Saturday, January 25, 2014

Pinterest Idea To Clean Your Tub or Shower

I know most of you who read this blog have joined Pinterest.  I know that many of you have tried this technique for cleaning the tub and shower because it has been posted on Pinterest many times.  For those who haven't, I want to say how great it works.  All you need is white vinegar and dish soap in equal proportions.  I usually measure out a half a cup of white vinegar and heat it in the microwave.  Then I add 1/2 cup of dish soap.  This small batch does a large walk in shower floor.   The recipe calls for using Dawn detergent but I used another grease cutting dish soap, and it worked just fine. 


12 ounces white vinegar (I used 1/2 cup or 4 oz.)
12 ounces liquid, blue dawn detergent (I used 1/2 cup or 4 oz.)

Directions:

Heat vinegar in microwave until hot and pour into squirt bottle.

Add the Dawn soap. Put the lid on and gently shake to incorporate.

You now have a powerful cleaning product that will melt soap scum and tub and shower buildup, clean sinks, appliances and just about anything. Just spray it on, scrub, rinse and be amazed. For tough soap scum build-up, spray the mixture on and allow it to sit as long as overnight. Then, scrub and rinse.
The solution is slightly thick so it clings and stays put.  

I use one of my hand crocheted scrubbies to scrub it clean.



Thursday, January 23, 2014

Watch The Calories In Those Mini Muffins

In the month of January you will see a common theme threaded through my blogs.  It is diet and exercise.  Every year I get focused in January and then forget it the next eleven months of the year.  It is obvious that I have lost the same ten pounds over and over again.  It is such a fine line between having enough calories and going over just a little.  If you have too few calories, the metabolism slows down and it goes into starvation mode.  It happened to me yesterday.  Myfitnesspal.com told me that I hadn't eaten enough to lose weight.  This is a foreign concept to me.  On the other side of the coin, just going over a few calories can put weight on.  It only takes 3600 extra calories to gain a pound.  This brings me to my point.  Yesterday I made mini muffins.  My dad has to have his sweets and at his age he should.  At age 89 you should be able to eat anything you are hungry for.  I got out a boxed Double Chocolate Muffin Mix.  It wasn't a good choice to even have it in the cupboard, but I had bought it on one of my "off" moments.  Instead of making a dozen big muffins, I got out the mini cupcake maker.  I purchased this mini baker at Goodwill before they got popular.  I wonder if the person who donated it, regretted it.  The stores were full of this type baker over the holidays.

Super easy way to make cupcakes or muffins.


I quickly mixed them up.  All it took was the mix and one egg.  How bad could that be?  I got forty little muffins out of the recipe.

I put them into a plastic bag to grab when we wanted a little snack.

Fortunately I decided to figure the calorie count before I ate one or two or more.  I did the math several times because it just didn't seem right.  Can you believe that these tiny little mini muffins have 53 calories each?  They are one bite.  It would be very easy to eat six of them in less than a minute.  I will still eat them, but not as many as I thought I could.

This is a snack plate and the muffin still looks little on it.


Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Exercise Wherever You Can


Sometimes it is really hard to get exercise.  Except for feeding the birds and walking to the mailbox, we don't get enough exercise.  We joined a fitness center once but it was 20 miles away.  It was like having a full time job.  We would get ready, drive for a half hour, exercise for an hour, get hungry, stop and eat more calories than we burned and then drive back home.  That only lasted a month.  We are eligible to use the equipment at our senior center, but walking on a treadmill or doing wii bowling just didn't cut it for me.  Plus they keep inviting us to the pot luck meal.  My husband plays cards there, but I'm not ready for that.  The best thing for us is just taking a walk.  It works great for most of the year, but not in the winter.  We can handle the cold, but the icy roads are a different story.  Today we found a solution to our walking dilemma.  We went to the school and walked the halls for 30 minutes.  I can see how it would get boring doing it everyday, but two or three times a week is going to be great.  So until the weather gets better, that's what we will be doing.  It's an easy way to add an extra 3600 steps to our usual day.  I'm still 70,000 steps behind both of our daughters for the week, but at least we are trying.

It doesn't look like I will get to 10,000 again today.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Make Your Own Vanilla

Yesterday in my blog I talked about wanting to make Vanilla Extract.  I didn't have the proper ingredients at the time, but today I found some vanilla beans for the recipe.  My daughter makes this vanilla extract so I know it works great.  Just make sure your vanilla beans are pliable and not all dried out.  They also need to be split so all the flavor inside the bean can come out.

All the ingredients necessary to make Vanilla Extract.


Vanilla Extract

2-3 Vanilla Beans
1 cup Vodka
Glass jar with tight fitting cover

Split the vanilla bean lengthwise down one side.  Leave it connected on the end.

Put the beans into a glass jar and cover completely with the vodka.  Make sure the beans are covered.

Store it in a cool, dark place for at least 2 months.  Shake it once in a while when you think of it.

After you start using the vanilla and need more, you can top it off with more vodka.  Shake it when you add the new vodka.  It can last for many years.  There are cute colored bottles available to buy to store the vanilla in.  It shouldn't be stored in a clear bottle unless it is kept in a dark cabinet.

My daughter is also trying to make vanilla sugar for the first time.  She buys vanilla sugar at Penzey spices, but it costs about $8.00 for a small amount.  Apparently you can put a split vanilla bean in a container of granulated sugar to make your own.  The vanilla bean will infuse the sugar with vanilla flavoring.  She will check it soon to see how intense the flavor is.  I will update this blog when I find out how well it works.

*The following link makes vanilla with Brandy.  It may be worth trying.

http://www.thedarlingbakers.com/homemade-vanilla-extract-with-brandy/

Monday, January 20, 2014

It Was A Long Day

Everyone has heard of the dog days of August, but they don't compare to the long days of January.  Yesterday I talked about embracing the winter and enjoying it.  Today I did not practice what I preached.  It was a miserable day.  I got to start it out with giving haircuts to my husband and my dad.  Next and the part I hate the most was toe nail clipping.  Yes I said it.  I have to clip my dad's toe nails.  It ranks right up there with life's most gagging moments. 

My husband is also obviously bored with winter.  The last two weeks he found things to do that usually get overlooked.   He cleaned the freezer we have in the basement.  He found a lot of stuff that was not usable anymore, and reorganized what was left.  He has cataloged every item and wants me to check off the items when I use them.  This way we can keep track of what we have, and what we need to buy.  I'm not sure how diligent I will be at doing it.  We have a lot more room in the freezer now because he took out many many cold packs.  Why we have so many is one of those questions with no answer.


Next thing on the list was organizing tax papers.  It is a job that needs to be done but it makes a big mess.  Of course, my husband has everything organized by date and type.  He has spreadsheets and plastic boxes with everything labeled.  That's the good part.  Everything else is still sitting on the dining room table and needs to be dealt with soon.


I made chili today, went to Dollar General for some new socks and otherwise I was just lazy today.  I was going to make perpetual vanilla extract.  My daughter never buys vanilla because she makes it herself.  All you do is put 3 vanilla beans into a cup of vodka.  You store it in a glass jar for a couple months and then it's ready to use.  I didn't have any vodka or vanilla beans so that stopped that project.  We went to the store to buy the ingredients but vanilla beans are too fancy to sell in my town.  I picked up some other groceries and when we began checking out I saw a gigantic bottle of vodka my husband had put in the cart.  He asked the check out kids if they needed to see his ID.  They said "uh, NO".  I only need a cup and since we don't drink, I will have to make a lot of vanilla.  We aren't teetotalers but we just don't like the taste of booze. 






Thank goodness it is almost bedtime.  Hopefully tomorrow will be more exciting. 


Sunday, January 19, 2014

Enjoy the Winter Instead of Complaining

We live in Wisconsin.  There is no escaping winter.  Sometimes it is mild and sometimes it is long, snowy and cold.  We live here because we love all four of the seasons.  People complain all the time about the cold, but it isn't something new and there is nothing to do about it but enjoy it.  You have heard the term, "if your handed lemons, you make lemonade".  That is what we do.  It makes the winter more enjoyable.  Instead of wishing your life away, have fun.

Today we stopped at my daughters house.  They were outside playing in the snow.

It's nice to have a sledding hill in your own backyard

Dylan working on the snow fort.




Heather having just as much fun as her boys Ewan and Dylan.

Piper too.

Snowmobiles going up and down the river.

The shark may not be happy with the weather, I believe he is frozen solid.

I also heard from my other daughter this morning.  She spent the morning snowshoeing on one of the many trails available to us.  It looks like she had a great time too. 

Fun, fun, fun


Saturday, January 18, 2014

Make Your Own Candle Tarts

Recently I wrote about saving our bar soap slivers in a bag to use up the whole bar.  I used acrylic yarn to make the bags, and I wasn't sure about the bag drying well.  I found they dried very well and have worked out great.

 http://www.thecabincountess.com/2014/01/knitted-and-crocheted-soap-bags.html

Besides saving all my soap slivers, I don't like to throw away candles that  have burned down to the wick either.  There is a lot of good wax left in the bottom of a candle jar.


It is fun to make scented tarts from the leftover wax.  Tart burners are great because there is no flame to worry about but the little tea light tart burners are pretty safe also.  The first thing you need to do is melt the old wax from the jar.  You can put the jar in really hot water or the microwave.  Just be careful that there is no metal left in the jar or on the label if you put it in the microwave. Melting with hot water in a double boiler or in an electric candle warmer is the safest.

This is an electric jar candle warmer.

When the wax has been melted, it can be carefully poured into a mold.  The best thing to use are the silicone cupcake forms.  When cooled, the tart pops out perfectly.  Metal forms work but they conduct the heat so they are hard to handle until cooled.



A tart warmer using a tea candle.


An electric tart warmer.


You can buy the little individually wrapped tarts, but they cost at least $2.00 each.  With a little effort these can be made for nothing and it's fun too.


*It has come to my attention that using regular paraffin wax could be hazardous to your health.  This is a link that talks about that and tells how to make tarts with Beeswax, coconut oil and natural ingredients.

http://healthylivinghowto.com/1/post/2014/01/diy-scented-wax-melts.html

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Repairing a Damaged Hat

Last week my daughter called very upset.  Her darling little puppy had chewed on her favorite hat.  Piper puppy is 4 1/2 months now and is getting better but......she still forgets and chews things she shouldn't.


The hat was not just any hat.  It was one they purchased on a trip to Ireland, and she likes it.  There are many photos of her wearing it.

It's the perfect winter hat for her.

So one day when I was at her house, I saw it laying on the table.  She wondered if I could try to fix it.  I had my doubts because it looked pretty bad, but I said I would try.  It took me a while to find some matching yarn.  It isn't black and it wasn't the gray I had in my stash.  It is a dark charcoal gray which isn't that easy to find.  I took my swatch with me everywhere and finally found something close.  I only needed a few yards, but I had to buy a whole skein.  The good part is that I will have enough leftover to make another headband.

http://www.thecabincountess.com/2013/11/knitted-headband-ear-warmer.html

I wasn't sure if I could make it as good as new.

The first thing I did was take out all the broken threads and unraveled enough to tie off.  Then I threaded and secured the yarn in the part of the hat that was stable.  I began knitting, securing each end by picking up a good solid stitch.  After a few rows, I bound off and sewed to the back.  It's a little bumpy, but I think she will get a little more wear out of it.

What do you think?  Good as new?









Tuesday, January 14, 2014

An Easy Way To Count Calories

It is recipe day but today I am doing something different.  I have been trying to count my calories.  It always happens in the dead of winter when I can't get out to exercise or get my mind off food.  Then when I can get out, my mind starts thinking about other things and I get past the need to be skinny (or even a little thinner).  I got on the Wii for the first time since last winter.  I got the fat avatar with the music indicating "Overweight".  What's new, I will probably never be "normal".


Seriously, I have found two websites that are really quite good.  The first one is one where you can enter all the ingredients for a recipe and it calculates the calories.  I did it for the Cherry Cheesecake Cupcakes that I posted last Tuesday.

http://www.thecabincountess.com/2014/01/cherry-cheesecake-cupcakes.html


You just cut and paste the recipe, put the number of servings in and click analyze.  It is shocking sometimes to see the total calories and how fast they add up.  You have to either save or burn 3600 calories to lose just one pound.  I'm sure there are tons of sites that do the same thing.  I have no investment in any of them, but it really makes things easy.

http://caloriecount.about.com/cc/recipe_analysis.php

The one I use the most is My Fitness Pal.  It links up wirelessly with the Fitbit I got for Christmas.  The Fitbit counts a persons steps and gives calorie credit for  them, but the fitness pal website can be used on its own.  There is a free app for it so all you do is enter your food, and it keeps track of the calories including the breakdown of carbs, fats, protein, sodium and other things.  We all have our phone with us most of the time, and it only takes a second to do.  If you don't want to use the phone the website does the same thing.  It couldn't be easier, the problem is Not grabbing the donut or cookie.  It is amazing what we eat that we don't even realize we are eating.

http://www.myfitnesspal.com

I have always said that losing weight is easy but keeping it off is the tough part.  Don't ask how I am doing with this.  If I look thinner in the Spring, then I am doing it.  If I don't, then it's my own fault.





Monday, January 13, 2014

Time To Try A Suet Log


As anyone who has read my blog knows,  I love the wild birds.  We feed them all year around.  I know some people feel they don't need to be fed in the summer, but we still do.  The weather determines how much food they eat, and when there is plenty of natural food they don't eat as much from the feeders.   It is costly and sometimes it is a pain to tromp through the snow.  It also makes a huge mess.  All the shells and uneaten seed have to be raked up in the spring.  Actually, we have so much that it needs to be shoveled off the ground.  If you don't want to bother with the expense or mess but like to see the birds, I have a solution.  We buy suet logs.  They come in a mesh bag which can be hung.

http://www.pecknlogusa.com/

Birds like chickadees, juncos and nuthatches love it but especially the woodpeckers. We use a hanger which has three suction cups, and it attaches to the window.  We use it for the suet log in the winter and a hummingbird feeder in the summer.  Suet gets soft in the summer and the grackles will eat it up too fast.  When they are frozen in the winter, the logs last a long time, they only cost about $2.50 and it keeps the woodpeckers off our house. 


New suet log hanging in the window.

This one is almost gone.

Downy Woodpecker enjoying a snack.

We also use several suet cake feeders.  These are popular too, but don't last nearly as long.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Beautiful Sunday In January

 
This is a beautiful Sunday in January 2014.  We just lived through some bitter cold temperatures but today it is approaching 40 degrees at noon.  It's hard to believe that the temperature has risen almost 60 degrees in six days.  The grass is peeking through and the snow is melting.

Grass and leaves showing through the snow.

Icicle dripping from the corner of the house.

This is probably only temporary, but we will take it.  Mother nature has a way of giving us all that we can take and then gives us a little break once in a while.





Saturday, January 11, 2014

Knitted and Crocheted Soap Bags

I write about a craft project once in a while but I haven't for quite some time.  Today is a good day for it.  We went from bitter cold temperatures last week to temperatures hovering around freezing the last two days.  Last night we had freezing rain which made the roads almost impossible to drive on and the sidewalks really slippery.  It was a good day to stay home and create.

Knitted and crocheted versions of a soap saver.

How many people use bar soap?  I usually don't but the men in my family do.  I think it's more economical to use bar soap than body wash.  The only problem is when the bar gets small, it breaks.  It leaves a sliver that most people throw away.  We throw them, but not into the wastebasket, we throw them into a little bag.  The soap lathers up nicely in the soap bag, and the bag has texture like a washcloth.  It isn't slippery so you don't lose your grip as easy.  It doesn't gunk up the soap dish as much either.  Just be sure to rinse it well.  We had purchased little bags in the past, but today I decided to make some new ones.   I used yarn.  In the future I will look for something that dries more quickly, but the patterns turned out.  Maybe I should use nylon yarn or tulle cut in strips like the nylon netting strips I use for scrubbies.

http://www.thecabincountess.com/2014/05/revised-nylon-netting-scrubbie.html

The scrubbie nylon netting would be too rough on the skin but tulle would be softer.  These bags would even fit a whole bar of soap. 

Knitted Soap Bag

Any type of yarn will work.  Heavier sport weight or worsted is best.  If you use wool, the bags will felt and get smaller as they are used.  Cotton yarn takes a little longer to dry so they should be hung up to dry or they will smell musty eventually.  If that happens, just remove the soap and wash in the washing machine with your laundry. 

You will need 4 double pointed needles in a size 3 or 4.  I changed to a size 3 circular needle-9 inch after the increases.  You could use two needles and knit a rectangle.  Then just sew a seam.

Cast on 9 stitches.  With 3 stitches on each needle, knit around increasing on the last stitch of each of the three needles as follows:

Row 1:  Knit 2, inc. 1 on next stitch (4 sts.), repeat on needle #2 and needle #3.  12 stitches total.
Row 2:  Purl around
Row 3:  Knit 3, inc. on next stitch (5 sts.), repeat on needle #2 and #3.  15 stitches total.
Row 4:  Purl around

Continue in this manner until 10 stitches are on each needle (30 total).  Then knit 1 round andpurl one round until the bag is 4 inches long.

Next round K1, YO, K1, YO etc.  This will make holes for the draw string.  Then knit each round for 3 or 4 rows.  Bind off loosely.  Hide the loose ends and close the bottom of the bag.

Make a tie either by crocheting a string of about 70 chains or try this fun technique.

Cut off about 6 feet of yarn.  Tie one end to a door knob and the other end to the middle of a pencil.


Pull the yarn taut and begin twisting the pencil in one direction.  After a while fold in half and the yarn will twist on itself like a rope.  It makes a sturdy tie.  Thread the tie through the holes in the top of the bag.

Crocheted Soap bag

Use the same type of yarn as mentioned for the knitted bag.

Size "J" crochet hook.

Chain 10 stitches.  Start with a half double crochet in 3rd stitch from hook.  Continue hdc in each chain stitch across and then on opposite side of foundation chain.  You should have 16 hdc's.  Slip stitch in top of starting chain, ch. 1 and continue around.  Work several rounds until the bag is about 4 inches.

Next round:  hdc, chain 1, skip 1 hdc, repeat around.  Single crochet around for 2 or 3 rounds to finish.

Make a draw string in the same way as the knitted bag and thread through the holes.

Update:  These bags work so well, I use one for the soap nuts I use for laundry.  I blogged about using soap nuts.  If you want to read about it, just put soap nuts in the blogs search box.  







Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Icequakes

Last night we were sitting watching TV as we usually do.  It was another cold cold night, but we were toasty warm in the house.  We all sit in different rooms because we all enjoy different shows.  Suddenly there was a loud boom that shook the house.  Mike and I both ran into the room where my dad sits.  I asked if he heard it and he did.  It sounded like our deck had fallen off or something big slid off the roof.  So my husband bundled up, took his flashlight and went outside to investigate.  He looked all around the house to see if anything seemed wrong.  He couldn't find anything amiss so he came inside.  We didn't think much about it again until this morning.  One of the weathermen from Green Bay said that big booms and vibrations were being reported from the Fond du lac area and Green Lake County.  He said that they were called "icequakes".  It happens when pockets of ground water which normally stay liquid become frozen in extreme cold.  When water freezes, it expands, sometimes to the point of cracking.  It makes sense but I wasn't familiar with this.  If I had heard this sound before, I didn't know what it was.  I thought it may have been in the very deep spring fed pond we have.  It usually doesn't freeze over but I hadn't checked during the extreme temperatures from the days before.  I decided to check it out this morning, but there was open water.  The temperature had warmed up a little to -1 degrees F.  Later in the day we heard that many people around town and in the area also heard the boom and vibration.  We have no idea the exact location.  Maybe it was many locations, and it could happen again.

At -1 degrees we have open water on our spring fed pond.

This cold weather is very bad for many people.  It is difficult for people who work outside or those who are homeless.  One of our deer can't stand on her back leg.  I don't know if it was too cold to stand on all fours, or if she is injured in some way.  I hope she gets better soon.

She can't put weight on her back right foot.

There is a lot of beauty too.  Not everything about this polar vortex is horrible.  These are photos I took of a frozen waterfall a few miles from us in Montello Wisconsin.

These frozen waterfalls sure look cold, but beautiful.


Waterfall in Montello Wisconsin with the ducks hunkered down next to the open water.