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10 0f the Best Make it at Home Recipes

cleaners We all love make it at home recipes they save us money, they often give us better products, and it is just plain fun to make our recipes instead of buying them at the store.

This is a list of my favorite recipes that we use on a daily basis.  If you have a favorite recipe then please share it with is us we would love to know!

1) Homemade Powdered Laundry Soap

1 box of borax
1 box of Arm & Hammer Super Washing Soda
1 bar of soap, grated (can use Dial, Ivory, Fels Naptha, or Zote)

Combine all ingredients and store in a container.
To use:
2 tbsp per load of laundry
If the laundry is really dirty, I will add 1/4 cup of baking soda.

2)Homemade OxiClean

Ingredient:
1/2 cup of hydrogen peroxide
1/2 cup of baking soda
1 cup of hot water
Directions:
mix together and use in place of OxiClean

3)Basic Waterproof Glue

  • 6 tbsp water
  • 2 packets unflavored gelatin (1/2 oz.)
  • 2 tbsp white vinegar
  • 2 tsp glycerine

Bring water to a boil. Remove from heat and stir in gelatin until it is dissolved. Add vinegar and glycerin and stir well. Let the mixture cool slightly and pour into a jar and seal tightly. To Use: This glue is best applied while warm. Apply to surfaces using a brush. Glue will gel after a few days. To re-use, warm by placing the jar in a pan of hot water. Good for binding leather to leather, fabrics to cardboard, paper to paper.

4)MAKE YOUR OWN FLY PAPER

Ingredients:

  • 1/4 cup maple syrup
  • 1 tablespoon brown sugar
  • 1 tablespoon granulated sugar

Mix ingredients together in a small bowl. Pour over strips of brown paper and let soak overnight. To hang, poke a hole in one end of a strip and tie a string to it.

5)MOSQUITO/INSECT REPELLENT

Formula 1: Ingredients

  • 3 cups rubbing alcohol
  • 1 1/2 cups red cedar wood shavings
  • 1/2 cup eucalyptus leaves

Mix ingredients together in a large bowl or jar. Cover and let stand 5 days. Strain the solid ingredients out and save the remaining liquid. Store tightly sealed. Yield: 2 cups. To use, pour into a small spray bottle and spray lightly on skin.

6)ANT TRAPS:
Ingredients:

  • 1/3 cup molasses
  • 6 tablespoons sugar
  • 6 tablespoons active dry yeast

Mix ingredients together in a small bowl until they form a smooth past. Spread the mixture into plastic lid. Any old plastic container will do. Set the mixture near the mouth of ant hill. For kitchen areas, coat a strip of cardboard with the mixture and lay along floor or in crevices where ants travel. Works best with medium to large ants. Try substituting honey for the molasses.

7)HM liquid/gel soap

1 bar of soap, grated
1/2 gallon of water
2 TBSP glycerin

Combine all ingredients and heat over low heat until the soap dissolves. Pour into your container and allow to sit for a few days till it thickens up.

8)Home Made Bubble Bath


Preparation time: 2 minutes
Makes 3.5 cups
1 cups of liquid dishwashing soap
1 teaspoon sugar
2 cups of hot water
3 – 4 tablespoons of glycerin
Large plastic container (I use an old bubble bath container)
Stir all ingredients together in the plastic container.

9) Home Made Baby Wipes

2 tsp Baby Bath
2 tsp Baby oil
2 cups warm water
Half roll of Bounty Paper Towels
Air Tight container

Mix all ingredients together than pour over paper towels and let soak. After mixture has been absorbed by the paper towels, pull the tube our of the center and pull the “wipes” out of the center! Store in the air tight container.

You can add a small drop Tea Tree Oil to prevent the towels from molding.

10 All-purpose cleaner

32oz spray bottle
1/4 cup vinegar or lemon juice
1 tsp borax
1 tsp washing soda (baking soda if you can’t find WS)
1 tsp Murphy’s oil soap

Put the borax and washing soda in the bottle. Fill 1/2 way with really hot water. Give it a good shake to dissolve the powders. Add the vinegar and fill to 3/4 with hot water. Add the oil soap and fill to the 32oz line. I fill the bottle in stages to prevent the oil soap from foaming up (or the vinegar reacting with the soda).

4 Cheap Dinner Menus for $5 or less

family dinner Sorry I have not posted a blog post recently but I have been sick and really busy so it has been difficult to get much of anything done!

Today’s post was inspired by an old post at a message board I used to belong to. Back then these meals could feed a family of four for around a dollar. These days the cost of these meals will be a bit more.

Many of these meals are reasonably healthy meals (as opposed to macaroni and cheese and hotdogs) as super cheap meals go and while I like to stick with healthy foods for the most part there are going to be those days,weeks or months when it is more important to feed a hungry crew than anything else.

We have all been there: when payday is longer than the paycheck, or when someone gets laid off, sometimes you have to do what you have to do to keep people fed.

These meals are shared with that thought in mind, they are bottom dollar meals that will stretch your food budget as far as possible.

How low you are able to go dollar wise with these meals will greatly depend on the time of year, whether you grow a garden and where you live. Most people ought to be able to bring the cost of these menu’s down under 5$ for a family of 4 or 5. Enjoy!!!

While you are at it Anissa at Learning Together Hand in Hand is having a recipe swap Head on over and check it out!
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First menu -Mexican

Bean Burritos
Mexican Rice
Cinnamon Crisps

You will be making the flour tortillas and refried beans ahead of time, so be sure to plan ahead as beans must be soaked and cooked.

Flour Tortillas
2C flour
1/3C shortening or lard
2 Tsp salt
1C warm water
In Food Processor, combine flour, salt, and shortening and drizzle in water until dough begins to stick together. Form dough into egg sized balls and let rest under cover for about 10 minutes. Roll out as then as possible and cook on dry griddle. One minute on each side. Makes about 24 thin tortillas, 12 gorditas.

Pinto beans (Low Fat version)
1 lb pinto beans
water to cover
Rinse dry beans and pick out any pebbles or bad beans (they will rise when the beans are covered with water). Bring to rapid boil on the stove and boil 10 minutes. Carefully drain off liquid and add fresh water. Return to stove and bring to rapid boil, then reduce heat to simmer and cook covered until a few beans peel when blown on lightly on a spoon, about 2-3 hours. Drain and refrigerate until ready to use. Makes about 4C cooked beans (or so).

To make Refried beans:
2C cooked pinto beans
1Tbsp shortening or lard
dash salt
Heat shortening or lard in skillet and add beans, mashing with potato masher and stir-frying until heated through and beans are thick (add a little water if necessary to thin down). Be sure to leave some beans whole. Sprinkle with salt and stir.
To assemble burritos, spread bean mixture on warm tortilla, sprinkle with grated cheese and roll up by folding two sides of tortilla and rolling lengthwise. You will need about 1/2C cheese for 4 burritos.

Mexican Rice
1C rice
1 large tomato, chopped fine
1 jalapeno pepper, chopped fine
2C water
In microwave safe covered casserole, pour 2C liquid over rice and vegetables and nuke for 15 minutes on high covered. When done, fluff with fork and serve.

Cinnamon Crisps
4 Flour tortillas
4 Tsp sugar
1 Tsp cinnamon (or to taste)
cooking oil
Cut tortillas into strips and deep fry in oil until lightly browned and crisp. Sprinkle while hot with cinnamon sugar. Serve warm with a drizzle of honey, if desired.

Menu Two – Italian

Beef Onion Soup
Stuffed Spinach Manicotti

Beef Onion Soup
1 lb beef bones
water
salt to taste
1 onion
Roast beef bones (shin, ankle…some butchers sell them as “dog bones” or save bones from your roasts) in a 400F oven on a cookie sheet until darkened and marrow is brown. Put in soup pot and cover with water. Bring to boil and simmer to form broth, skimming off any foam that forms. Remove bones and add salt to taste and onion, sliced. Simmer until onion is softened. Serve. (Or cheat and use 1 boullion cube and one cup of water per serving, plus onion).

Stuffed Spinach Manicotti

Make shells in advance-
2 eggs
2C flour
water
Place eggs and flour in food processor and whirl for about 15 seconds. Drizzle in water while processor runs until flour mixture resembles coarse meal and will stick together into a dough ball without sticking to your hands. Feed through pasta maker (or roll out) until you have a long narrow strip. Cut into pieces slightly larger than the handle of a broom is around. (I use a clean broom handle). Wrap dough pieces around handle and give a slight pinch to form a tube around the handle. Hang on back of chairs to dry at least one hour. Makes about 1 dozen or so.

Filling-
1 pkg frozen spinach, drained, cooked, and squeezed dry
1/2C cottage cheese
1 slice bread, crumbed in food processor
1 egg
Combine cheese, spinach and egg and bread crumbs, and stuff into partially dried manicotti and place in well greased baking dish. Makes enough filling for about 8. Cost: 80¢
Topping-
1/2C canned spaghetti sauce
Pour topping over manicotti lightly, and bake covered at 350F for 30 minutes or until bubbly.

Menu Three – Southern

Beans and Greens
Southern Cornbread

Beans


1 lb white beans (or your favorite: pintos, black eyed peas, butter beans, whatever)
1 end chunk of ham or ham hock
water
Cover beans with water and bring to boil, pour off water and add fresh and return to stove (or soak overnight and pour off before cooking). Place ham or ham hock in with the beans and bring back to boil, cover, and turn the heat down. Boil several hours until beans are cooked and meat begins to fall off the bone. Remove bones and skin, and lid and boil a few minutes longer to form “bean gravy”. Serve with chow-chow, sliced onion or other condiment. Makes enough for 4 people for AT LEAST two meals.

Greens

This is my way, not the Southern way. I think cooking them the Southern way makes them bitter…to do that you put them whole in the saucepan pan with bacon drippings and a little water and cook until lifeless.
6C uncooked greens of choice (turnip, mustard, collard, or mixed), with tough stems removed, roll up and cut into slivers
2-3 Tbsp butter
Melt butter in large skillet and stir-fry greens in the butter until color changes and heated through. Serve with a bit of malt vinegar, if desired. Makes about 6, 1/2C servings

Cornbread


1C self-rising flour
1C cornmeal
1 egg
2 Tbsp oil, melted shortening, melted butter, or bacon drippings (through the crumbled bacon in, if you’ve got it!)
buttermilk
Combine all ingredients with enough milk to make a medium batter. Pour into well greased and hot cast iron skillet, bake at 350F until done about 1/2 hour. Makes 8, 3″ wedges.

Meal Four – Vegetarian

Zucchini Casserole
Banana Cream Pie

Zucchini Casserole

3 medium zucchini, sliced
1 tbsp water
1 medium onion, sliced
1 clove garlic
1 can (28 oz)diced tomatoes and liquid, or two large tomatoes chopped, but not seeded plus 1/2C water
1 tsp dried basil
1/2 tsp oregano
1/2 tsp garlic salt
1/4 tsp pepper
1-1/2C dried bread cubes (good use for stale bread)
1 tsp oregano
1/2 tsp garlic salt
1/2C parmesan cheese
1/2C shredded mozzarella (optional)

In non-stick skillet, place water and zucchini, cook t minutes until tender. Add onion and garlic and cook for one minutes, stirring constantly. Add tomatoes and their liquid and spices, including first 1/2 Tsp garlic salt. Simmer, uncovered for 10 minutes. Place in ungreased 13 X 9 X 2 inch dish, top with bread cubes, sprinkle with oregano and second 1/2 tsp garlic salt, sprinkle on parmesan cheese and bake covered at 305F for 20 minutes. Uncover and top with mozzarella, return to oven until mozzarella melts, about 10 minutes. Serves 6-8.

Banana Cream Pie
3/4C+3 Tbsp (divided) sugar
1/3C flour
1/4 tsp salt
2C milk
3 eggs, separated
2 Tbsp butter or margarine
1 tsp vanilla extract
3 bananas
1 pastry shell
shell:
2C flour
1/3C shortening
dash salt
cold water

In Food Processor, whirl shortening and flour together until it looks like cornmeal (about 15 seconds). Drizzle in ice cold water until mixture begins to form a dough. Roll out thinly and line ungreased 9 inch pie pan, crimping edges decoratively.
filling:
In a saucepan, combine sugar, flour and salt. Add milk and mix until smooth. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly until mixture thickens and it comes to a boil for two minutes (do no allow to scorch!) Remove from heat and stir in beaten egg yolks, slowly, by adding some hot liquid to the yolks and then pouring yolks into the hot mixture. Cook for two more minutes, stirring constantly, remove from the heat. Add butter and vanilla, cool slightly. Slice bananas into pie crust and pour filling over.
meringue:
Beat egg whites with an electric mixer until they form soft peaks, adding sugar gradually. Top pie with meringue being sure to spread to edges of crust. Bake at high heat 400F until meringue is set and l lightly browned. Makes 6-8 servings (Refrigerate any leftovers or if it will be served after reaching room temperature.) Cost: about 50¢ This pie recipe can be made without eggs, but will lose some richness. Suggest then that you cool it and top with non-dairy whipped topping instead of meringue.

Grocery Shopping During Times of Economic Distress

Nobody will dispute that with state of the economy times have become more lean. Grocery prices are

soaring, coupons are becoming less available, and the cash pool from which to shop is shrinking.

More People are looking for more strategies to stretch their dollars than ever in recent history.

Many people are turning to the practices of our ancestors during the great depression and it is no wonder why. Our grandparents knew how to stretch a dollar till there was no stretch left.

There are many things you can do to help your budget, such as planting a garden, and shopping locally, but there are some time tested practices that you can put to work now that will help your grocery fund go as far as possible.

Practice Rock Bottom Frugality

In this country and many others like it we have learned to live a lifestyle that so little resembles the the lifestyle of our ancestors, or others from poorer countries, that we just simply don’t know there is another way to live. Our perception of the bottom line is far higher than theirs would ever have been, and we have never challenged ourselves to go lower.

How many types of soaps, shampoo’s, and shaving creams do you have in your home? Could you make do with just one? Can you switch the liquid soap for bar? Have you done the math to see what paper products go the farthest for price? Better yet what paper products can you do without?

Does your child need that name brand sugar loaded cereal? or would oatmeal or cream of wheat for the whole family suffice?  Do you buy your chicken pre-cut or whole? Can you make that  chicken last for 3 or 4 meals?

When crisis hits your family will you be able to shave off to the bottom line or do the riches of your lifestyle seem more like necessities?

This is not to say we should never have luxuries, but we are talking depression style living here. Surviving and staying healthy become the priorities, rather than our comfort levels.

Challenge yourself to see what you can do without, take the time to read about the lifestyles of people during the depression and other cultures. you will be amazed at how rich your lifestyle really is, and how much can be pared off of it.

Couponing

I have never been a big fan of coupons, and I guess that will make me unpopular but here in a bit I will tell you why. Couponing has its uses to be sure. Getting things for free, or almost free, that you will use, is a great motivator, and is certainly a great way to save dollars.

Here is few questions to see if coupons are a good way for you to save money.

  • will you use the item for which the coupon is for? Many people purchase items simply because they are a good deal with coupon, and find that the item is not something they really needed or could use. If you paid anything at all for that item then it was NOT a good deal.
  • Can you get another product for less? I am not talking about just an identical product here. I am talking about anything that can substitute for that item. An example would be purchasing lunch meat with coupon for 2$ when in fact you can purchase other sandwich items much cheaper. (keep in mind here we are talking about economic distress. This assumes you need to go rock bottom on your frugality)
  • Can you get double or triple coupon offers and match them with sales? This is what it takes to be able to items for near free or free. If your store does not offer deals like this, than chances are good that your deals will not be better than the alternative.
  • Are the products healthy? Many coupon items are for processed foods that are neither nutritious, nor filling.  When in economic distress, the last thing you should be doing is buying overprocessed junk foods. Unless you are getting them for free, these foods should not be on your list. Ok I know this seems a bit harsh but consider this….  When your family is experiencing stress, and a large reduction in available funds for foods, you want to eat as nutritiously as you possibly can. Why? Because you can and will eat less. Your body is highly efficient machine, and if you fill it with foods that do not satisfy its nutritional requirements, it will crave more foods. If you feed it properly, and eat less, and save money. Food is not entertainment, or comfort, it is fuel. The more you view it like that, the better you are able to save money.

Often times you can get good deals that make your coupons worth using, but more often I find it more economical to buy foods as close to their original state as possible, and to buy store brands whenever possible. You get healthier food, meaning more bang for your buck, in larger quantities, for less than another item purchased with coupons.

Shopping at places with discounts

Store A offers you a coupon for $4 off a purchase of 40 dollars or more.

Store B entices you with .20 cents off a gallon of gas for every $50 spent.

Store C offers no discounts at all.

So which way should you go? Well it depends, and this is one of those places where your grocery fliers, select coupons, and price book will come in handy. Much also depends on how much gas you will be purchasing. DO THE MATH. If you are buying 10 gallons of gas, that $50 spent will net you a $2.00 savings. Sure you could buy more and get a bigger discount, but check your prices at this store, you might find they are much higher than Store A or Store C and the gas discount won’t justify the extra cost at the register.

Store C offers no discounts, but have you checked prices? will you save more than $2-4.00 shopping there?

Often stores will compensate their discounts with higher prices elsewhere.

That is where sale fliers come in handy. If you are selective about what you buy, you can save money at each of those stores, and still get your discounts.

Careful planning, price books, store fliers, and groceries lists will net you the greatest savings.

Savings lots of money at the grocery store requires careful planning, being willing to do without, and some extra effort. By gaining a different perspective, on what you eat, and how you purchase it, you can gain control of your spending, and eating habits. While it is always nice to have luxuries we have become too used to them in the western world, and as our economy struggles we are paying the price for that extravagance.