22 December 2008

Furniture Polish

I have a couple older wood pieces around the place - a late 50's HiFi set, a similarly aged night table, a somewhat newer, solid oak dinning set.  All of them are used and all have clearly been dying for lack of a good, rehydrating polish.  But my parents run a furniture refinishing shop and I know from growing up around that business that your average over the counter furniture polish is a very bad idea, especially if you have any plans at all to refinish in the future.  All of these older pieces are going to get refinished at some point.  The problem with most commercial polish is that most of them contain silicone to keep dust away.  Silicone gets into the grain of the wood, forever to remain.  You can strip a piece all you want, it will look clean to the eye, but the instant you put new lacquer/varnish/shellac/polyurethane on it, you'll get these oily spots called fish eyes in the trade all over the place.  It isn't pretty and there's literally no way to fix it.

So I've opted for no polish at all rather than risk fish eyes on my solid wood pieces in the future.  Until two days ago when I just happened to stumble upon the easiest furniture polish recipe ever.  I mixed up a batch immediately and gloried in the results.  My good wood furniture looks absolutely beautiful.

The recipe is, 3 parts any oil you happen to have around (I used olive oil but seriously, any vegetable based oil will work) to 1 part lemon juice.  You can put it in a spray bottle, remembering to shake before using, or you can put it in a little jar and upend it over your dusting rag (this was my option since I didn't have any spare spray bottles lying around).  It goes on super easy, absorbs into the wood within a couple minutes, and there are no harsh fumes or artificial scents to foul the air.  I absolutely love this stuff

13 December 2008

Practicing Frugality

I'm not sure why this is.  According the the Yahoo article I just read, our nation is in turmoil.  Yet my husband has a good paying job with tremendous job security, we're living within our means, and we're going to try and get a land contract on a nice little house in a decent working class neighborhood in the next few weeks.  I personally do not feel like we're in turmoil.  I actually feel pretty secure.

Here's how we do it:  
1)  One vehicle that we don't have payments on, and which is old enough we don't need to carry full coverage insurance on it.  Liability insurance alone is $56/mo.
2)  Basic cable service plus internet service.  I would love to ditch the cable tv but can't quite justify it on account of Ba'al's mental health.
3)  Our grocery budget is under $150/mo for three adults and one baby.  I shop the bargain grocery stores first, use ethnic stores for "unusual" ingredients, and buy dry goods in bulk.
4)  Everything possible, I make at home.  I can clean my house in its entirety, wash dishes, do laundry, and keep our bodies clean with cornstarch, baking soda, vinegar, and a few other basic household things I buy anyway.
5)  We buy almost nothing prepared.  95% of meals in this house are made completely from scratch, including the bread.
6)  We eat out twice a month and usually for lunch.  Lunch menus are *always* cheaper.
7)  The last movie we went to was in August, at the budget theater where a ticket is $1.50.

Yes it's stingy.  But we like it this way and we feel pretty confident about surviving and living well while doing it.

07 December 2008

Cheap Yogurt !

This procedure comes to you courtesy of a crockpotting mom here on blogger.  I tried it yesterday and sampled the results this morning.  AWESOME yogurt for much less than cups of the stuff cost and much healthier too since this isn't laced with sugar, gelatin, and G*D knows what else.  

Pour half a gallon (8 cups) of milk into a crockpot.  A 2 quart will work but having some room to stir, a three or four quart crock, will work better.  Turn your crock to it's lowest setting, cover the milk, and leave along for 2 1/2 hours.

Turn off the crock.  Leave the milk covered.  Don't touch for three hours.

Now that the milk is warmish, scoop out 2 cups.  Mix in 1/2 cup store bought PLAIN yogurt that has "active cultures" listed in the ingredients.  I used the Great Value brand from Wal-Mart with no trouble at all.

Pour the milk/yogurt mixture into the crock.  Add up to 1 cup of powdered milk.  If you're using whole milk to start, you don't really need to add powder.  But use powdered milk if anything less than whole milk, and use the full cup of powder if you started with powdered milk or skim milk!

Now wrap the whole crock up, base and all, in a thick bath towel.  Leave it alone.  Forget about it.  Hopefully you're doing this part in early evening and you can leave it on the counter until morning.  That's best.  The longer the milk is left undisturbed, the thicker your end product will be.  After 8 to 14 hours, unwrap your crock and check on the results.  The milk should have thickened up (texture will depend on how much fat and protein are in the milk you used) and taste tangy.

You can serve it toped with honey or fruit or you can stir fruit in.  Growing up on homemade yogurt, I opt for the topping it with something option.  Mixing stuff in tends to break the protein chains and make the yogurt runny.  This is also the perfect yogurt to use in Middle Eastern and Indian cooking and it makes a rich substitute for milk in baking.  I used mine for the milk in biscuits this morning and my word!  They are they best biscuits I've every had.

02 December 2008

New Discount Grocery in Town!

We have a new scratch and dent grocery in town and this one is close enough to where we live to actually make going there practical.  I am so excited about Extreme Bargains!  They advertise prices up to 70% off  regular grocery store prices.  Unlike Bargain Mart, which we have to drive twenty minutes to get to and which has a generous selection of sauces, dressings, and spices and very little else, EB had pasta, pasta sauce, flour, sugar, goat milk (!!!), and a wide variety of other items I would like to buy more regularly but usually don't have the grocery dollars to get.  I spent way more than necessary on our first visit but I won't have to spend much on groceries when Ba'al gets paid this week.  So we're all happy.

I've also finally gotten a sewing machine.  My last one got left behind in Wisconsin when we moved here from there almost a year and a half ago.  I did not get a new one.  I do not like the modern plastic machines that have to go to a trained professional for such simple things as a lube job and cleaning.  No, instead I went to a pawn shop and bought a 1960's model that's insanely heavy but can be lubed and cleaned by someone with few mechanical skills (moi) and then operated without spending hours hunched over a manual first (like the last machine I had which my dear Ba'al thought he was doing a good thing by buying me a brand new model).  That one ended up in the shop a month after purchasing because cleaning fabric fuzz under the foot plate was decidedly not a do it yourself project.  So we're very happy around here with the Dressmaker model S-3000 purchased for $60 (pawn shops are as good or better than thrift stores for electronics).  That price is about half what the same machine goes for on ebay so I think I got a pretty good deal.  

The same day, we got a gently used Philips DVD player from the same pawn shop.  Y'all know what that means?  Means that when we got to pay our cable bill this week, we're also taking in the cable box for the TV!  We are going to become a one service (internet) household, using the DVD player and the 'net to do all of our TV watching.  I have to put together a TV lineup this week so we know what shows to download for our viewing pleasure and what days to look for them.