Sunday, February 15, 2009

Frugal


This is a recipe that I don't remember the source but absolutely looooove! Homemade Laundry Soap. It is fantastic for little Chunky Monkey and his super-sensitive-skinned brother Baby Love. And honest-to-goodness it makes your clothes soooo soft. Although it's good for mine and the kid's clothes, I don't use it for DH's work clothes. So try it out for yourself..


*Laundry Soap*

1 c Borax

1c Washing Soda

1 Bar of Fels-Naptha grated

The Washing Soda is made by Arm & Hammer (Meijer), the Fels-Naptha (VG's) and Borax get mixed up. I put mine in a large Rubber Maid cylinder. The orig. recipe calls for 2-3T, but I like to use 4T.


*Fridgerator Cleaner (interior)*

Spray Bottle with White Vinegar and H2O

Vinegar is fantastic at killing mold or anything else grungy.


*Window Cleaner*

1c Alcohol

1c Water

1T Vinegar

I love the fact that this leaves my windows streak-free. I also like using newspaper (black & white, no glossy paper) to wipe the widows down.


*Dry-Erase Board Cleaner*

Any type of tooth "paste." -No gels. Get a paper towel damp, squeeze a little paste on it and voile, a clean, minty smelling board!


*Wheat Bread*

We love whole wheat bread but don't care for the prices. I've found a bread outlet on Hill Rd. that sells Sara Lee bread for only $0.70 a loaf. I usually grab about 10 loaves and throw them in the deep freeze. They thaw wonderfully.


*Food Co-op/Beef*

There are local organic farms who will allow you for a fee, join their working or non-working coop. You purchase shares and then as the harvest comes in, you get your share. I have not joined one yet. It's hard to find a co-op w/ an opening. We buy our beef from a farmer who raises organic cattle. It's the best I have had and the leanest. Since we can't eat a whole cow, we go in on it with friends or family. We buy it at slaughter time, the beginning of fall and keep it in our deep freeze.


*Compost*

Yes, I have been teased about this. I don't like to waste a thing. My compost pile is growing this year. I figure it will make my garden soil richer naturally and I'm keeping biodegradable out of our land fills. So if you have a garden or garden with pots and have a little corner in the back of your yard, composting is a great thing.


*Rain Water*

We have a run-off from the garage and last year I put a large plastic garbage bin there to collect rain water for the garden. You can do the same thing if you have gutter drain thingies. I haven't yet figured out a watering "system" yet, but used the water regularly with my watering can. The key is to keep it covered and dump it if it's getting weird stuff growing or getting bugs in it.


Well I guess that's enough for now. If you have any ideas, please share. I'm sorry I can't give sources for all the ideas. I've learned them over the years and honestly don't know where I picked up all this stuff.

1 comment:

Nikki said...

Love this Sarah, thanks for sharing! I too love the sara lee outlet, the bread there is very yummy and nutrious! We usually get the 45 calorie 100% multi grain which is good. Interested in the laudry soap, the Duggars did on their show and have been thinking about it. Could you give some stats on it, Like shelf life, How many loads/batch and what the real savings is? I'm really curious. I'm typically a bleach person, not really a vinegar, but like to use Ammonia too. Speaking of borax, we went to Impression 5 museum in Lansing this week-end and made really cool non toxic SLIME for the kids to play w/. Borax & water diluted, added to polyvinyl alcohol in a baggie mixed up w/ some food coloring. The kids loved it! My girlfriend gets the co op veggies out in Linden. Likes it, but says she throws away stuff because it rots too quick. This year my goal is to have one tom. potted plant and see where that goes. I'd like to eventually learn to can too. I'm going to have Jac come up w/ a make shift rain barrel too. Keep up the good work!