Monday, May 9, 2016

5 Tricks to make Cooking and Cleanup Easier




You may have seen my earlier post on the effectiveness of Norwex in speeding up cleanup time... but there are a few additional tricks I've come across recently that I think may be helpful as well... -


1. Have a sharp slicing knife. You've probably heard from multiple tv chefs that the most valuable possession in a kitchen is a sharp knife. They say that because it's TRUE. A good knife will save you enormous amounts of time and effort. You will be able to slice through hard-shelled fruits/veggies easily; thinly slice raw meats evenly; slice up freshly baked anything without mashing, etc. 
Don't go too cheap, a good knife will be worth every cent. It is one kitchen utensil that will instantly decrease prep time on any given meal.

2. Start off with a sink full of hot, soapy water. I know, we all hope and pray with every dish we dirty during meal prep that "Kitchen Fairies" really exist and that they'll be popping in right after the meal to start on the cleanup... I'm very sorry to burst any soap bubble of hope that may be floating by, but that's just not going to happen. And lets face it, no one will be volunteering to scrub those pots and pans after dinner either... So, cinch up those apron strings and start making your life easier by filling the kitchen sink up with hot, soapy water right from the start, that way when you've used a dish for mixing or a pot for boiling, you can quickly rinse and throw it in the soapy water to soak. Then when you have a couple extra seconds while you're waiting on a burner to heat up, of the entree to cook on one side, you can grab that dish and give it a quick wash and rinse. You will be that much closer to getting off your feet after dinner.

3. Nonstick pans are invaluable. I've recently purchased a Gotham steel frying pan, and although it doesn't allow me the freedom of not using cooking spray or butter as shown on tv... it does make the clean up of anything fried or sautéed a breeze. And it cuts down on dishes used when whipping ingredients together as I can throw all of the ingredients together in the same pan I'll be cooking them in. In addition to nonstick pans I use aluminum foil and parchment paper (up to 420F, *be careful that it's oven-safe) for almost anything I put in the oven. Rewarming rice, baking fish, pizza, or cookies - put down aluminum foil/parchment paper first and then for cleanup - just throw it away! What could be easier than that? And did you know that they make disposable liners for crockpots? Best. invention. ever. Your melted chocolate almond bark has never been easier to clean up!!

4. Plan meals with similar ingredients that can all be prepped at the same time.  For instance, if you plan tacos for one night and omelets for the next, you can slice up (with your newly purchased sharp chef knife I might add...;) green onions, peppers, jalapeños, tomatoes, olives, avocados, etc... enough for both meals at one time. Then have the throw together meal on an evening you're cramped for time.

5. Use baggies or storage containers as serving dishes when possible. I know "classy," right? But in all reality if you don't have time or energy to do the after meal dishes, and you go to a drive-thru instead - guess what your family will be eating out of... That's right. Bags and throwaway containers. So save yourself some money and energy, and meal prep with cleanup in mind. Serve the entree in a pan that has a lid for leftovers, or in an aluminum foil-lined dish for easy cleanup. Put those sliced, raw veggies and toppings in baggies that can be easily zipped-up and thrown into the fridge if there's leftovers. Martha Stewart will not be stopping by, and even if she did, she'd probably say "Easy cleanup - it's a good thing!"

What are some tips and tricks you use to make cooking and cleanup easier? I'd love to hear them and put them to use!!     

Monday, April 25, 2016

I'm just glad you're here.


"Don't you ever feel sorry for yourself, kiddo. There is always someone worse off than you are. No matter what. Always someone worse off who's not feeling sorry for themselves, so you shouldn't either," said the van driver as he flicked his cigarette onto the ground early that cold fall morning. I was 10, I think. My mom and I were set to begin our biannual trip on the "short bus" for low income families to the children's hospital for crippled kids. And just in case the wheelchair ramp, or the old guys with the funny looking hats didn't give away where we were headed, it was plastered all over the 15 passenger van: "Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children". They did that so other drivers cruising down the interstate could peer in and stare as we drove by. Some would even flip us off for fun.
 I've had dozens and dozens of people give me the exact same unprovoked pep-talk that bus driver gave me that morning. People I don't even know, people I'll never see again - "don't feel sorry for yourself, there's always someone worse off." I don't remember responding to him that day, but I doubt I said much. I rarely talked on the 12 hour van ride there, and never talked to the doctors and nurses once we arrived. Couldn't they see, if I were worse off I'd belong here at this hospital, or if I were better off I'd belong in the world I lived in every day. I didn't feel sorry for myself from what I could tell, I just wanted a category that I fit into. Someone to tell me - "you fit here; we want you. You don't embarrass us. We're not ashamed of you. You won't be the best, and you'll most times even be the worst, and that's fine - we're just glad you're here."  How many uncomfortable meltdowns in front of my peers those words could have prevented. No one knew that was what I needed to hear, not even me. I mistook my pride throughout childhood and the teen years for low self-esteem. I thought if people could just really praise me for the few things I could do, I would feel so much better about myself. I'd feel good about being "me". But that wouldn't have been true. I needed to find out - it's ok to be the worst, the last... to fail. The loser belongs here just as much as the winner. We all play the game together. And the loser who loses gracefully and graciously is really the winner after all. He gets the position all the winners in the world combined, could not have filled. Take a bow, win the crowd - they choose you as their champion! And I mean that as someone in the crowd - YOU are the people's choice.  
 "Shoot for the dreams within your ever shrinking horizon" - that's my life's motto. My dad took me for a walk one day, I don't think I was much older than 7. He, as any good father would have done, clued me in on the life that lay ahead: "...You're going to have to try for a career that's within your abilities. Maybe a secretary... Something like that..." "Oh no I'm not," I thought to myself, "I'm going to do whatever I want to do!" Many years later as I listened to my husband on the phone to my then employer telling them I wouldn't be coming in that day or ever again, because I couldn't lift my head off of the pillow - "I guess, maybe I'll try for something within my abilities... if I just knew what they were..." I am physically capable of doing just about anything - once. What limits me physically, is met equally by my limits mentally. An ocean of limitless possibilities if only it weren't for... the limits. But that's okay, I won't feel sorry for myself, I don't need to - because I'm here. And I belong here. And I will have to get up the nerve to do that thing everyone else does without a second thought, and I will be awkward and blush at all of the wrong times, and I will make people roll their eyes or feel bothered. I probably won't do whatever it is - right, and I probably won't start being good at it today... But I'm here, because I belong here, doing this thing called "life", I enjoy doing so much.  I'll do my best not to hurt anybody, and maybe even let someone else know - "you fit here; I want you. You don't embarrass me. I'm not ashamed of you. You won't be the best, and you will most times even be the worst, and that's fine - I'm just glad you're here."  

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Planters for Pennies a Piece



If you have extra water jugs waiting to go to the recycle bin, you may just want to save them! If you think you may need some extra pots for starting seeds, or a very inexpensive planter to give as a gift this Mother's Day; or maybe you're in need of a super festive napkin holder, or candy bowl - these may be just what you are looking for!!

Let's get started on making them!!


Supplies you'll need:
Your basic crafter's tools...



If you'd like to use this as a planter you may want to add drainage holes first, as putting them in later may prove to be very difficult, structurally...




Then, we'll tape off the jug for a nice clean straight line, or at least as much as possible... It is very easy to gouge out a big piece of your jug with the slightest, unintentional pressure on the scissors in the wrong direction... Not to mention jugs are the most surreal cylindrical optical illusion... ever. You think you're going straight, you think you're cutting right, you think it's going to work out perfectly... nope. You're going up when you should go down and visa versa... To counter this twilight zone illusion, we use tape as our straight edge... easy peasy.




Next comes cutting off the top. I poked a starter hole with a knife and then snipped out the rest along the line with scissors....



Then comes the painting! I wanted a heavy texture on my pots to camouflage the jug shape as much as possible... So I picked a Hammered paint and primer in one... Keep in mind when choosing your paint, that the jug is not a porous surface, so acrylic paint (among others) would rub off very easily...



After the paint dries, you will be able to apply your colorful duct tape! I tried to put a little more than half on the outside of the pot.... Making it straight is tricky, and if you have to peel it away, some paint may come as well... But it's very doable if you're patient and work your way around slowly. If you choose a tape that has lines on it, you can easily use those as guides.
I snipped the corners to make the four sides lay down smoothly rather than crumpling up inside.



Fold the tape down. Lookin' good! Just press out any wrinkles.




I added a bow to mine, but you could bedazzle your pot however you wish! I found this blog to be very helpful in designing my bow.... Then I hot glued it on, but if I had something stronger like cement glue for instance, it may have worked better.... It stays put with the hot glue, but it is anxiously awaiting the chance to dislodge... Super glue does not work on duct tape, crazy huh?!





Ta-da!! Pots for pennies a piece! And to think, you were about to throw those jugs out!!;)




But wait!! There's more:
You can upcycle your pop cans too!!!!!!!
 Unbelievable.



;)Thanks for reading!! Happy Planting!!

5 Helpful Thoughts to Overcome Frustration While Chasing Your Dreams



Sometimes it feels like the road to success is paved with gold for everyone else, but you. All of your energy, talent, willpower, drive - poured into your quest for attaining that dream - and yet here you are again at the base of another gargantuan mountain... You're frustrated. You're nanoseconds away from throwing in the towel and giving up on that dream completely - Wait! Maybe, just maybe these thoughts can help you, too!!

This state of being you're in right now, is only your CURRENT state, not your everlasting state of being -  You are only going to improve. You may have failed a thousand times before, whereby eliminating a thousand ways to fail. Look at how far you've come now! Going over that preceding mountain was not a waste or a misstep, it was part of YOUR journey. If you wouldn't have learned what you learned from that mountain, you would have had to learn it from another... 
Have you spent a thousand hours attempting, practicing, trying, but still missing the mark? Those are hours that had to be spent; they were a deposit that had to be made. Now you are that much further ahead. You are moments away from your next milestone, if you just keep moving forward. 

There's a difference between long-term goals and short-term goals - Are you trying to empty the ocean with a 5 gallon bucket? It won't happen overnight... But could you take that 5 gallon bucket and fill up a small pool? All in a days work! Do you feel like you are choking on your talent? Take smaller bites... You may not be able to learn to paint a "Picasso" overnight, but in a good days work, you could learn to draw some killer stick figures! You've got your google maps zoomed out on the entire country as your long-term goal, now zoom in to the turn by turn roadmap... The outcome will be the same, but the journey will be far less frustrating and much more rewarding. 

The "struggle" gives your product "value" - Think - coal to diamonds; think - pebbles to pearls; think - caterpillar to butterfly; think - Sistine Chapel! It's the struggle that gives your product value. It'll be the struggle that makes you stronger. It's the struggle that sets you apart. There's no cheating, or taking short cuts, just one struggling feat at a time. And no matter what - the struggle is unavoidable. You won't get ANYWHERE if you aren't struggling against anything, even if only struggling against space itself... 

You are unique - Billions of people on the planet, and there's only one with your story, only one with your skill set, only one with your path, only one with your ambition, only one with your character, only one on your journey - and it's YOU! You have something to offer unique from ALL others, because there can only be one you, and you're it! Wear "You" as a mark of distinction. Your meandering journey against the rocks and ridges, raging rivers and babbling brooks have edged away at a shape to create the artwork that is at the heart of who you are. Don’t wish that uniqueness away - embrace it. Let it lift you to higher heights.

There’s a time to be whimsical – The mind, body, and soul can only take so much focused, nose to the grindstone “training”. Every now and then, you have to recalibrate. You have to breathe in the whole experience from another perspective. You have to retrace your steps, your motivations, your hopes… What path led you here, and where is it taking you next? How far will it take you? Does it reach your full potential, or will you need to merge onto another path? Will you get to see everything you want to see on this path or is a detour in order? 
What inspired your dream in the first place will most likely reignite the fire of ambition to propel you towards your goal once more. Start over again from where it was fun, new, and adventurous. Sand off the marred imperfections of doubt and worry and coat on a fresh layer of enthusiasm.

You’ve got this! You’re going to strive forward from one mountaintop to the next, each time gaining a new perspective and a clearer path forward. Don’t give up now – you’ve come too far. Detour; meander… do whatever it takes to keep moving towards your dreams!!




Thanks for reading!! Feel free to comment below - I love to hear your feedback!!

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Girlfriends: stay safe!

All of the recent news surrounding public restrooms has really brought to light a vulnerability in society that, I think, would be prudent to address and give thought to... 
Public restrooms/locker rooms/dressing rooms are not safe environments no matter what the law is... A quick Google search of "tiny cameras", "spy cameras", etc... will give a better understanding of what a person needs to be watchful of. If someone is invading your personal space in any way (a purse or any personal effect is set down encroaching your stall) be mindful of the risk that you could be being recorded or watched... A quick glance of the fixtures in your stall before disrobing for things that don't belong or anything out of the ordinary is always a good rule of thumb... 
Most malls have a long, long creepy hallway back to the restrooms - watch for people who may seem to be "keeping a lookout", people who are loitering... The more distracted one is, and the longer the "pit stop" is, the more vulnerable a person becomes. I like to make a mental note of the safest and most private restrooms at any given business and then if my kiddo and I are able to use those rather than others, that's what we'll do. 
If I'm clothes shopping, I really prefer that my husband escort me while I'm in the dressing rooms... The locks and doors in most dressing rooms are notoriously flimsy, and you are generally at the most vulnerable state you'll ever be in public while in a dressing room or locker room... 
Get in, get out, don't be distracted, be mindful of your surroundings and those loitering, and then - watch out for your fellow man. If you see someone who is putting themselves at risk, or is being "stalked" by someone, or something just doesn't quite feel right... Be vocal about it. "Do you know that person?" "There's someone outside the door, just so you know." "Is everything ok - if not, I can find a security guard to walk you out." 
The more people power we claim, the less power predators will have. We don't ever live in fear, but we aren't going to become victims either. 
What other things do you do to keep yourself and your family safe in these public places?

Thursday, April 14, 2016

3D Butterfly Artwork


This 3D Butterfly Artwork was so much fun to create! 
I had rounded up a few similar ideas on Pinterest and then added in my own flair to make it unique. And just in case you'd like to make one for yourself, I documented the whole process in pictures. I hope to give you enough written details to make recreating this painting easy and fun!

Supplies needed:

12x16" Canvas Panel
Painters tape/scotch tape
Cutting board
Exacto Knife 
Spray paint (black)
Paper (for butterflies)
Butterfly stencil 
Scissors 
Iridescent Medium (optional)
Superglue 



Your first task will be laying out the background of your trees and branches. Because some branches will be overlapping, I did this one piece of tape at a time. I would secure the tape at the top and then pull out enough tape to reach the bottom.




Before securing the tape tightly, I placed the cutting board under the tape and then chiseled out the various branches (with my "not so exacto" knife) to whatever shape fit their placement.
Pull the tape then up off of the cutting board (the top should still be secured in place), remove the cutting board, and stick down your newly formed branch outline.




For the smaller branches, I found it easiest to stick a long piece of tape to the cutting board and squiggle my way down the tape with my knife, cutting out about four different strands of jagged edged branches, that could then be cut up into whatever size I needed.




Next came the spray paint! No real science behind the application, just try to hold the spray can at a good angle so that it won't start "spitting" the paint and make the background blotchy. You just want a   pretty, even layer of paint, shot from all sides to make sure the four edges are also painted.




Once dry, you can simply pull off the tape and see what sort of background you've produced!! It makes a neat painting all on its own, don't you think?




Next came the butterflies. I wanted my butterflies to all be hand-painted using the marbling technique seen here. Then I used 3 different shaped butterfly stencils to draw out my butterflies so I could cut them out. I used the Iridescent medium on a few of the butterflies, but not on all of them. If you choose to add the iridescent medium, beware that if you also used the marbling technique, smearing rather than simply glazing over will be an issue...

Placement of the butterflies will be totally up to the artist's eye... However you like it, will make it PERFECT!! I just used superglue to secure the butterflies, but I tried to make sure that every one was on a white part... They may have secured just fine to the black paint, but I didn't want to risk having to do a repair job.;)


The finished 3D product from the side...


I love it! To me it's a beautiful mixture of modern art and fanciful color. :)



Was this blog helpful? I'd love to hear your input and any questions you may have!!:)
Thanks for reading!!





Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Isaiah 6


Isaiah 6
In the year that king Uzziah died I saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple. 2Above it stood the seraphims: each one had six wings; with twain he covered his face, and with twain he covered his feet, and with twain he did fly.
3And one cried unto another, and said, Holy, holy, holy, is the LORD of hosts: the whole earth is full of his glory.
4And the posts of the door moved at the voice of him that cried, and the house was filled with smoke.
5Then said I, Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips: for mine eyes have seen the King, the LORD of hosts.
6Then flew one of the seraphims unto me, having a live coal in his hand, which he had taken with the tongs from off the altar: 7And he laid it upon my mouth, and said, Lo, this hath touched thy lips; and thine iniquity is taken away, and thy sin purged. 
8Also I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, Whom shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, Here am I; send me.
9And he said, Go, and tell this people, Hear ye indeed, but understand not; and see ye indeed, but perceive not.
10Make the heart of this people fat, and make their ears heavy, and shut their eyes; lest they see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand with their heart, and convert, and be healed.
11Then said I, Lord, how long? And he answered, Until the cities be wasted without inhabitant, and the houses without man, and the land be utterly desolate,
12And the LORD have removed men far away, and there be a great forsaking in the midst of the land.
13But yet in it shall be a tenth, and it shall return, and shall be eaten: as a teil tree, and as an oak, whose substance is in them, when they cast their leaves: so the holy seed shall be the substance thereof.



KJV