Friday, March 23, 2012

Medicinal Herb Garden ~ A Real Solution

I often am asked about where to start with herbs or veggies.... and who to purchase what from.  As you know from my numerous posts I am a solution person.  I don't dwell on gear or gadgets but try and provide useful information that you can use TODAY. I wanted to be able to say go buy XYZ ~ from ABC for this excellent price.  However, the more I looked the solutions out there are way overpriced. Yes I said overpriced.  Seed Vaults... Really?  Most of those are alot of airspace!

So after much soul searching I have partnered with an heirloom organic supplier to provide an herb garden at a really affordable price.  These are the seeds I am using in our gardens.  These are the seeds you can count on.  For $29.00 you can plant these 18 Medicinal Herbs.  I am not a doctor, I encourage you to get a good book on herbal medicinal remedies you will find these herbs are an excellent basis for healing.

The real deal ~ Medicinal Herb Garden, (18 seed packets), organic: A set of herb seeds that would embody the foundation for a diverse medicinal garden that would contribute to every aspect of health and well-being, and making this set of seeds available to people at a very low cost, so that more would find it possible to buy them and realize the benefits.. 100% USDA certified organic seeds from our garden to yours.  There are 18 packets in all, packed in earth-friendly recycled paper .
  1. Astragalus,
  2. Holy Basil (Kapoor Tulsi),
  3. Gobo Burdock,
  4. Mixed Calendula,
  5. German Chamomile,
  6. Echinacea purpurea,
  7. Elecampane,
  8. Evening Primrose,
  9. Brown Flax,
  10. Lemon Balm,
  11. Marshmallow,
  12. Official Motherwort,
  13. Stinging Nettles,
  14. Cayenne Pepper,
  15. Garden Sage,
  16. Official Valerian,
  17. Wood Betony
  18. Yarrow
Available to you for $29.00 plus $5.55 shipping total cost $34.55
This is barely over our cost. And, you don’t have to choose.   Check other sites, Check with other preppers ~ this is really the greatest BANG for your buck.  If you're interested, I accept paypal and some web genius will be setting up my site so you can click and order but if you want them now you can email me: prepperswife (at) GMail (dot) com that is also the email for paypal payments.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Start today ~ Step up your game

Start today.
Start small. Go big,
Whatever you do ~ Do SOMETHING to prepare 
Easiest: Store water 3 gal per person per day remember to stockpile water for your pets (even goldfish need fresh water)  Preps for free? Maybe.  Look around your house what do you already have? Make a list of your everyday items and how they can pull double duty in an emergency List what else you could use items for, and where in your house that item is...  If it lives in the junk drawer ~ dump the junk make it a prep drawer a place where you can stash stuff you might need in a hurry in an emergency..

Already prepping?  Step up your game today... what have you been putting off?  Make a list of a few things you can do and get done this weekend.  Use today to plan, and this weekend to act on your list.  Hardcore preppers ~ where are you?  Time to evaluate your prepping goals and move forward.  Do you have all your bases covered? There's always something you can be doing, but don't forget to make time for life.  You can be prepared for your world to go sideways and still have fun.    Knowledge is power ~ reading this post give yourself some credit that counts as prepping research in my book.

March Madness ~ We're checking in on getting checkups so we know where everyone is physically.  This is living and prepping. What have I been putting off?  PLANTING.  So today we're planting all our seedlings and starting our medicinal herb garden.  On a Thursday... this is living AND prepping.... Our kids are involved too, they love playing in the dirt.

What are you doing to be more prepared in case your whole world goes sideways?


Friday, March 16, 2012

Friday Funny





Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Vinegar in Pet & Car Care

Preppers need to stock items that have multiple uses.  It only makes sense.  I don't know of anything as versitle in our stockpile as vinegar.  Do you use vinegar to its fullest potential? Vinegar kills the flu virus and seasons salads... did you know you can use vinegar in Cleaning, Gardening, Health, Laundry, Kitchen, Pet Care, and Car Care? We have looked at each over the past couple of days, today let's finish our look at vinegar by exploring both pet care and car care benefits.

Let's start with pet care.  Humans aren't the only ones that can enjoy the many uses for white distilled vinegar-even our four-legged friends can benefit.

  1. Give your dog a gleaming coat by spraying or rubbing with a solution of 1 cup white distilled vinegar to 1 quart water. As a bonus, you save the cost of an expensive shine product used on show animals. (Works even on a horse!)
  2. Keep a dog from scratching its ears by wiping them out regularly with a soft cloth dipped in undiluted white distilled vinegar.
  3. Remove skunk odors by wiping down the animal with a 50-50 solution of white distilled vinegar and water, followed by a plain-water rinse. Repeat if necessary.
  4. Discourage a cat from sitting on a certain windowsill or other surface, or from scratching upholstery, by spraying vinegar on the item. Test on small area to be sure there won’t be discoloration.Keep a cat out of a garden area by placing paper, a cloth, or sponge there that has been soaked in white distilled vinegar.
  5. Get rid of the deposits and water lines that form in aquariums and fish bowls by wiping them down with white distilled vinegar and following with a good rinse. For stubborn deposits, soak for several hours or overnight.
  6. Keep the birdbath clean by scrubbing it often with undiluted white distilled vinegar. Rinse well.
  7. Keep flies away from horses or other outdoor pets by spraying a mixture of water and white distilled vinegar around the area where the animals are.
  8. Remove cat litter odor by pouring ½ inch of white distilled vinegar in the empty litter box. Let it stand for 20 minutes, swish it around, then rinse with cold water.
  9. Kill fleas by adding a little white distilled vinegar to your dog or cat’s drinking water.
  10. Stop a dog from barking with a spray bottle filled with equal amounts of water and white distilled vinegar. When the dog barks, spray the vinegar water in its direction but not in the face.
  11. Remove pet odors. After cleaning, cover the area with baking soda. Let it stand overnight. The next day vacuum up the baking soda and wash the area with white distilled vinegar. Rinse and let dry.
  12. Cats hate the smell of vinegar. If you have a cat that is marking its territory around your house, spray the area with white distilled vinegar then rinse with a hose.
  13. Stop cats from fighting with each other with a spritz of a white distilled vinegar and water solution.
  14. Prevent cats from eating your plants by spraying the leaves with a solution of white distilled vinegar and water.
Now let's look at car care... Because white distilled vinegar has so many wonderful uses as a cleaning agent, it’s no surprise that it is also perfect to use on some of your bigger cleaning projects—namely automobiles. The next time you’re washing your car, shift into high gear and really make it shine with a little vinegar.


 
  1. Keep car windows frost-free overnight in winter by coating them with a solution of 3 parts white distilled vinegar to 1 part water.
  2. Polish car chrome with full-strength white distilled vinegar on a soft cloth.Remove unwanted decals and bumper stickers by covering them with a cloth soaked in white distilled vinegar, or by repeatedly spraying them with full-strength white distilled vinegar. They should peel off in a couple of hours.
  3. Rid the windshield wipers of road grime by wiping them with a vinegar-soaked cloth.
  4. Remove the leftover odor after a rider has been carsick by leaving a bowl of white distilled vinegar overnight on the floor.
  5. Get rid of hard water stains on your car with a rinse made from 3 parts soft water to one part white distilled vinegar.
  6. Wipe vinyl upholstery with a mixture of equal parts white distilled vinegar and water.
  7. Remove winter road salt residue on car carpeting by spraying with a mixture of equal parts white distilled vinegar and water, then blot with a soft towel.
  8. Remove the hazy film that builds up on inside windows by spraying with white distilled vinegar.
  9. Remove dirt and stains from car carpeting with a mixture of half white distilled vinegar and half water.
  10. When doing car maintenance, soak rusty bolts and screws with white distilled vinegar to make them easier to remove.
  11. Loosen chewing gum stuck to carpeting or upholstery by soaking it in white distilled vinegar.
  12. Create an all-purpose window cleaner with a few ounces of distilled vinegar in a quart of water.
  13. Give leather upholstery an extra shine by cleaning it with hot white distilled vinegar and rinsing with soapy water.
  14. Make your car extra shiny by adding a few drops of white distilled vinegar to your bucket of water.

 So now let me ask you this, after 5 days of reviewing the value of vinegar ~ how many gallons are you going to store in your preps?


Vinegar & Laundry

Preppers need to stock items that have multiple uses.  It only makes sense.  I don't know of anything as versitle in our stockpile as vinegar.  Do you use vinegar to its fullest potential? Vinegar kills the flu virus and seasons salads... did you know you can use vinegar in Cleaning, Gardening, Health, Laundry, Kitchen, Pet Care, and Car Care? We'll look at each over the next couple of days, today let's look at it's value in the LAUNDRY.  Looking for brighter whites or bolder colors? The answer just might be white distilled vinegar. It’s a safe and inexpensive way to boost the power of your detergent and add a little more muscle to your stain remover. With vinegar in the mix, your clothes have never looked better.
  1. Prevent lint from clinging to clothes by adding 1/2 cup white distilled vinegar to the wash cycle.
  2. To remove soap residue that makes black clothes look dull use white distilled vinegar in your final rinse.
  3. Get stained white socks and dingy dishcloths white again. Add 1 cup white distilled vinegar to a large pot of water, bring it to a rolling boil and drop in the articles. Let soak overnight.
  4. Some stains on clothing and linens can be soaked out using equal parts milk and vinegar.
  5. Before washing a mustard stain, dab with white distilled vinegar.
  6. Attack spaghetti, barbecue, or ketchup stains with a white distilled vinegar and water solution.
  7. Remove perspiration odor and stains on clothing, as well as those left by deodorants, by spraying full-strength white distilled vinegar on underarm and collar areas before tossing them into the washing machine.
  8. Forgot that you left wet laundry in the machine and it now smells moldy? Pour a few cups of white distilled vinegar in the machine and wash the clothes in hot water. Then run a normal cycle with detergent.
  9. Remove smoky odors from clothes by filling the bathtub with very hot water and 1 cup white distilled vinegar. Hang the garments above the steaming water and shut the door so the steam can penetrate the fibers.
  10. Keep the steam iron clean and in good working order by getting rid of mineral deposits in steam vents and spray nozzles. Fill the water chamber with a solution of equal parts white distilled vinegar and distilled water. Set it in an upright position and let it steam for about 5 minutes. When the iron is cool, rinse the tank with water, refill and shake water through the vents onto an old cloth. Test before using.
  11. Remove scorch marks from an iron by rubbing it with a warmed-up solution of equal parts white distilled vinegar and salt. If that doesn’t work, use a cloth dampened with full-strength white distilled vinegar.
  12. Remove musky smells from cotton clothes by sprinkling them lightly with white distilled vinegar and then pressing them.
  13. Get water and salt stains off shoes and boots by wiping them down with a solution of equal parts white distilled vinegar and water.
  14. Give patent leather shoes and bags a better shine by wiping them down with vinegar.
  15. Get cleaner laundry! Add about 1/4 cup white distilled vinegar to the last rinse. The acid in white distilled vinegar is too mild to harm fabrics, yet strong enough to dissolve the alkalies in soaps and detergents. Besides removing soap, white distilled vinegar prevents yellowing, acts as a fabric softener and static cling reducer, and attacks mold and mildew.
  16. Eliminate manufacturing chemicals from new clothes by adding 1/2 cup vinegar to the water.
  17. Remove soap scum and clean the hoses of your washing machine with white distilled vinegar. Periodically run the machine with only a cup of white distilled vinegar in it—nothing else added to the wash cycle.
  18. Bring out bright colors by adding 1/2 cup white distilled vinegar to the rinse cycle.
  19. Fluff up wool or acrylic sweaters (hand- or machine-washed) and rid them of soap smell with 1/2 cup white distilled vinegar in the last rinse water.
Tomorrow we'll finish our exploration of white distilled vinegar and its many uses when we examine how it improve pet care & car care.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Vinegar & the Garden

Preppers need to stock items that have multiple uses.  It only makes sense.  I don't know of anything as versitle in our stockpile as vinegar.  Do you use vinegar to its fullest potential? Vinegar kills the flu virus and seasons salads... did you know you can use vinegar in Cleaning, Gardening, Health, Laundry, Kitchen, Pet Care, and Car Care? We'll look at each over the next couple of days, today let's look at it's value in the GARDEN...White distilled vinegar provides many safe and natural ways to protect and enhance the garden.
  1. Kill weeds and grass growing in unwanted places by pouring full-strength white distilled vinegar on them. This works especially well in crevices and cracks of walkways and driveways.
  2. Give acid-loving plants like azaleas, rhododendrons, hydrangeas and gardenias a little help by watering them with a white distilled vinegar solution now and again. A cup of white distilled vinegar to a gallon of tap water is a good mixture.
  3. Stop ants from congregating by pouring white distilled vinegar on the area.
  4. Discourage cats from getting into the kids’ sandbox with white distilled vinegar.
  5. Preserve cut flowers and liven droopy ones by adding 2 tablespoons white distilled vinegar and 1 teaspoon sugar to a quart of water in a vase.
  6. Get rid of the water line in a flower vase by filling it with a solution of half water and half white distilled vinegar, or by soaking a paper towel in white distilled vinegar and stuffing it into the vase so that it is in contact with the water line.
  7. Clean out stains and white mineral crusts in clay, glazed and plastic pots by soaking them for an hour or longer in a sink filled with a solution of half water and half white distilled vinegar.
  8. Remove crusty rim deposits on house planters or attached saucers by soaking them for several hours in an inch of full-strength white distilled vinegar.
  9. Clean a birdbath by scrubbing it often with undiluted white distilled vinegar. Rinse well.
  10. Get rid of rust on spigots, tools, screws or bolts by soaking the items overnight or for several days in undiluted white distilled vinegar.
  11. Neutralize garden lime by adding white distilled vinegar to the area.
  12. Avoid skin problems after working in the garden by rinsing your hands in white distilled vinegar.
  13. Increase the acidity of soil by adding white distilled vinegar to your watering can.
  14. Eliminate anthills by pouring in white distilled vinegar.
  15. Cure a cement pond before adding fish and plants by adding one gallon of white distilled vinegar to every 200 gallons of water. Let sit three days. Empty and rinse thoroughly.
  16. Sanitize outdoor furniture and picnic tables with a cloth soaked in white distilled vinegar.
  17. Kill slugs by spraying them with a mixture of 1 part water and 1 part white distilled vinegar.
  18. To catch moths use a mixture of 2 parts white distilled vinegar and 1 part molasses. Place mixture in tin can and hang in a tree.
  19. Keep rabbits from eating your plants. Put cotton balls soaked in white distilled vinegar in a 35mm film container. Poke a hole in the top and place in the garden.
  20. Remove berry stains on your hands by rubbing them with white distilled vinegar.
  21. Clean plastic patio furniture with a solution of 1 tablespoon white distilled vinegar to 1 gallon of water.
  22. Wash fresh vegetables with a mixture of 1 tablespoon of white distilled vinegar in 1 ½ quarts of water.
  23. When cleaning an outdoor fountain, soak the pump in white distilled vinegar to remove any mineral deposits.
  24. Clean a hummingbird feeder with white distilled vinegar—soap or detergent can leave behind harmful residue.
 Tomorrow we'll look at the benefits of using vinegar in the laundry

Monday, March 5, 2012

Vinegar in the kitchen

Preppers need to stock items that have multiple uses.  It only makes sense.  I don't know of anything as versitle in our stockpile as vinegar.  Do you use vinegar to its fullest potential? Vinegar kills the flu virus and seasons salads... did you know you can use vinegar in Cleaning, Gardening, Health, Laundry, Kitchen, Pet Care, and Car Care? We'll look at each over the next couple of days, today let's look at it's value in the kitchen. Enjoying a salad with a tangy vinaigrette dressing is one of the most popular ways to use vinegar in the kitchen. But that’s just the beginning! Regular and flavored vinegars are versatile recipe ingredients that add flavor and distinction, and can also contribute to good health.

  1. To make basic vinaigrette salad dressing use 1 part white distilled vinegar to 4 parts oil.
  2. Make creamy vinaigrette by adding some plain or whipped cream to a mixture of 1 part white distilled vinegar to 3 parts oil.
  3. Tenderize meat with white distilled vinegar. Use it in marinades or when slow cooking any tough, inexpensive cuts of meat.
  4. When poaching eggs, add a little white distilled vinegar to the water. The whites stay better formed.
  5. For extra tenderness with boiling ribs or stew meat add a tablespoon of white distilled vinegar.
  6. To add a zesty new taste to fresh fruits such as pears, cantaloupe, honeydew, or others, add a splash of rice or balsamic vinegar. Serve immediately to prevent the fruit from becoming mushy.
  7. Freshen wilted vegetables by soaking them in cold water containing a spoonful or two of white distilled vinegar.
  8. When boiling or steaming cauliflower, beets or other vegetables, add a teaspoon or two of white distilled vinegar to the water to help them keep their color. This will also improve their taste, and reduce gassy elements. This also works when cooking beans and bean dishes.
  9. Make pasta less sticky and reduce some of its starch. Add just a dash of white distilled vinegar to the water as it cooks.
  10. Give some extra zest to your white sauce by adding 1/2 teaspoon of white distilled vinegar.
  11. Try cider or malt white distilled vinegar instead of ketchup with french fries—that’s how the British like to eat them. Either one is also great on fish or any fried or broiled meat.
  12. Remove kitchen odors that come from burnt pots or when cooking certain foods by boiling a small amount of water with 1/4 cup white distilled vinegar so that the steam circulates throughout the room.
  13. Make onion odors disappear from your hands by rubbing with white distilled vinegar.
  14. Add moistness and taste to any chocolate cake—homemade or from a box—with a spoonful of white distilled vinegar.
  15. To keep frosting from sugaring add a drop of white distilled vinegar. It will also help keep white frosting white and shiny.
  16. Make perfect, fluffy meringue by adding a teaspoon of white distilled vinegar for every 3 to 4 egg whites used.
  17. Perk up any can of soup or sauce with a teaspoon of red or white wine vinegar.
  18. Eliminate the greasy taste in food cooked in a deep fryer by adding a dash of white distilled vinegar.
  19. If you’ve added too much salt to a recipe, add a spoonful of white distilled vinegar and sugar to try correcting the taste.
  20. Keep molded gelatin desserts and salads from sagging or melting in the summer heat by adding a teaspoon of white distilled vinegar for each box of gelatin used.
  21. When making tuna salad add a dash of any herb-flavored white distilled vinegar.
  22. Turn out great rice by adding a teaspoon of white distilled vinegar to the boiling water.
  23. To make the perfect picnic potato salad dressing combine 1 cup mayonnaise, 3 tablespoons white distilled vinegar, 1 tablespoon sugar, and 1/2 teaspoon salt.
  24. Olives or pimentos covered with white distilled vinegar can be kept almost indefinitely if refrigerated.
  25. To keep eggs from cracking when boiling add a tablespoon or two of vinegar to water.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Vinegar & Health

Yesterday we looked at the attributes of white distilled vinegar and its cleaning properties.  Today we'll look at how we can use vinegar for better health.  White distilled vinegar is something good for you on the inside and the outside. The next time you’re not feeling well, consider trying a home remedy that is made with vinegar.


 
--Source: AOL Health and "100 SIMPLE THINGS YOU CAN DO TO PREVENT ALZHEIMER'S AND AGE-RELATED MEMORY LOSS" by Jean Carper. Copyright © 2010 
Stave off high blood sugar and other Alzheimer's risk factors with a daily dose of vinegar According to researchers, there is evidence that vinegar sinks risk factors that may lead to memory decline and dementia -- namely, high blood sugar, insulin resistance, diabetes and prediabetes, and weight gain. While vinegar does not confront Alzheimer's directly, studies at Arizona State University have found that vinegar can curb appetite and food intake, helping prevent weight gain and obesity. Swedish investigators agree. In one study, downing two or three tablespoons of vinegar with white bread cut expected rises in insulin and blood sugar by about 25 percent. Pour on the vinegar -- add it to salad dressings, eat it by the spoonful, even mix it into a glass of drinking water. Any type of vinegar works because it's the acidity that counts.
  1. Stop insect stings and bites from itching by dabbing them with a cotton ball saturated with undiluted white distilled vinegar.
  2. Soothe sunburn with a spray of white distilled vinegar, repeating as often as you like. Ice-cold white distilled vinegar will feel even better, and may prevent blistering and peeling.
  3. For cuts and scrapes, use white distilled vinegar as an antiseptic.
  4. Get rid of foot odor by washing feet well with antiseptic soap daily, then soaking them in undiluted cider vinegar for 10 minutes or so. Remember that cotton socks aid odor control more effectively than wool ones.
  5. Clean a hairbrush by soaking in a white distilled vinegar solution.
  6. Tone facial skin with a solution of equal parts white distilled vinegar and water.
  7. If commercial aftershaves cause rashes and itching, try using undiluted white distilled vinegar as an aftershave lotion.
  8. Lighten body freckles (not facial freckles) by rubbing on full-strength white distilled vinegar.
  9. Eliminate bad breath and whiten your teeth by brushing them once or twice a week with white distilled vinegar.
  10. Make nail polish last longer. Wipe fingernails with cotton balls dipped in white distilled vinegar before putting on nail polish.
Tomorrow we'll explore vinegar in the kitchen...

 

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Vinegar is a MUST have item...

Preppers need to stock items that have multiple uses.  It only makes sense.  I don't know of anything as versitle in our stockpile as vinegar.  Do you use vinegar to its fullest potential? Vinegar kills the flu virus and seasons salads... did you know you can use vinegar in Cleaning, Gardening, Health, Laundry, Kitchen, Pet Care, and Car Care? We'll look at each over the next couple of days, today let's look at it's value in cleaning.  White distilled vinegar is a popular household cleanser, effective for killing most mold, bacteria, and germs, due to its level of acidity. Cleaning with white distilled vinegar is a smart way to avoid using harsh chemicals. You’ll also be glad to know that it is environmentally friendly and very economical.  
  1. Vinegar has several unique properties which give it the ability to kill the flu virus with the correct mixing and application.
    For one, vinegar has a PH of 2.1 whereas the microbial strain of flu virus that is carried within the blood has a PH of 6.6. Anytime PHs that drastic are mixed a chemology is observed of 3.4. Chemology concerns mixing and primarily mixing between two polar microbial liquids in a blank status stasis. Any chemology over 3.0 results in a cataclysmic destruction of the urvanostrical virus
  2. To shine chrome sink fixtures that have a lime buildup, use a paste made of 2 tablespoons salt and 1 teaspoon white distilled vinegar.
  3. Make your own scouring cleanser by combining 1/4 cup baking soda with 1 tablespoon liquid detergent. Add just enough white distilled vinegar to give it a thick but creamy texture.
  4. Clean counter tops and make them smell sweet again with a cloth soaked in undiluted white distilled vinegar.
  5. Clean and deodorize a drain by pouring in 1 cup baking soda, then one cup hot white distilled vinegar. Let this sit for 5 minutes or so, then run hot water down the drain.
  6. Deodorize the garbage disposal by pouring in 1/2 cup baking soda and 1/2 cup hot white distilled vinegar. Let sit for 5 minutes then run hot water down the disposal.
  7. Deodorize and clean the garbage disposal with white distilled vinegar ice cubes. Make them by freezing full-strength white distilled vinegar in an ice cube tray. Run several cubes down the disposal while flushing with cold water.
  8. Clean the microwave by mixing 1/2 cup white distilled vinegar and 1/2 cup water in a microwave-safe bowl. Bring it to a rolling boil inside the microwave. Baked-on food will be loosened, and odors will disappear. Wipe clean.
  9. Clean the shelves and walls of the refrigerator with a half-and-half solution of water and white distilled vinegar.
  10. Cut the grime on the top of the refrigerator with a paper towel or cloth and full-strength white distilled vinegar.
  11. Avoid the bad smell when you heat up a newly cleaned oven by using a sponge soaked in diluted white distilled vinegar for the final rinse.
  12. To clean a grease splattered oven door window, saturate it with full-strength white distilled vinegar. Keep the door open for 10 to 15 minutes before wiping with a sponge.
  13. Remove soap buildup and odors from the dishwasher by pouring a cup of white distilled vinegar inside the empty machine and running it through a whole cycle. Do monthly.
  14. To prevent good glassware from getting etched by minerals, wash then spray with full-strength white distilled vinegar. Give the glasses a hot water rinse before letting them dry or drying them with a towel.
  15. For cloudy glassware, soak paper towels or a cloth in full-strength white distilled vinegar and wrap around the inside and outside of the glass. Let sit awhile before rinsing clean.
  16. Get rid of lime deposits in a tea kettle by adding 1/2 cup white distilled vinegar to the water and letting it sit overnight. If more drastic action is needed, boil full-strength white distilled vinegar in the kettle a few minutes, let cool and rinse with plain water.
  17. Remove mineral deposits from coffee makers with white distilled vinegar. Fill the water reservoir with 1 cup or more of white distilled vinegar and run it through a whole cycle. Run it once or twice more with plain water to rinse clean. (Check the owners’ manual first.)
  18. Remove stains from coffee and teacups by scrubbing them gently with equal parts of salt (or baking soda) and white distilled vinegar. Rinse clean.
  19. For stained and smelly plastic food containers, wipe them with a cloth dampened with white distilled vinegar.
  20. Remove odors from a lunch box by placing inside a slice of bread that has been soaked in white distilled vinegar. Leave overnight.
  21. Remove ugly film in narrow-necked glass jars, flower vases, and bottles by letting undiluted white distilled vinegar sit in them for a few hours. Add a little rice or sand and shake vigorously to loosen stubborn stains. Repeat if necessary.
  22. Easily clean your mini blinds by wearing pair of white cotton gloves.  Dip gloved fingers into a solution of equal parts white vinegar and warm tap water, and run your fingers across both sides of each blind.
  23. To clean tarnished brass, copper, and pewter, use a paste with equal amounts of white distilled vinegar and table salt.
  24. Make a metal cleanser by adding enough white distilled vinegar to 2 tablespoons of cream of tartar to make a paste. Rub it on and let it dry on the surface. Wash it off and dry with a soft cloth.
  25. Polish brass and copper with a mixture of 2 tablespoons of ketchup and 1 tablespoon white distilled vinegar. Rub it on with a clean cloth until dry and shiny.
  26. Remove dark stains on an aluminum pot by boiling a mixture of 1 cup white distilled vinegar and 1 cup hot water.
  27. Discourage ants by spraying undiluted white distilled vinegar outside doorways and windowsills, around appliances and wherever you find the pests coming in.
  28. Get rid of fruit flies by setting out a small dish of undiluted white distilled vinegar.
  29. Clean the wheel of a can opener using white distilled vinegar and an old toothbrush.
  30. Remove the smell of spoiled food from a refrigerator by first rinsing the area with soap and water. Spray surfaces with full-strength white distilled vinegar and wipe them down with a damp cloth or sponge. Fill some containers with baking soda and place inside. Close the door and leave for a few days.
  31. Wipe grease off exhaust fan grids, the inside of your oven, or anywhere grease gathers with a sponge soaked in white distilled vinegar.
  32. To make cleaning the grill easier, spray a solution of half water and half white distilled vinegar on the cooking surface.
  33. To remove a label, decal, or price tag, cover with a cloth soaked in white distilled vinegar. Leave the cloth on overnight and the label should slide off.
  34. Renew sponges and dishrags by placing them in just enough water to cover them. Then add 1/4 cup white distilled vinegar. Let them soak overnight.
  35. Get rid of calcium deposits on faucets by soaking a cloth or paper towel in white distilled vinegar and wrapping the area tightly. Let this sit for a couple of hours or overnight.
  36. Remove soap buildup from faucets by scrubbing them with a solution of 1 part salt to 4 parts white distilled vinegar.
  37. Rid a faucet of lime deposits by tying a plastic bag containing 1/2 to 1/3 cup of white distilled vinegar around it and leaving it there for two or three hours. If mineral deposits don’t wipe off, scrubbing with an old toothbrush should complete the job.
  38. Shine colored porcelain sinks by scouring them with undiluted white distilled vinegar.
  39. Rinse away soapy film on countertops with a solution of white distilled vinegar and water.
  40. Clean grout by letting full-strength white distilled vinegar sit on it for a few minutes and scrubbing it with an old toothbrush.
  41. Kill germs all around the bathroom with a spray of full-strength white distilled vinegar. Wipe clean with a damp cloth.
  42. To remove grime, mildew, and scum from the tub, tile, shower curtain or door, wipe with undiluted white distilled vinegar. Rinse with water.
  43. Spray shower doors with full-strength white distilled vinegar after you’ve squeegeed the glass, or before you step in and turn on the water. It will help release the hard water deposits so they don’t remain on the glass.
  44. Mix up an inexpensive tile cleaner by adding 1/2 cup baking soda, 1 cup white distilled vinegar, and 1 cup ammonia to a gallon of warm water.
  45. Get rid of stubborn bathtub film by wiping it with white distilled vinegar and then scouring with baking soda.
  46. Soak a sponge or loofah overnight in a strong white distilled vinegar and water solution to remove dirt and slime. Rinse several times with cold water and let air dry (in the sun if possible).
  47. Clean shower door tracks by filling them with white distilled vinegar and letting it sit for a few hours. Pour hot water into the tracks and wash and scrub away the scum with a toothbrush.
  48. To clean a scummy showerhead, pour 1/2 cup baking soda and 1 cup white distilled vinegar into a sandwich bag and tie it around the showerhead. Let this set for an hour after the bubbling has stopped. Remove the bag and then turn on the water.
  49. Deodorize the toilet bowl by allowing 3 cups white distilled vinegar to sit in it for about a half hour before flushing.
  50. To make the toilet bowl sparkle, pour in a cup or more of diluted white distilled vinegar and let it sit several hours or overnight. Scrub well with the toilet brush and flush.
  51. Freshen air in the bathroom by spraying into the air a solution of 1 teaspoon baking soda, 1 tablespoon white distilled vinegar, and 1 cup water.
  52. Get a shining finish on a no-wax vinyl or linoleum floor by cleaning it with a solution of one cup white distilled vinegar for every gallon of water.
  53. Apply full-strength white distilled vinegar directly to tough linoleum stains. Leave it on for 10 to 15 minutes before wiping it up. If that doesn’t work, apply white distilled vinegar again and then sprinkle some baking soda over the white distilled vinegar. Scrub the area with a brush or sponge. Rinse clean with water.
  54. For an economical and environmentally friendly floor cleaner, mix a solution of 3 drops dishwashing liquid to 1/3 part white distilled vinegar, 1/3 part alcohol, and 1/3 part water. Spray sparingly and mop for a fast clean-up.
  55. Some carpet stains can be removed with a paste of 2 tablespoons white distilled vinegar and 1/4 cup salt or baking soda. Rub into the carpet stain and let dry. Vacuum up the residue the next day. (Always test on an out-of-sight part of the carpet first).
  56. Bring out the color in carpet by brushing it with a solution of 1 cup white distilled vinegar for every gallon of water. (Always test on an out-of-sight part of the carpet beforehand).
  57. To reduce soap bubbles in a steam cleaner add about 1/4 cup white distilled vinegar. Use the same amount in the rinse water to remove detergent residue and make carpets stay fresh longer.
  58. Wash indoor/outdoor carpet with a solution of 1 cup white distilled vinegar in 1 bucket of warm water. Scrub using a brush or a broom and then hose off.
  59. Clean up pet accidents by first blotting up the area and then adding a white distilled vinegar-and-water solution. Blot until it is almost dry. Then sprinkle baking soda over the area and let it dry. Vacuum up the residue the next day.
  60. Create your own window cleaning solution by combining 1/2 cup non-sudsy ammonia, 1 cup white distilled vinegar, and 2 tablespoons cornstarch in a gallon of water.
  61. Remove the wax residue left by commercial window cleaners with a solution of 2 cups water, 1 cup white distilled vinegar and 1 teaspoon of liquid soap or detergent.
  62. To remove paint from windows try using undiluted, hot white distilled vinegar. Give the solution time to soften the paint before removing with a razor edge tool.
  63. To remove paint splatters from windows apply full-strength white distilled vinegar with a clean paintbrush.
  64. Get rid of mildew, dust, and stale odors by wiping down walls with undiluted white distilled vinegar on a cloth or a sponge mop.
  65. Clean woodwork and walls with a mixture of 1 cup white distilled vinegar, 1 cup baking soda, 1/2 cup ammonia and 1 gallon warm water. Wipe on with a sponge or damp—not wet—towel.
  66. Clean wood paneling with a solution of 1/4 cup olive oil, 1/2 cup white distilled vinegar, and 2 cups warm water. Wipe on with a soft cloth.
  67. Remove wallpaper easily by using a paint roller to wet the surface very thoroughly with a solution of equal parts white distilled vinegar and hot water. Or spray on until saturated.
  68. Get decals off walls or doors by letting undiluted white distilled vinegar soak into them for several minutes before trying to peel them off. Repeat if necessary.
  69. Remove white water rings from wood with a solution of equal parts white distilled vinegar and vegetable oil. Rub with the grain.
  70. Remove fireplace soot and grime with undiluted white distilled vinegar. Use a brush to scrub and a towel to blot up the wetness and dirt.
  71. Clean fireplace glass doors with a solution of 1 part white distilled vinegar to 2 parts water. Spray or wipe on, then wipe clean with a dry cloth.
  72. To kill germs, spray full-strength white distilled vinegar on doorknobs and then wipe them dry.
  73. Remove the smell of a dead mouse or other rodent (after removing all animal remnants) by wiping down the area with either white distilled vinegar or bleach. Then place a fabric softener sheet in the area to remove any lingering odors.
  74. Never use white distilled vinegar on marble. The acid can damage the surface.
  75. Before painting old concrete, clean with full-strength white distilled vinegar. Let it air dry.
  76. Clean hardened paint brushes by simmering them in a pot with white distilled vinegar. Soak them first for an hour before bringing the white distilled vinegar to a simmer. Drain and rinse clean.
  77. Remove mud and stains from plastic, fiberglass, or aluminum sports equipment by applying a paste of 1 part white distilled vinegar to 3 parts baking soda. Wipe off with soapy water and rinse with clear water.
  78. Clean your grill by spritzing white distilled vinegar over wadded up aluminum foil and scrubbing the grill vigorously with it.
  79. To remove film in glass baby bottles, fill with equal parts hot water and white distilled vinegar. Let sit for at least an hour. Scrub with a bottle brush.
  80. To clean and disinfect baby toys add a good-sized splash of white distilled vinegar to soapy water.
  81. Clean vinyl baby books or board books by wiping with white distilled vinegar. Wipe clean with a damp sponge or cloth.
  82. Clean scissors that have become sticky (after cutting tape, for instance) with a cloth dipped in undiluted white distilled vinegar.
  83. Clean and deodorize urine on a mattress with a white distilled vinegar and water solution. Then sprinkle the area with baking soda and let dry. Brush or vacuum the residue after it is dry to the touch.
  84. Shine pennies by soaking them for a couple of hours or overnight in a glass or bowl of undiluted white distilled vinegar.  
 Tomorrow we'll explore vinegar and its uses in our health...

Friday, March 2, 2012

Durable Foods

Did you know these foods were so durable?

1. HONEY  Pure honey is as durable as it is delicious; it keeps safe indefinitely. Honey may change color or crystallize over time, but that won't make it unsafe.  Keep it fresh: Store in a cool area and keep tightly closed. Revive crystallized honey by placing the opened jar in warm water and stirring until dissolved.

2. RICE  White, wild, arborio, jasmine and basmati rice all have an indefinite shelf life, when kept free from contaminants. Keep it fresh: Store in a cool, dry area. Once opened, place rice in a sealed airtight container or place original package in a resealable heavy-duty freezer bag. For added protection, store rice in the refrigerator or freezer.

3. SUGAR  White, brown or powdered — sugar never spoils because it doesn’t support bacterial growth. The real challenge is to prevent it from becoming rock-hard.  Keep it fresh: Keep sugar in a cool, dry area. To prevent sugar from hardening after opening, place it in an airtight container or cover the original package in a heavy-duty plastic bag and seal tightly.

4. HARD LIQUOR  Whipping up some penne alla vodka and a pitcher of cocktails? Distilled spirits —vodka, rum, whiskey, gin, tequila and the like — don’t spoil, even after opening. The taste and aroma may fade gradually, but it’ll take ages before you notice.
Keep it fresh: Store in cool, dark area, away from direct heat or sunlight. Keep bottle tightly closed when not in use.

5. MAPLE SYRUP  Pure maple syrup not only makes your pancakes special, it adds tremendous flavor to a whole range of dishes. Best of all, it keeps forever in the freezer.  Keep it fresh: Refrigerate after opening. For long-term storage, freeze maple syrup in airtight plastic containers.

6. PURE VANILLA EXTRACT  pure vanilla extract keeps forever, so you’ll never have to waste a drop. Keep it fresh: Store in cool, dark cupboard and keep tightly closed when not in use.

7. DISTILLED WHITE VINEGAR  A reliable standby in everything from marinades to salad dressings, distilled white vinegar will remain virtually unchanged as the years pass by. Keep it fresh: Store vinegar a cool, dark area and keep tightly capped after each use.

8. CORNSTARCH  A must-have for thickening sauces, gravies, and puddings. Cornstarch will keep indefinitely if it's kept dry and free from contaminants. Keep it fresh: Store in cool, dry area; keep package tightly closed between uses.

9. SALT  From the basic table variety to fancier versions like kosher and sea, salt is a flavor enhancer that never spoils or goes stale.
Keep it fresh: Store in cool, dry area.

10. Dry Pasta & Wheat  were found in the pyramids!