living Challenge at Frugally Sustainable. I’m number 473. It all begins on January 6, 2012. I don’t know what to expect from it but I’m excited!
Labels:
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