August 21, 2013

Why I Quit the Homemade Laundry Detergent Craze

 

Homemade Laundry detergent.  It was so appealing in the beginning.  You will find recipes and fantastic photos of it plastered all over Pinterest.  You can save so much money compared to buying it at the grocery story.  As an extremely frugal housewife, there was nothing more appealing than the cost savings.  I'm so cheap, I once decided against buying a shirt because it was $7.  So of course, I jumped at the opportunity to save a few cents.  But the honeymoon stage only lasted for so long...

4. Preparation - While I'm known for being very thrifty, I'm also known for being lazy.  I even had a friend (Thanks, Mandi) who would buy, grate, and deliver the soap bars to me.  Even then, I still got annoyed at having to mix together all the other ingredients.  I much prefer throwing a bottle into my shopping cart as I cruise for groceries down the isles.

3. Lack of smell - When your grating the soap bar, your kitchen will smell of lovely cleanliness.  When your clothes are swishing away in the washing machine, your laundry room will smell fantastic.  But when you pull those warm, clean clothes out of the dryer, you will smell... nothing.  Not stinky, but not fragrant.  Just the odd, normal scent of cloth.

2. Phantom grey stains - Does your Grandma's use those huge white, thin tea towels?  Both of mine always have, and my mother does, and so do I now.  Most of mine were given to me by my Grandmother that passed away last year.  Now I'm not saying that the homemade detergent caused these little grey splotches all over them, but they were never there before then and they never showed up again after I quit.

1. Grease Stains - Maybe it's a sign that I'm a messy cook, but every single one of my shirts ends up with some sort of olive oil stain on it everyday.  This detergent doesn't come close to cutting through those stains.  Every shirt needed to be rubbed down with liquid dish detergent before washing.  I always thought detergent commercials that boast stain fighting boosters were just exaggerating, but now I'm a believer.

July 17, 2013

Good Eats: Sesame Chicken with Stir-fry Veggies

 
Sesame chicken is a staple dinner in our house.  This is originally a Weight Watcher recipe, so you know it's got to be a great, healthy choice for the whole family.  I've added on a stir-fry veggie that's super simple and tasty.  I also normally cook white rice to make a good square meal.
 







 
 


 Chinese Sesame Chicken
2-3 lbs. skinless, boneless chicken thighs
6 oz. apple juice (or one juice box)
1 c. water
2 Tbs. packed brown sugar
4 Tbs. soy sauce
2 Tbs. ketchup
2 cloves minced garlic
Dash ground red pepper
2 Tbs. cornstarch dissolved in a little water
4 tsp. toasted sesame seeds

Brown chicken in med-hot pan sprayed with pam.  Combine juice, water, brown sugar, soy sauce, ketchup, garlic, and red pepper.  Add sauce to chicken and bring up temp to a low boil, then reduce to low for a simmer.  Cook for 20-25 minutes, flipping the chicken over half way through.  Remove chicken and whisk in dissolved corn starch.  Cook till thickened. Add back chicken and add sesame seeds.  Enjoy!

Stir-Fry Veggies
1/2 small head of cabbage
1 onion (I like red)
2-3 peeled carrots
soy sauce
salt
pepper

Dice up cabbage, onion, and carrots.  Add a little oil to a pan or pot on medium heat.  Sprinkle on soy sauce and add a few dashes of salt and pepper.  Cook till carrots are tender and cabbage nice a wilted.  Add more soy sauce to taste.  Approximately 15 minutes. Enjoy!


May 7, 2013

Travel Maze Tutorial

 





I found my maze on a google image search, or you can get creative and think of your own design.  The only important factor is that your path is wide enough for your bead or marble to push around.

 
I choose a crazy checkered fabric in hopes to make it more complicated for my 4 year old. 


 Don't forget to add your bead before you close the gap up, or you'll end up with a weird hanky.

 

 
 This takes a little patience, but it will all be worth it!

 
Now you have a start and a finish!
 
When your kiddo gets good at getting the bead from the start to the end and the end to start, then you can create variations.  I like to steal the maze, put the bead in a weird secluded part of the maze, and then ask Clare to get it to one of the buttons. 
 
It's a super simple sew, that can give lots of car time/waiting room entertainment.