Hubby and I went on a date! Well sorta. The two of us went out to paint the town beige. We set off this morning and drove to the Ric Rac in Dawsonville Georgia. If you have never been there, you need to remedy that. Anyway, there is no way we out did the time spent by my sister and I when we go to the Ric Rac, but we gave it a valiant effort. We were there about 1.5 hours give or take. During the course of our stay we found a set of 6 heavy duty glasses for $1.50 for all. DH found three men's shirts in great shape. I think two were new. I found three shirts as well as a denim vest. I have to say, being 48 lbs lighter has made trying on clothes FUN!!!!! I actually found many more shirts, but settled on the three I choose. I had to have the vest though. It's fitted and cute as all get out. I also came away with a white toy chest.
It's in pretty good shape. Especially for $20! It's all real wood. None of that particle stuff. I'm gonna use my paint remover gun on it and see if I can stain and varnish it. Instead of a toy chest, it will soon be a trunk to store blankets and such in. I will post a picture after it's done. It will take up residence at the end of my bed where my makeshift Table stood before. That one didn't last too long, but then it wasn't supposed to. It also wasn't supposed to be sat on and my son didn't realize that soooo.
I found some other odds and ends, but the trunk is my main find. We also had lunch out. Not very frugal mind you, but a date none the less. We don't get these days too often so it was a great time out and a great day to do it. If you can believe it, It's 70 degrees outside today this Jan 14th. Welcome to Georgia.
So that's my day. How has yours been?
Saturday, January 14, 2017
Sunday, January 8, 2017
Just now have my head above water
As of last night I am finally caught up with what is listed in my Etsy shop. I put the final snaps on three little slip sets. Now my focus can change to making the little creative outfits I truly enjoy. I have a few of those in the works. My store stock fell to 13 items from 30 and that was with me continuing to add items. The last week before Christmas, however, I put the sewing away and focused on the holiday with the family.
I made 110 sales before New Years Eve this year. It is my first year on Etsy. Not to shabby. My bread and butter were the doll diapers. I sold 57 sets of those in various sizes. My goal for the coming year is to have 65 diaper sets of various sizes in stock going into next years Christmas season. That's 185 diapers ya'll. Yikes! In addition, I would like to have my store stock level be at about 50 if possible.
Lest you think all I would talk about is Etsy (My sons says I'm a spokesperson), I have ventured into a few normal things again. I've started making bread for us again. There for a while it was too crazy and I bought bread at a local bread thrift store near us. Still not as cheap as making bread, but cheaper than at the grocery store. I am bummed to hear the Sams is no longer carrying the 80 oz packages of regular honey. Now all they carry is the raw honey half that size, but the same price of 13.98. I know why, apparently raw honey is all the rage. I get that, but if you are baking with it, then you might as well use the regular. Once raw honey is heated up past 95 degrees, all those wonderful attributes go away. I use raw honey to make our cough syrup (Which is never heated up), but other than that, I use honey for bread and granola.
Here is the cough syrup recipe lest I forget:
COUGH SYRUP
3 TBS FRESH THYME- I use lemon thyme, but you can use whatever you have on hand. I just like the lemony taste with the honey.
1/3 CUP RAW HONEY
2 CUPS WATER
BRING THE 2 CUPS WATER TO BOIL. ADD THE THYME AND REMOVE FROM HEAT. LET STEEP AND COOL DOWN TO BELOW 95 DEGREES. POUR THE TEA THROUGH A STRAINER TO REMOVE THE LEAVES. ADD THE RAW HONEY TO THE TEA AND MIX WELL. YOU CAN ADD EXTRA LEMON JUICE OR CHOP A FRESH LEMON TO PUT IN THE JAR. STORE IN THE FRIDGE FOR UP TO 3 MONTHS.
The best thing about this cough syrup, is it is non toxic. You can give it to small children, just not children under two if you use raw honey. If you make this with regular honey, you can give it to any child, though many of the benefits are lost if you aren't using raw honey. The Thyme is still medicinal.
In addition to the few things I've managed to accomplish aside from sewing, I have managed to start some of my seeds for gardening in 2017. The tomatoes are doing fine. I have about 36-40 plants right now. I had to replant the broccoli and cabbage and a few snow peas. The cold weather stuff I'm hoping I can start hardening off soon. Soon will be the time of warmer weather. With a temp of 15 degrees this morning and a projected low tonight of 9, I will take whatever warms thoughts I can get.
So not a barn burner, but hopefully this post is a start back on a new year. How are things in your neck of the woods?
I made 110 sales before New Years Eve this year. It is my first year on Etsy. Not to shabby. My bread and butter were the doll diapers. I sold 57 sets of those in various sizes. My goal for the coming year is to have 65 diaper sets of various sizes in stock going into next years Christmas season. That's 185 diapers ya'll. Yikes! In addition, I would like to have my store stock level be at about 50 if possible.
Lest you think all I would talk about is Etsy (My sons says I'm a spokesperson), I have ventured into a few normal things again. I've started making bread for us again. There for a while it was too crazy and I bought bread at a local bread thrift store near us. Still not as cheap as making bread, but cheaper than at the grocery store. I am bummed to hear the Sams is no longer carrying the 80 oz packages of regular honey. Now all they carry is the raw honey half that size, but the same price of 13.98. I know why, apparently raw honey is all the rage. I get that, but if you are baking with it, then you might as well use the regular. Once raw honey is heated up past 95 degrees, all those wonderful attributes go away. I use raw honey to make our cough syrup (Which is never heated up), but other than that, I use honey for bread and granola.
Here is the cough syrup recipe lest I forget:
COUGH SYRUP
3 TBS FRESH THYME- I use lemon thyme, but you can use whatever you have on hand. I just like the lemony taste with the honey.
1/3 CUP RAW HONEY
2 CUPS WATER
BRING THE 2 CUPS WATER TO BOIL. ADD THE THYME AND REMOVE FROM HEAT. LET STEEP AND COOL DOWN TO BELOW 95 DEGREES. POUR THE TEA THROUGH A STRAINER TO REMOVE THE LEAVES. ADD THE RAW HONEY TO THE TEA AND MIX WELL. YOU CAN ADD EXTRA LEMON JUICE OR CHOP A FRESH LEMON TO PUT IN THE JAR. STORE IN THE FRIDGE FOR UP TO 3 MONTHS.
The best thing about this cough syrup, is it is non toxic. You can give it to small children, just not children under two if you use raw honey. If you make this with regular honey, you can give it to any child, though many of the benefits are lost if you aren't using raw honey. The Thyme is still medicinal.
In addition to the few things I've managed to accomplish aside from sewing, I have managed to start some of my seeds for gardening in 2017. The tomatoes are doing fine. I have about 36-40 plants right now. I had to replant the broccoli and cabbage and a few snow peas. The cold weather stuff I'm hoping I can start hardening off soon. Soon will be the time of warmer weather. With a temp of 15 degrees this morning and a projected low tonight of 9, I will take whatever warms thoughts I can get.
So not a barn burner, but hopefully this post is a start back on a new year. How are things in your neck of the woods?
Saturday, December 24, 2016
It was weird, but good
Many of you know that our family said goodbye to our dad, granddad, great-granddad, husband, uncle, and brother this past July. This was the first holiday season without him. First Thanksgiving and now Christmas, Daddy was missed. Daddy was fixture in our family and at every holiday gathering. This is usually how we found him.
The type of camera has changed over the years; from an 8 mm camera which blinded you (but still he would say "look at the camera!" and all we saw were spots), to the digital wonder you see before you, he felt it his personal duty to be the one to record our family history.
Daddy liked to talk politics and so every get together, even visits, you had to be well versed in current events. Regardless of how much you thought you knew, You would still walk away having learned something you never knew or never thought of before. Daddy was a walking encyclopedia and/or history book. "Well read" would be an understatement.
Daddy was big on quality control when it came to Christmas cookies, especially the cut out Christmas cookies. He knew he never had to worry. Mama knows cookies of all types. She definitely knows her way around an oven. He did, however use quality control as a good excuse for snagging a few.
We gathered this year and managed to have two successful holidays. We laughed, joked, opened gifts, hugged and just enjoyed being together. But it was weird. It's the best way to describe it. There were no political discussions. People took their own pictures, but there wasn't the hiding from the roving camera.
I missed a bear hug. Daddy gave great hugs. He was so big, he could just wrap you up.
We laughed, but the heartiest laugh over all was absent...for now.
What there was, though, love, family, and togetherness. Above all of that was Hope. There was something missing from the festivities this year...Daddy. But we celebrated, regardless, because we have hope. Hope given by a baby in a manger who is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords. One day we will have another Christmas celebration with all of those who have gone on before us, and I will hear that laughter and receive that hug again.
I say all of this to point out, good or bad, happy or sad, Christmas is Christmas. Not because of the gifts, songs, cards, or even people celebrating. Christmas is Christmas because of Christ. This year was hard, but possible because Christ is still Lord. Christ still chose to come. So we celebrate. I hope this Christmas finds you well. Thank you for all of your support this year and previous years. I wish for you the Merriest Christmas and the Happiest new year..
The type of camera has changed over the years; from an 8 mm camera which blinded you (but still he would say "look at the camera!" and all we saw were spots), to the digital wonder you see before you, he felt it his personal duty to be the one to record our family history.
Daddy liked to talk politics and so every get together, even visits, you had to be well versed in current events. Regardless of how much you thought you knew, You would still walk away having learned something you never knew or never thought of before. Daddy was a walking encyclopedia and/or history book. "Well read" would be an understatement.
Daddy was big on quality control when it came to Christmas cookies, especially the cut out Christmas cookies. He knew he never had to worry. Mama knows cookies of all types. She definitely knows her way around an oven. He did, however use quality control as a good excuse for snagging a few.
We gathered this year and managed to have two successful holidays. We laughed, joked, opened gifts, hugged and just enjoyed being together. But it was weird. It's the best way to describe it. There were no political discussions. People took their own pictures, but there wasn't the hiding from the roving camera.
I missed a bear hug. Daddy gave great hugs. He was so big, he could just wrap you up.
We laughed, but the heartiest laugh over all was absent...for now.
What there was, though, love, family, and togetherness. Above all of that was Hope. There was something missing from the festivities this year...Daddy. But we celebrated, regardless, because we have hope. Hope given by a baby in a manger who is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords. One day we will have another Christmas celebration with all of those who have gone on before us, and I will hear that laughter and receive that hug again.
I say all of this to point out, good or bad, happy or sad, Christmas is Christmas. Not because of the gifts, songs, cards, or even people celebrating. Christmas is Christmas because of Christ. This year was hard, but possible because Christ is still Lord. Christ still chose to come. So we celebrate. I hope this Christmas finds you well. Thank you for all of your support this year and previous years. I wish for you the Merriest Christmas and the Happiest new year..
Saturday, December 10, 2016
Still here
I know I've been absent of late. My doll clothes business is going great with the holiday season here. I'm figuring a lull after Dec 20th so things should get back to more normal. This was my first year having an Etsy shop so there's been a bit of a learning curve. Right now I'm at 91 sales. I'm hoping I can pass 100. In the new year during the slower times, I'm hoping to increase my inventory so next Christmas won't be quire so crazy. It's been fun seeing all of the places my creations get to go. I may not be well traveled, but my doll clothes are. I've been to London, Canada, and the Cayman Island internationally. I've been to New York, California, Virginia, Pennsylvania and many other states in the US. I have to say I've really enjoyed this experience. Here's a link to my store if you're interested.
https://www.etsy.com/shop/TeaTimeDollClothes?ref=hdr_shop_menu
The new year holds many things on my to do list. We're in a drought here and so I was wondering if I would have a garden. Lately we've had a good amount of rain so I may chance it. Especially if I can get my first priority accomplished for the year; Gutters on the house. We've never had them, but I want them and badly. The rain that runs off the house is eroding the ground at the base of my foundation. Not cool. We are finally planning on getting this resolved. When I do this, I'm making it where I can either steer the water to my garden, or catch the water for my garden. Either way, my garden should benefit.
Speaking of garden. Dec 23rd is the date I have set aside(if I am going to have a garden) to plant my seedlings to grow indoors. I've always started them later, like February, but my tomato plants end up setting fruit when it's getting too hot outside. I'm hopeful I can get a longer harvest time if my plants are bigger when I set them out. I'm also going to start my cold weather things like spinach, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbages, snow peas, and lettuce. These things, once mature, can take low temps as far down as 21 degrees, so if I start them indoors I can get a sooner and longer harvest. Again, when my cabbage family plants are setting fruit, it's getting too hot for them.
Other items on my to do list include having the few cracks in the foundation of the house patched (don't worry this isn't a weight bearing foundation), rebuilding the crawl space door under the house, Pressure washing the house, and repairing or replacing the decks : front, side, and back. This will be a work in progress and I make no promises as far as accomplishing all of these. I'm gonna look into it and see what I can do and what we can afford. Those are my plans however.
When the time comes, the garden will take priority, but there are a lot of things requiring our attention. For right now though, the gutters are top of the list. Everything else falls under that by necessity. No other repair will be worth it if the ground continues to erode.
With two week to go til Christmas and with Etsy requiring a lot of my time, I may not be back on here until the new year. If I can I will. So just in case I don't see you, I will wish you a MERRY CHRISTMAS! HAPPY HANUKKAH! HAPPY KWANZA! HAPPY HOLIDAYS! AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR.
https://www.etsy.com/shop/TeaTimeDollClothes?ref=hdr_shop_menu
The new year holds many things on my to do list. We're in a drought here and so I was wondering if I would have a garden. Lately we've had a good amount of rain so I may chance it. Especially if I can get my first priority accomplished for the year; Gutters on the house. We've never had them, but I want them and badly. The rain that runs off the house is eroding the ground at the base of my foundation. Not cool. We are finally planning on getting this resolved. When I do this, I'm making it where I can either steer the water to my garden, or catch the water for my garden. Either way, my garden should benefit.
Speaking of garden. Dec 23rd is the date I have set aside(if I am going to have a garden) to plant my seedlings to grow indoors. I've always started them later, like February, but my tomato plants end up setting fruit when it's getting too hot outside. I'm hopeful I can get a longer harvest time if my plants are bigger when I set them out. I'm also going to start my cold weather things like spinach, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbages, snow peas, and lettuce. These things, once mature, can take low temps as far down as 21 degrees, so if I start them indoors I can get a sooner and longer harvest. Again, when my cabbage family plants are setting fruit, it's getting too hot for them.
Other items on my to do list include having the few cracks in the foundation of the house patched (don't worry this isn't a weight bearing foundation), rebuilding the crawl space door under the house, Pressure washing the house, and repairing or replacing the decks : front, side, and back. This will be a work in progress and I make no promises as far as accomplishing all of these. I'm gonna look into it and see what I can do and what we can afford. Those are my plans however.
When the time comes, the garden will take priority, but there are a lot of things requiring our attention. For right now though, the gutters are top of the list. Everything else falls under that by necessity. No other repair will be worth it if the ground continues to erode.
With two week to go til Christmas and with Etsy requiring a lot of my time, I may not be back on here until the new year. If I can I will. So just in case I don't see you, I will wish you a MERRY CHRISTMAS! HAPPY HANUKKAH! HAPPY KWANZA! HAPPY HOLIDAYS! AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR.
Sunday, November 27, 2016
I didn't forget! Hobby Horse tutorial
I didn't forget! It took me a bit with the Thanksgiving holiday and my Etsy store taking my attention. I am happy to report I have this finished. It won't take as long as it took for me to post this. I would say you can finish this in a few hours as long as you have everything. I had to buy a dowel which cost me about $2. So here ya go:
First you want to choose your fabric. I used some scrap stretch denim I had on hand. Denim, Canvas, twill, etc; any sturdy fabric will do well. I put right sides together (that's the part that would be on the outside, the nice looking side). I drew out what could be termed as a horses head free handed on my fabric with some chalk. You can use anything to draw this. No one will see that anyway. Make it big enough where you will have a dece3nt sized head. Mine was about 12 inches from crown of head to snout. Once you draw it out, cut it out.
Sew your pieces together just along the top of the snout from about the bridge of his nose to where his eyes would be. Use a 5/8 inch seam allowance.
Lay your horses head flat with the right side looking up at you. See below. Press it flat. Pin ribbon, bias tape, or anything else you are planning on using for a bridle all the way across. Sew in place close to the edge of each side of the "Bridle"
Now you will do the same for the cross pieces of the "Bridle" to finish it up. Place these at about the half way point between top and bottom of the horses head. Again, sew along close to the edge on both sides of the "Bridle"
See below and you can see what I mean by close to the edges of each side.
Turn up the hem on the neck about 3/4 inch on each piece. I zig zag stitched the fabric before I turned it up to make sure it doesn't fray.
Now pin every thing back together lining up the "Bridle" as much as you can. See Below. Se up the rest of the horses head using a 5/8 inch seam allowance. Leave the neck open.
Trim your seam to about 1/4 of an inch all around the head. I had the nose a little too pointed so I trimmed it to make it a little more square. See below.
Pinch the seam together and clip a little "v" into the seam on all the areas that curve. It will be a row of "v's". Don't cross the stitching line. That would be bad. Makes a hole in your horse.
Turn right side out and press. Lookie below! It's taking shape!
I have a good sized bag of fabric scraps that I used to stuff this little guy. You can use stuffing as well if you have it, but the idea for me was to make this without having to buy anything if I can help it. Kinda shape as you stuff to make it look less lumpy and more horsey. Make sure you get the stuffing down into the nose area and any other tight fitting places. You will stop stuffing when it is full to the opening of the head. Leave the neck free of stuffing.
Now for the hair! Ahem...mane. I have a large yarn needle and can add hair by pulling it through the fabric and tying it off. If you don't have the ability to do this, you can sew the hair onto the head with a needle and thread or glue it on. Use fabric glue if you do. To do it the way I do, first you thread about a 9 inch piece of yarn onto your large needle. Poke it into the horse head pushing the needle and yarn all the way through. Leave yarn on either side of the "poke". Take both ends of yarn and tie it into a knot. Try to keep your "stitches" in rows moving from the center top of the head down on either side. It doesn't have to be perfect. It just needs to look like a head of yarn hair.
Once you have all your "Hair" in, he needs a hair cut. Trim the yarn pieces evenish.
I happen to have googly eyes left from a former craft, but you can use two buttons or even sew in eyes with embroidery thread or felt. You can also paint eyes on with fabric paint. I sanded the back of the googly eyes and, using a hot glue gun, glued the eyes onto the horse. I put glue on the horse and on the eye. Then smooshed them together.
To finish up I took a 1 inch diameter dowel and pushed it as far into the horses head as possible. Moving stuffing to one side as I pushed. I put the top of his head down on a table and pushed the dowel in. Then, using a hot glue gun, I ran a strip of hot glue on the inside neck and on the dowel. I squeezed the fabric around the strip of glue. Then on the outside, I took a staple gun that uses JT 21 staples and stapled the outside of the horses neck to the dowel, fitting the fabric around the dowel as I went. I covered the staples by tying a strip of red bias tape tightly around the neck wrapping twice before I tied it off. If you don't have staples, you could use small screws. The hot glue is for holding the horses head while you fasten it with the more secure fasteners (staples or screws). It won't last long other wise.
Here he is! looks kinda "Bieberish" I guess". Oh! I forgot! I used a button for his nose and a strip of yarn hot glues to his head for his mouth. Also, You can opt to paint or stain the dowel. I choose to spray it with clear acrylic.
Saturday, November 12, 2016
No money for Christmas, Now What?
I have always love Christmas. I put my tree up on Thanksgiving night after all the turkey eating festivities and to the wonderful tunes of traditional Christmas music. Love, love, love Christmas. Always have, always will I expect. My parents always made it such an event and I have always tried to do the same. Things were harder when the kids were little. Money was tighter then, but we still wanted the kids to have a good Christmas. Reminiscing about those times made me think about other young parents or other families going through a tight holiday or even an impossible holiday. What do you do? How do you celebrate this holiday without money?
First and foremost, just like the Who's down in Whoville, we know that Christmas is not about the gifts unless you count THE GIFT given. It's easy to wax philosophical when you don't have kids. Kids would argue with the Who's down in Whoville. Christmas is about gifts,and Santa. You have to be honest with them about what you guys are facing. As honest as their age will allow. I grew up with Santa coming down the chimney to bring us gifts. I know there are some out there who don't do Santa. If Santa doesn't make a yearly stop at your house, telling the kids money is tight will be easier. We always knew there may be times when money would be tight and we never wanted Santa to "not come". We did do Santa at our house. However, because we never wanted Santa to be affected by a financial down turn, Santa brought 1 gift and the stocking.Everything else was ours. That way if they only got 1 gift it was from Santa and they would understand Mom and Dad were low on money. Not telling kids can actually make them worry more. Kids are very perceptive and they'll know something is up. Letting them in on this can actually help them because it will enable them to "Help"make the Holiday special.
So once you have the whole "telling the kids" thing out of the way; my first step is easy and fun.
1) Decorate for Christmas- You don't need to buy anything new. Use what you already have on hand, but make it festive. Play Christmas music and pull out all the stops. If you can't afford lights, no problem. Decorations are just as pretty without. Plus, no fire hazard or cords to worry about. String popcorn, Make construction paper garland, Bring in some evergreen from outside. Go on a pine cone hunt for cones to place in a basket. Don't have a Christmas Tree? Make a Christmas table to place what gifts there are. You can put your evergreen from outside here and put out a few ornaments. You can use other ornaments around the house if there isn't a tree.You can hang out the stockings over the table in a triangle shape on the wall. Place your festive containers of baked goods there as well; like a bowl of individually wrapped popcorn balls tied with a ribbon. These are just some thoughts. The idea is to create a festive atmosphere. Pintrest has great ideas for Christmas crafts from things you may already have on hand.
2) Found Money- Okay, you've probably run the numbers and just thought, "there's just no way!". There is, but you may need to think outside the box. You may not be able to get what your normal budget is, but you might be able to get a little, Think along these lines
a) Do you or your spouse contribute to a 401k at work? Maybe suspend the contributions for the next 2 months. These are extremes I know, but we're thinking outside the box. You'll be able to restart contributions after the Holidays.
b) Would your family rather have internet and cable for the next two months or gifts on Christmas morning? If the later, cancel for the next two months. Many times your cable/ internet provider will be sending you deals to entice you back by the beginning of the year. I understand it means no internet connection. This is Black Belt frugality.
c) There maybe family or friends that gift you with gift cards or money for Christmas. If this happens, use the money for gifts under the tree. The time for you to be able to spend on yourself (which is great) can come later. Family doesn't need to know your situation if You aren't keen on sharing, but they can know that If your family participates in a gift exchange, they will be homemade gifts.
d) Do you have a skill or something you can make to sell that may raise a little money? Can you watch kids for someone to run errands? Help someone decorate their home for Christmas, bake Christmas cookies for someone too busy to do it their self? Let people know your available. Print you out some signs advertising you availability to help include rates too. Just 8x10 printer paper, nothing extravagant. You can hang it on community bulletin boards at post offices, grocery stores, schools (if they allow, ask first), your church, etc.
e) If you haven't already changed your tax withholding now's the time. It will be reflected on the next check that does come in. Take those deductions!
f) Last on the list, and Dave Ramsey would have my hide, but some companies will let you skip a payment around the holiday only paying interest. It is a last resort and not one I recommend lightly. Really think this one through. If you can avoid using this step, do so.
g) If you haven't already, call around for better car insurance rates. A lot of people will just keep the same insurance for years and years, never shopping around. I was one of those people. In one call I save $700 over a year! Crazy!
What money you free up this way will be gold. You want to use it very carefully. What is the one "Wow" gift your kids would want? What do you need to make this Christmas happen?
3) Christmas food with what's on hand- So you probably can't stock up right now because of the financial hardship. You can, however, work in a couple of extra basic items for Christmas. The great thing is, if you already have flour, sugar, butter or margarine, you can make goodies for the holidays. Add a bottle of corn syrup to your grocery shopping list and you can add making candies for stockings(see my recipe page for Butter Toffee Crunch). Chips, cokes, cereal, boxed anything, and anything pre-made needs to go off your list. Plan on making more casseroles or soups so you can free up the money you would use to buy a lot of meats. Basics. you are looking for basics. This will save you considerably on your grocery list and allow extra for purchasing things for holiday baking or allow you extra money to go toward a few small gifts or stocking stuffers. You can make your own biscuits and cornbread for making stuffing. Make your own cream soup for casseroles (see my recipe page for the cream soup mix recipe).
Every Christmas we have a Christmas breakfast as opposed to a Christmas dinner. The menu usually consists of Cinnamon Rolls, Sausage balls, Sausage croissants, Gorilla Bread, coffee, Hot Chocolate, and OJ, We end up munching on this pretty much all day. I make the cinnamon rolls, sausage (see my recipe page), sausage balls, Gorilla bread, and hot chocolate from scratch. I use the dough from the cinnamon rolls to make the Gorilla bread as well. The only extra thing I usually have to buy is the OJ, Crecent rolls, and cream cheese for the Gorilla bread. All of which could be omitted in a tight situation. Here are some other recipes for you to try that don't take a lot of effort or expense:
Dinner Rolls ( This is what I use for Cinnamon Rolls, Gorilla Bread, and Raisin Bread)
4- 4 1/2 cups flour
1 pkg of yeast (or 1 TBS)
1 cup milk
1/3 cup sugar
1/3 cup butter, shortening or margarine
1 ts salt
2 eggs
In a small saucepan, add your milk, butter, sugar, and salt. Heat milk mixture just until the butter is just about melted. While that heats up, put 2 cups flour and yeast in a large mixing bowl and mix together. Once milk is hot (120 degrees) dump into the flour mixture and add the two eggs. Mix all together for about 100 strokes. Stir in as much remaining flour as you can with a spoon. Dump out onto a floured counter. Knead dough 10-12 minutes adding just enough flour to keep dough from being sticky as you work. Once dough starts to tear, it's time to stop kneading (or if the timer goes off). Place dough in a greased bowl, turning once to coat. Cover, Let rise no more than 30 minutes. Punch down, shape into desired rolls. Place in the pan you will use. Cover and let rise until double.
Bake 350 degrees for 15-20 min or until golden on top. Or you can just put the whole thing in the bread machine; liquids first, sugar, salt, flour, yeast being last. Put on dough setting and go read a book. Then shape how you want weather it's dinner rolls, cinnamon rolls, or Gorilla bread
Don't have yeast? Try this for cinnamon rolls
3 cups self rising flour
1/3cup sugar
1/2 cup butter or margarine
1 cup milk
In a mixing bowl place your flour and sugar (mix well)and cut in the butter until it make a crumbly mix. Add milk and fold in until well mixed. Turn out onto a floured surface and knead exactly 8 times ( that's basically just to shape it well into a ball). Roll out thin(about 1/2 inch) and rectangular. Spread with melted butter and sprinkle liberally with cinnamon and sugar. Starting with the long side, roll up the dough and cut into "cinnamon rolls". Place in a baking pan and bake 10-15 minutes at 350 degrees. Once out, you can milk 1 cup powdered sugar with 2 Tbs milk and 1/2 tsp vanill extract and pour over the top.
Just had an interesting idea in trying this for Gorilla bread too. Hmmm. Yea, I am my own worst enemy when it comes to eating healthy. Hey! It's the holidays!
Hot Cocoa
1/3- 1/2 cup sugar
1/3 cup cocoa powder
4 cups milk or 1 1/3 cups dry milk powder plus water to make 4 cups
1/2 ts vanilla
dash salt
Mix your sugar, cocoa powder,and dash salt in a pan. Stir in the milk and continue stirring frequently while it warms to hot. A whisk works best for this, but if you don't have one, no big deal. Once hot, remove from heat and add the vanilla. Serve hot. If you have marshmallows, great. A small peppermint stick would be good too.
Easy Fudge
1/2 cup butter or margarine
1/3 cup water
1 box (16 oz) powdered sugar
1/2 cup dry milk powder
1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
dash salt
1/2 cup chopped nuts (if you have them)
In a small sauce pan heat together butter/margarine and water just to boiling, stirring to melt the butter/margarine. Sift together (whisk together) dry ingredients. Add the melted butter mixture. Stir til well blended. Stir in nuts if you have them. Turn into a buttered 8x8x2 inch pan. Chill several hours. Cut into squares.
You can make popcorn balls, peanut brittle, the fudge, toffee, etc for very little outlay of funds and these can go in stockings. If you have peppermint sticks, you can crush one or two (to taste) and stir in the fudge or sprinkle on top for a festive stocking stuffer.
4) Make gifts - This can be a difficult one if you don't really have a crafty side. I'm not gonna leave you hanging I swear! My next post will be a how to on making a hobby horse. I'm actually making one for my grandson for Christmas this year along with a Superman or Super hero cape. Neither of these will require a pattern. Do you have some scrap wood; ends of 2x4 or 2x2's? Cut these into different sizes and shapes. Sand them smooth and voila, Blocks to play with.
Brandy over at "The Prudent Homemaker" has a great series she does every November called "A gift a day" series. She has lots of easy to make ideas for all ages. Here is a link to her blog (which I read).
http://www.theprudenthomemaker.com/blog
She also has a "Sewing tutorial" on her main website.
http://www.theprudenthomemaker.com/
This lady provided Christmas for 5 kids during a time when income was non existent in her household. There are a lot of money saving ideas. Worth a look.
Pintrest is another great resource.
Here comes another recipe for Playdough!!!!
2 cups all purpose flour
1 cup salt
4 tsp cream of tarter
2 cups water with food coloring adding in whatever color you want
2 T oil
Mix all ingredients together in a pan. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until it forms a hard ball. I'll try to include more over the next few weeks.
Don't have fabric? I buy sheets (King size flat sheets in solid cottons or flannel) for fabric at thrift stores. If you can't afford that you can always sacrifice a sheet or two (done that before too). I mean how many sets does one person need! (smile). I will have another post soon containing some ways to save on sewing in general.
Don't have a Sewing machine? It is harder to do if that is the case, but not impossible. In a day of google we can pull up how to's on hand stitching and sew your items by hand.
There's no time to sew! My sister and I, many years ago, put up a sheet to block off an area of her house normally open to the rest of the family. We named it "Santa's Workshop" and all our creations were hidden from the crowd. We sewed in the evening. She sewed at night after I had gone to my home. To this day my niece says the sound of a sewing machine lulls her to sleep. It is comforting to her because she would go to sleep to the sound of my sister sewing for her family. Aren't good memories great?!
Speaking of Thrift stores! They, as well as Yard Sales can be resources for Christmas gifts. Books can be found there cheap that are in great condition. Other items can be found that may need a little TLC to be like new again. Great thing is in this age of Google there are a slew of "How To" videos or articles to help you take a thrift store find and revamp it to be like new. Little secret. I have never bought a brand new video game or DVD. Nope. I always purchased them from either Amazon or a thrift store. In fact when my kids were young, and we didn't have a lot of money for gaming systems, we bought a used system for all three kids together. It wasn't the latest and greatest, but the kids loved it. I found a Playmobile Castle with all the characters at a yard sale for $5 for the whole thing!
I realize this may not be the coolest Christmas, at least on paper, but it can still be a great Christmas. I hope some of these ideas can help. I will try to add to them over the next few weeks. The idea is to be able to still celebrate even in the midst of financial hardship.
First and foremost, just like the Who's down in Whoville, we know that Christmas is not about the gifts unless you count THE GIFT given. It's easy to wax philosophical when you don't have kids. Kids would argue with the Who's down in Whoville. Christmas is about gifts,and Santa. You have to be honest with them about what you guys are facing. As honest as their age will allow. I grew up with Santa coming down the chimney to bring us gifts. I know there are some out there who don't do Santa. If Santa doesn't make a yearly stop at your house, telling the kids money is tight will be easier. We always knew there may be times when money would be tight and we never wanted Santa to "not come". We did do Santa at our house. However, because we never wanted Santa to be affected by a financial down turn, Santa brought 1 gift and the stocking.Everything else was ours. That way if they only got 1 gift it was from Santa and they would understand Mom and Dad were low on money. Not telling kids can actually make them worry more. Kids are very perceptive and they'll know something is up. Letting them in on this can actually help them because it will enable them to "Help"make the Holiday special.
So once you have the whole "telling the kids" thing out of the way; my first step is easy and fun.
1) Decorate for Christmas- You don't need to buy anything new. Use what you already have on hand, but make it festive. Play Christmas music and pull out all the stops. If you can't afford lights, no problem. Decorations are just as pretty without. Plus, no fire hazard or cords to worry about. String popcorn, Make construction paper garland, Bring in some evergreen from outside. Go on a pine cone hunt for cones to place in a basket. Don't have a Christmas Tree? Make a Christmas table to place what gifts there are. You can put your evergreen from outside here and put out a few ornaments. You can use other ornaments around the house if there isn't a tree.You can hang out the stockings over the table in a triangle shape on the wall. Place your festive containers of baked goods there as well; like a bowl of individually wrapped popcorn balls tied with a ribbon. These are just some thoughts. The idea is to create a festive atmosphere. Pintrest has great ideas for Christmas crafts from things you may already have on hand.
2) Found Money- Okay, you've probably run the numbers and just thought, "there's just no way!". There is, but you may need to think outside the box. You may not be able to get what your normal budget is, but you might be able to get a little, Think along these lines
a) Do you or your spouse contribute to a 401k at work? Maybe suspend the contributions for the next 2 months. These are extremes I know, but we're thinking outside the box. You'll be able to restart contributions after the Holidays.
b) Would your family rather have internet and cable for the next two months or gifts on Christmas morning? If the later, cancel for the next two months. Many times your cable/ internet provider will be sending you deals to entice you back by the beginning of the year. I understand it means no internet connection. This is Black Belt frugality.
c) There maybe family or friends that gift you with gift cards or money for Christmas. If this happens, use the money for gifts under the tree. The time for you to be able to spend on yourself (which is great) can come later. Family doesn't need to know your situation if You aren't keen on sharing, but they can know that If your family participates in a gift exchange, they will be homemade gifts.
d) Do you have a skill or something you can make to sell that may raise a little money? Can you watch kids for someone to run errands? Help someone decorate their home for Christmas, bake Christmas cookies for someone too busy to do it their self? Let people know your available. Print you out some signs advertising you availability to help include rates too. Just 8x10 printer paper, nothing extravagant. You can hang it on community bulletin boards at post offices, grocery stores, schools (if they allow, ask first), your church, etc.
e) If you haven't already changed your tax withholding now's the time. It will be reflected on the next check that does come in. Take those deductions!
f) Last on the list, and Dave Ramsey would have my hide, but some companies will let you skip a payment around the holiday only paying interest. It is a last resort and not one I recommend lightly. Really think this one through. If you can avoid using this step, do so.
g) If you haven't already, call around for better car insurance rates. A lot of people will just keep the same insurance for years and years, never shopping around. I was one of those people. In one call I save $700 over a year! Crazy!
What money you free up this way will be gold. You want to use it very carefully. What is the one "Wow" gift your kids would want? What do you need to make this Christmas happen?
3) Christmas food with what's on hand- So you probably can't stock up right now because of the financial hardship. You can, however, work in a couple of extra basic items for Christmas. The great thing is, if you already have flour, sugar, butter or margarine, you can make goodies for the holidays. Add a bottle of corn syrup to your grocery shopping list and you can add making candies for stockings(see my recipe page for Butter Toffee Crunch). Chips, cokes, cereal, boxed anything, and anything pre-made needs to go off your list. Plan on making more casseroles or soups so you can free up the money you would use to buy a lot of meats. Basics. you are looking for basics. This will save you considerably on your grocery list and allow extra for purchasing things for holiday baking or allow you extra money to go toward a few small gifts or stocking stuffers. You can make your own biscuits and cornbread for making stuffing. Make your own cream soup for casseroles (see my recipe page for the cream soup mix recipe).
Every Christmas we have a Christmas breakfast as opposed to a Christmas dinner. The menu usually consists of Cinnamon Rolls, Sausage balls, Sausage croissants, Gorilla Bread, coffee, Hot Chocolate, and OJ, We end up munching on this pretty much all day. I make the cinnamon rolls, sausage (see my recipe page), sausage balls, Gorilla bread, and hot chocolate from scratch. I use the dough from the cinnamon rolls to make the Gorilla bread as well. The only extra thing I usually have to buy is the OJ, Crecent rolls, and cream cheese for the Gorilla bread. All of which could be omitted in a tight situation. Here are some other recipes for you to try that don't take a lot of effort or expense:
Dinner Rolls ( This is what I use for Cinnamon Rolls, Gorilla Bread, and Raisin Bread)
4- 4 1/2 cups flour
1 pkg of yeast (or 1 TBS)
1 cup milk
1/3 cup sugar
1/3 cup butter, shortening or margarine
1 ts salt
2 eggs
In a small saucepan, add your milk, butter, sugar, and salt. Heat milk mixture just until the butter is just about melted. While that heats up, put 2 cups flour and yeast in a large mixing bowl and mix together. Once milk is hot (120 degrees) dump into the flour mixture and add the two eggs. Mix all together for about 100 strokes. Stir in as much remaining flour as you can with a spoon. Dump out onto a floured counter. Knead dough 10-12 minutes adding just enough flour to keep dough from being sticky as you work. Once dough starts to tear, it's time to stop kneading (or if the timer goes off). Place dough in a greased bowl, turning once to coat. Cover, Let rise no more than 30 minutes. Punch down, shape into desired rolls. Place in the pan you will use. Cover and let rise until double.
Bake 350 degrees for 15-20 min or until golden on top. Or you can just put the whole thing in the bread machine; liquids first, sugar, salt, flour, yeast being last. Put on dough setting and go read a book. Then shape how you want weather it's dinner rolls, cinnamon rolls, or Gorilla bread
Don't have yeast? Try this for cinnamon rolls
3 cups self rising flour
1/3cup sugar
1/2 cup butter or margarine
1 cup milk
In a mixing bowl place your flour and sugar (mix well)and cut in the butter until it make a crumbly mix. Add milk and fold in until well mixed. Turn out onto a floured surface and knead exactly 8 times ( that's basically just to shape it well into a ball). Roll out thin(about 1/2 inch) and rectangular. Spread with melted butter and sprinkle liberally with cinnamon and sugar. Starting with the long side, roll up the dough and cut into "cinnamon rolls". Place in a baking pan and bake 10-15 minutes at 350 degrees. Once out, you can milk 1 cup powdered sugar with 2 Tbs milk and 1/2 tsp vanill extract and pour over the top.
Just had an interesting idea in trying this for Gorilla bread too. Hmmm. Yea, I am my own worst enemy when it comes to eating healthy. Hey! It's the holidays!
Hot Cocoa
1/3- 1/2 cup sugar
1/3 cup cocoa powder
4 cups milk or 1 1/3 cups dry milk powder plus water to make 4 cups
1/2 ts vanilla
dash salt
Mix your sugar, cocoa powder,and dash salt in a pan. Stir in the milk and continue stirring frequently while it warms to hot. A whisk works best for this, but if you don't have one, no big deal. Once hot, remove from heat and add the vanilla. Serve hot. If you have marshmallows, great. A small peppermint stick would be good too.
Easy Fudge
1/2 cup butter or margarine
1/3 cup water
1 box (16 oz) powdered sugar
1/2 cup dry milk powder
1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
dash salt
1/2 cup chopped nuts (if you have them)
In a small sauce pan heat together butter/margarine and water just to boiling, stirring to melt the butter/margarine. Sift together (whisk together) dry ingredients. Add the melted butter mixture. Stir til well blended. Stir in nuts if you have them. Turn into a buttered 8x8x2 inch pan. Chill several hours. Cut into squares.
You can make popcorn balls, peanut brittle, the fudge, toffee, etc for very little outlay of funds and these can go in stockings. If you have peppermint sticks, you can crush one or two (to taste) and stir in the fudge or sprinkle on top for a festive stocking stuffer.
4) Make gifts - This can be a difficult one if you don't really have a crafty side. I'm not gonna leave you hanging I swear! My next post will be a how to on making a hobby horse. I'm actually making one for my grandson for Christmas this year along with a Superman or Super hero cape. Neither of these will require a pattern. Do you have some scrap wood; ends of 2x4 or 2x2's? Cut these into different sizes and shapes. Sand them smooth and voila, Blocks to play with.
Brandy over at "The Prudent Homemaker" has a great series she does every November called "A gift a day" series. She has lots of easy to make ideas for all ages. Here is a link to her blog (which I read).
http://www.theprudenthomemaker.com/blog
She also has a "Sewing tutorial" on her main website.
http://www.theprudenthomemaker.com/
This lady provided Christmas for 5 kids during a time when income was non existent in her household. There are a lot of money saving ideas. Worth a look.
Pintrest is another great resource.
Here comes another recipe for Playdough!!!!
2 cups all purpose flour
1 cup salt
4 tsp cream of tarter
2 cups water with food coloring adding in whatever color you want
2 T oil
Mix all ingredients together in a pan. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until it forms a hard ball. I'll try to include more over the next few weeks.
Don't have fabric? I buy sheets (King size flat sheets in solid cottons or flannel) for fabric at thrift stores. If you can't afford that you can always sacrifice a sheet or two (done that before too). I mean how many sets does one person need! (smile). I will have another post soon containing some ways to save on sewing in general.
Don't have a Sewing machine? It is harder to do if that is the case, but not impossible. In a day of google we can pull up how to's on hand stitching and sew your items by hand.
There's no time to sew! My sister and I, many years ago, put up a sheet to block off an area of her house normally open to the rest of the family. We named it "Santa's Workshop" and all our creations were hidden from the crowd. We sewed in the evening. She sewed at night after I had gone to my home. To this day my niece says the sound of a sewing machine lulls her to sleep. It is comforting to her because she would go to sleep to the sound of my sister sewing for her family. Aren't good memories great?!
Speaking of Thrift stores! They, as well as Yard Sales can be resources for Christmas gifts. Books can be found there cheap that are in great condition. Other items can be found that may need a little TLC to be like new again. Great thing is in this age of Google there are a slew of "How To" videos or articles to help you take a thrift store find and revamp it to be like new. Little secret. I have never bought a brand new video game or DVD. Nope. I always purchased them from either Amazon or a thrift store. In fact when my kids were young, and we didn't have a lot of money for gaming systems, we bought a used system for all three kids together. It wasn't the latest and greatest, but the kids loved it. I found a Playmobile Castle with all the characters at a yard sale for $5 for the whole thing!
I realize this may not be the coolest Christmas, at least on paper, but it can still be a great Christmas. I hope some of these ideas can help. I will try to add to them over the next few weeks. The idea is to be able to still celebrate even in the midst of financial hardship.
Saturday, November 5, 2016
Now's the time to re-stock
There are many times of the year when you can get certain grocery items at a good price. For example, Holidays such as Labor day, 4th of July, and Memorial Day can yield good prices on meats, condiments, chips, etc. This time of year, however, is what I call the mother load of good prices. That is for the things I normally use. Thanksgiving and Christmas are great times to be on the lookout for staple items; flour, sugar, butter, oil, spices, chocolate, nuts (especially). In addition turkeys and hams are cheaper. Produce such as celery, onion, white potatoes, and sweet potatoes are on sale. Now is the time for me to stock up on things I normally use, but can't grow here. So far this season, I've managed to get butter for $1.74 lb. Sour Cream for .39 for 16 oz. Del Monte canned peaches for .89 a can. Del Monte diced tomatoes (love these) for .49 a can. I know I grow tomatoes here, but my better boys didn't do so well this year. My Roma tomatoes were for sauce, and I do have plenty of that. Russet potatoes for .15 cents a lb. Onions for .26 cents a lb, and last but not least, milk chocolate chips for 1.49 a bag. I'm still waiting on some other things to hit the sale price before I stock up.
The great things is these things will store!
Store onions in a way where they don't touch each other and in a cool dry place. They'll keep a good long while If you're so inclined, you can go crazy and chop all of the onions to freeze or can. I can be that crazy, and have been before, but not this time. If you do want to pre chop them, I suggest you use a food processor. Once a batch is chopped, remove the lid and walk away to allow the gases the onions emit to dissipate. This will cut down significantly on crying. I usually package mine in 1 cup portions because that's what most recipes call for.
Store potatoes, both white and sweet, in a cool dry place. Don't leave them in the bag even if the bag has holes for ventilation. This allows more air to circulate around them and will also allow you to see and that might be bad when you dump out the bag. Out of 30 lbs of potatoes bought yesterday, I found one that, while not bad, had a small spot on it that may get bad down the road. I took it out and will use it first.
Celery can be chopped and frozen without having to do anything else to it. I mean WASH it first, but then chop and freeze for use in soups and casseroles.
Butter can be frozen, but, without freezing, will last a good long while on a refrigerator shelf.
Sour cream as well as yogurt can be stored upside down in the fridge for a good long time, even past the sell by date.
Flour can be put in the freezer for a few days and then stored in an airtight container in a pantry. You can also store flour with 1 bay leaf.
Sugar can be stored with a piece of Terracotta to keep it from hardening. I've never really had a problem with sugar hardening, and I store lots for a long time.
Buy an extra turkey (or two). Go ahead and cook it, de-bone it, and store in freezer bags in the freezer. You can use this anywhere chicken is called for in a recipe. Slow cook the leftover turkey bones with some onion, carrots, celery, 1 tbs vinegar and salt to make broth you can store in the freezer or can for later use. Buy an extra ham or two. Cut it into chunks and store in freezer bags in the freezer. Set the ham bone aside in its own freezer bag to use in your next batch of veggie or bean soup.
Can goods will definitely keep. In addition to veggies this season, canned goods on sale will more than likely be; canned fruit, evaporated milk, sweetened condensed milk, sweet potatoes, cream soups, and canned pie filling. Stock up!
Nuts will keep as well, but can be stored in the freezer if needed.
You don't have to be stocking up for an end of the world scenario. You can, however, be stocking up to
a) Make the most of these great prices
b) Have a good supply in your pantry in the event of an illness or a layoff
c) Have a supply on hand to be able to bless someone you know in need
So there you have it! Make the most of the deals! Make your list. Check it twice! Just...a...save some for me!
The great things is these things will store!
Store onions in a way where they don't touch each other and in a cool dry place. They'll keep a good long while If you're so inclined, you can go crazy and chop all of the onions to freeze or can. I can be that crazy, and have been before, but not this time. If you do want to pre chop them, I suggest you use a food processor. Once a batch is chopped, remove the lid and walk away to allow the gases the onions emit to dissipate. This will cut down significantly on crying. I usually package mine in 1 cup portions because that's what most recipes call for.
Store potatoes, both white and sweet, in a cool dry place. Don't leave them in the bag even if the bag has holes for ventilation. This allows more air to circulate around them and will also allow you to see and that might be bad when you dump out the bag. Out of 30 lbs of potatoes bought yesterday, I found one that, while not bad, had a small spot on it that may get bad down the road. I took it out and will use it first.
Celery can be chopped and frozen without having to do anything else to it. I mean WASH it first, but then chop and freeze for use in soups and casseroles.
Butter can be frozen, but, without freezing, will last a good long while on a refrigerator shelf.
Sour cream as well as yogurt can be stored upside down in the fridge for a good long time, even past the sell by date.
Flour can be put in the freezer for a few days and then stored in an airtight container in a pantry. You can also store flour with 1 bay leaf.
Sugar can be stored with a piece of Terracotta to keep it from hardening. I've never really had a problem with sugar hardening, and I store lots for a long time.
Buy an extra turkey (or two). Go ahead and cook it, de-bone it, and store in freezer bags in the freezer. You can use this anywhere chicken is called for in a recipe. Slow cook the leftover turkey bones with some onion, carrots, celery, 1 tbs vinegar and salt to make broth you can store in the freezer or can for later use. Buy an extra ham or two. Cut it into chunks and store in freezer bags in the freezer. Set the ham bone aside in its own freezer bag to use in your next batch of veggie or bean soup.
Can goods will definitely keep. In addition to veggies this season, canned goods on sale will more than likely be; canned fruit, evaporated milk, sweetened condensed milk, sweet potatoes, cream soups, and canned pie filling. Stock up!
Nuts will keep as well, but can be stored in the freezer if needed.
You don't have to be stocking up for an end of the world scenario. You can, however, be stocking up to
a) Make the most of these great prices
b) Have a good supply in your pantry in the event of an illness or a layoff
c) Have a supply on hand to be able to bless someone you know in need
So there you have it! Make the most of the deals! Make your list. Check it twice! Just...a...save some for me!
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