WELCOME to my BLOG

Hi there!

I’m slowly working towards some simplicity within the home, but hey! It’s a lot of hard work!

I love having a go at growing my own veges and always use herbs fresh from my garden. I try to plant from seed whenever I can and have learnt to save and share my own seed for the following year. I make Award Winning preserves and pickles; and my husband brews Award Winning boutique beers as well. I love to stockpile and try to limit quick trips to the shops. I dabble in bread making and enjoy making my own stocks too.

I enjoy feeding my family good hearty meals, nothing like those tiny restaurant stacks you have to look for on the plate. My husband maintains our vehicles and machinery and we both enjoy fabricating on a small scale mostly relying on metal & timber recyclers for any materials needed.


While I don’t always have time to reply to comments, I love reading them. I hope you enjoy your stay and I hope you learn something new because I love sharing what I learn, and I'm always looking for another new skill myself.

Cheers!

Showing posts with label soap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soap. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Citrus Cleaner in October issue of Women's Weekly magazine!!!

After a few weeks infusing
dilute 50:50 with Water or Vinegar
(I dilute with Vinegar)
To all the newcomers reading here for the first time...from Women's Weekly, I welcome you to my blog. If you don't buy Women's Weekly and/or are wondering what on earth I am talking about,........here goes the story......

Rhonda over at Down to Earth was interviewed for the "Live for Less" theme for the October Issue of The Australian Women's Weekly magazine....It's only the largest magazine in the country...and probably the most popular this month too for a number of reasons. heheh! During the interview Rhonda was asked to recommend two other people who enjoy doing the same as her, living in a similar frugal way.

I was pleased, no I was gobsmacked that she had chosen me to be interviewed as well. I can understand that she chose Christine from Slow Living Essentials, but I never dreamt that she would choose me too. Thank-you Rhonda for sharing your spotlight with both of us. Congratulations on your new column as well.

After chatting with the lovely reporter from WW for what seemed like close to an hour on the phone.....I was so excited, but knowing that the magazine wouldn't be published for an entire month, nearly drove me mad. I usually get excited about new buds forming or newly found fruits or veg developing around my garden.....but this.....this was something else.....Now, I had to wait and see, just like Rhonda
and Christine.....Let me tell you.....it was a long month waiting.

The waiting finally simmered down to waiting for the newsagents to open one morning after dropping DS20 off at the train station for another day at work......I was half an hour early for the newsagents to be opened, so I just sat in my car. I finally got the Australian Women's Weekly...and flicked through to page 40...I started to quickly scan through the words, looking for anything that mentioned what I do.....I was amazed when I turned the page to find out that my Citrus Cleaner had made it as a special recipe into the magazine. I'm now sharing my easy cleaner with more readers than I ever could have imagined, and that's great!...

The article goes on to mention how I learn't to sew at a time when I needed it the most....I was 21 and found out I was pregnant with my first child (now DS 20). I took myself off to Puckapunyal to my sisters....and she taught me stretch sewing with an over-locker and a normal sewing machine. I guess it all started long before that though...as I watched my mother and my grandmother do a lot of work from scratch over the years.....

No-one expects you to learn it all in one day!


I've done hoards of different things since those times..and learn't many new skills as well....I love learning new skills, but don't be thinking that you can do it all at once, because you can't. You can't possibly learn everything at once, and begin 'Living for Less' completing all the tasks that others do. Start with something little...like building a compost. After-all, you will need somewhere to put all those food scraps when you start cooking from scratch....and your going to need good hearty compost to grow some lovely veg, flowers or herbs in your garden. Save your strawberry punnets to plant seeds in...It all starts with something little, and before you know it, you have a list of tasks that you are enjoying. You may already have a list that you don't realise....

*When I heard the word Permaculture a few months back.....I had no idea I already practice many of the Permaculture methods in my own garden.

Always make time to enjoy the little things.
Take time
in the beginning to live more frugally. Baby steps are the way to go.... Remember that frugal doesn't mean cheap.....Cheap often adds to waste, which adds to consumerism, which adds to landfill, which adds to contamination of our earth, and just as important to look out for, Cheap often adds to our money going overseas. No matter what country you live in, you should be supporting your country by buying items made in your country, even better....support the small business's in your local community.


  • Living more frugal.......means getting the most of out of your money, caring for the items you already have........
  • It means organising your time to give you the best value for the work you do......
  • It means thinking more about the gifts you give with love.......
  • It means living below the wage/s that comes into the home, and not relying on credit cards...When you need something new to the house, firstly try to source it somewhere other than new from the huge stores that are ripping you off and helping with huge masses of landfill each year. 
  • It means living with less waste. If you don't want the waste, don't generate it.  
  • It means using your little space of this huge ball we call Earth, to the best you can and not destroying the earth as you live. 
  • It means exchanging goods with one another, instead of exchanging money....Try to share with your neighbours, and barter often comes your way. Get the word out, that you are looking for X in exchange for Y. Money doesn't need to change hands every time you source something you need.

Well, that's some of what it means to me, anyway.

I'm working on these steps each day, some days I can accomplish soooo much and some days, I don't achieve much at all. Life in general and family.....it all takes time...making changes takes up that time too.
It also takes a bit of organisation and patience to do things from scratch.

So take baby steps, one at a time....Before starting a new task, try finishing or refining the other ones first, before moving on to the next. Ha!....Easier said than done my friends....take it from someone who knows....

What does 'living for less' or 'living frugally' mean to you?.....


Have you exchanged goods with someone this week where money wasn't needed?

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Citrus Cleaners - so easy and good

I recycle the peelings of Oranges and Lemons...although I usually run out of lemon cleaner, as I don't eat lemons, like I do with oranges....

Citrus Cleaner is Oh so easy to make....Citrus Cleaners are so expensive in the shops, and if you use citrus, you just keep adding to the jar, as you eat an orange, or use a lemon.

All you need is vinegar and the citrus peel...

Here is my Orange Cleaner that I use in the kitchen.....it is excellent for wiping down the stove and bench-tops.

ORANGE CITRUS CLEANER

I think there is the rind of at least 1 dozen oranges in this bottle.
I dilute the citrus solution to 50%.

Here are the lemons I needed to juice today for the Quince & Apple Jam....before juicing them, I peeled them with a vegetable peeler, to make my Lemon Citrus Cleaner....using a peeler leaves behind the unwanted pith.
No waste, the rind was used for Citrus cleaner,
and the juice was extracted for the jam
and the empty shells will go in the compost.

LEMON CITRUS CLEANER

3/4 fill a wide brimmed glass jar with white vinegar....
then start adding your lemon peel, just like the orange cleaner above.....
I use this lemon cleaner for the bathroom vanity, 
but I ran out a few months ago...and have just been using the orange one.
You can see how the lemon oils are already starting
 to be extracted; by the lemon tint to the vinegar......

Leave for 2 or 3 weeks to mature before using.

Now how easy is that!...

Thursday, March 31, 2011

1 Bad soap, 1 good soap, A flower-press, & Cleaning Beeswax

Hi Catoosh, Welcome to my Blog, I hope you stick around and enjoy reading what I get up to..

I've been a bit frazzled these last few days..my mind is on other things....I came close to having a real disaster in the kitchen yesterday, while I was making soap...I could have been burnt so badly....
So I write this to give warning to others of the things that may happen while making soap....

I was supposed to make the soap in the morning, but plans got put on hold, and other plans were bought forward...which I really wasn't happy about, but couldn't change......I always like to prepare the things that take the longest first...Like getting fat onto the stove to render....or cutting up onions to salt for a few hours...You know, the things that take more time than just say, doing the dishes, or hanging clothes on the line. Actually, I like to get the clothes on the line early too, so they have time to dry.....

When making my soap....................................

First; I add the caustic soda to the required amount of water...(I have a 'caustic bucket' for this)..and set this aside to cool...not too cold, but maybe a bit warmer than body temperature.

Second; I barely melt and warm the rendered fat and add other oils to warm them slightly...and set aside.....

Third; I prepare my moulds. I spray them with either Cooking Spray or Olive Oil Spray (Cheap Brands)  and have them ready....Set up my work area, because once  I start blending the two...I can't leave it until it is done.

Fourth; slowly pour the caustic mix into the oils, while gently stirring, remember to wear your protective gear the whole time..before you open the caustic soda, you should have your gloves on...Stir until you reach trace, which I have explained before....

Then pour into your prepared moulds, and set aside to set overnight, before cutting.

WHAT WENT WRONG YOUR WONDERING....???
This recipe only had rendered beef fat...In the past I have always added other oil to the mix, and I guess this cools the oil mix down considerably....Now because I was so frazzled and the afternoon was soon slipping into meal prep time....I was in a hurry to get the soap finished....MAJOR PROBLEM THERE!!!

NEVER HURRY WHEN MAKING SOAP...
ACCIDENT'S CAN HAPPEN WHEN YOU LEAST EXPECT THEM.

I can tell you; alarm bells started ringing, as soon as I started adding the oil to the caustic....Yep, the wrong way around for a start......I ALWAYS ADD THE CAUSTIC TO THE OIL....I knew I had made this mistake as soon as I poured it...The mix started to look like it was slightly curdled...not the usual creamy mix I create....That was the first alarm that rang......

When the mix starts a rolling boil right in the plastic bucket...You know you have done something wrong.....Next it started foaming...everything from here went so quickly I barely had time to react....But fortunately I had recently read about something similar happening...with a milk soap mix heating too much and scolding the milk...I recall the notes saying to immerse the whole bucket into a sink of cold water......
So while this caustic mix is literally boiling in my hands...well in the bucket, but rising quickly.....I run to the laundry with this volatile caustic monster....Is it going to stop? Will I get it under control? Am I going to get seriously burnt.....????

Luckily I had a huge tub in the laundry half filled with water, ready to do some major school clothes soaking....(pale blues and whites).....No I hadn't had time to soak the school clothes...and I have no idea what I would have done if I had..(the bath was probably the next place to run, but sure; I can think of that now!).....but I put the bucket in the tub of water..and was splashing water onto the sides of the bucket...The rising froth of errr soap slowed down to a crawl, but still overflowed into the water....

Well it finally cooled enough to say it needed to be poured...Yep it still went into the mould.....and I would wait until the following morning (today) to see what I had produced.

Amazingly, it is a big block of soap...I still have a huge tub of caustic mess to clean up....but I'll take care of that on the weekend...I have put it up, that no-one or the pets can get to it....and warned the family to stay clear.   Yuck.

Today I scraped the messy top edge of the soap....keeping the shavings for laundry soap...(but they still have to wait and be cured like the rest of the soap)........

A disaster diverted....and here is the soap...100% animal fat, 100% learning curve!!!











SO BE CAREFULL WHEN MAKING YOUR SOAP.......I DON'T WANT TO PUT ANYONE OFF MAKING SOAP....I ENJOY THE EXPERIENCE....BUT ALWAYS REMEMBER THAT YOU ARE WORKING WITH CAUSTIC CHEMICALS THAT CAN  BURN YOU.....

*********************************************
Other things that happened yesterday and today.....
*********************************************

My little op-shop find....
I have  been meaning to replace my garlic jar with something a little nicer....
and my milk bottle of dishwashing liquid....
When I pick herbs, any unused herbs always go on the 
windowsill in water to be used later..No waste!

BEFORE....YUK!!!

AFTER......Much better!!...the shaker has industrial Bi-Carb in it..
I like this product as it has the same texture as salt. A good scrub and cleaner.
The two vases, the wire basket, the shaker,
and the glass (bourbon) bottle.....Not bad for $2.50.
You can also see in the vase a cutting of a scented Geranium
I got this when I visited Rose,
Thanks Rose, it's just starting to shoot,
so it will go in the ground shortly.

***********************************
 A new day, a new list
************************************
Start the new garden bed in the front yard
Make more washing powder
Plant out the seedlings
Cut yesterday's soap
Thin out other seedlings in back yard
Take back Library books
Complete dishcloth #4
Tie ends in on two dishcloths
Make another batch of soap
Melt and clean beeswax
2 loads of washing
Meal prep for tea, (spaghetti)

The new No-Dig garden bed is started....need newspapers now.
I got the concrete blocks free. They are super heavy.
I only had just over 1 cup of grated Sard Wonder soap....so I made a small batch of laundry powder in the whizzer...Not going to the shops just for a bar of soap.


 After the recent heavy rain we have had...I have lost many plants to mildew, rain etc....because I use my herbs all the time....I don't mind starting again with some cheap plants..I will also sew seeds, but this will help for more immediate use. (soon)                  $1 each.
Early trip to Bunnings for Borax...found cheap plants too...
 I finished dishcloth #4...and tied the ends in on this one and the last one.....
I can't believe I am getting a knitted stockpile.
It was a well needed rest to sit down 
and do this after those concrete blocks. 
Phew!!
I have even started dishcloth #5 now.


I also cleaned the very dirty Beeswax.....by adding it to a pot of water to melt in.


Then strained the wax, through a piece of curtain from the op-shop.
I don't buy Muslin any more...Curtains do a pretty good job for almost all jobs.
If not curtain material, I use 100% cotton as well for straining things.




 I love the patterns the Beeswax makes when it is starting to set.

Once it is cool and set all the way through....but still warm
Cut it into manageable sized pieces. 
This makes it easier to weigh certain amounts 
when you want to make something.


I love the smell of Beeswax.

*********************************** Checking on my
home-made flower press.

************************************

Anyone can make a flower press.....I have always stuck to the idea of, If I can't use it, don't grow it......So I have never planted flowers...Mum lives with us, and believes colour should be in the garden, and lots of it. So a compromise took place...I planted from seed, some little pansies....and was quite surprised at the detail in the tiny flowers.. ...
Wanting to capture the flowers at their brightest, I decided to make a flower-press. I am thinking of making bookmarks with the flowers for xmas gifts.  

Remember; I didn't make this press today, I was checking how the flowers were going.

How to make a flower-press.
First go to Bunnings, and buy a large piece of particle board, Have them cut it in 2 exact halves...
Find the butterfly wing nuts and bolts...That way you don't need a shifter when you want to open it.
I needed 6 bolts because it is a rectangle....If you decide on a square you will most likely only need 4.


After marking and drilling the holes...I also glued the bolts to the base of the press...it is so much easier with them glued into place....I remember having a little flower press when I was a child...and when closing the press, the bolts always wanted to fall out....So I glued the little suckers down this time.

You will also need to cut out oddly shaped papers to press your flowers between.....and a cardboard buffer, so your flowers aren't pressing flowers....
So for each layer you need 1 cardboard buffer and two paper sheets....all cut to shape to go around the bolts.


Use your imagination, 
walk around your garden 
to look for things to press....
Purple Basil, and Lemon-grass leaves.

Yes, even flowers can be pressed in a flower-press...lol
Just look at the detail in that flower.


See the carrot leaves, and garlic chive flowers,
also lettuce and rocket flowers.

I even tried some parsley,
some baby beet leaves, and marjoram flowers.


 You too can enjoy your flowers long 
after they have stopped flowering...
and hey, I found a way Mum can have her colour
 in the garden, and I can use the plants.  
I think pressed-flower bookmarks 
will make nice gifts.

Once your first lot are pressed, store them at the base of your press, and make some more paper inserts and buffers.

*********************************** Another soap, 2kg Animal Fat, 1kg of Rice Bran Oil

************************************




Reaching Trace

 Ready to pour, with a good trace.



This was a lovely soap to make, 
it reminded me of making lemon butter....
so thick and creamy...I think this will be a lovely soap.

********************************

PROBLEM????
On suggestion, I have been using my stick-mixer...
to get my soap to 'trace' quicker.
It's Mum's original Bamix. It must be 30 years old..Yikes
I have noticed, that the caustic mix has oxidised the metal base....
It used to be a shiny silver like the shaft.
Now when I wipe my finger on it,  my finger has like a fine metal dust on it.
And that's after it is cleaned.

 I wonder has anyone else had this happen to their stick mixer???
I am no longer using it for food prep.

****************************************
I hope you have all enjoyed reading my post today..it's certainly been a busy one...
Hope you can take my warnings about soap making and keep them in mind.
Things I try, don't always work,
but if I can use it in another way or learn from it, then that's ok.
and I don't mind admitting my mistakes;
that's just another part of learning. 

Please leave a comment. I would love to hear what you think of all the things I do...
My brain is sometimes slightly fried, and although I may forget to reply or reply late..
I welcome and appreciate any comments I receive....
Thanks for reading my blog.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Cutting the soap

I'm up early, its pouring rain, but before rising, claps of thunder could be heard in the distance. I think we are only going to get the rain today though. This water will do my fresh garden beds well....I have new seedlings coming along nicely, ready for the freshly dug garden beds...I have never been so organised in the garden, I'm all ready for winter gardening, bring it on I say.

This morning I have already cut yesterday's soap, I feel it was a bit crumbly towards the base, when cutting it...maybe I should have cut it last night before going to bed...maybe I was a few hours late and that's why it crumbled when the knife was half way through....

Anyway, overall, it is a good soap.....the animal fat was free..I think I will have to pass some onto the butcher and barter for some more fat.



Above is the Low Allergy Body Soap made from the Rendered Animal Fat




Above shows the bucket, I will even let the left over residue dry from the bucket. The crumbs from that will be added to make my Laundry Powder or dishwasing liquid. This way I don't have to scrape a caustic bucket to get every last bit, and I have no waste.


Here is an update on the first two soaps I made.....
The Lemon Verbena soap and the Olive Oil soap.

I made these two soaps on 7 Feb, I can't believe I still have 3 weeks to go, before trying out my new soaps.....Has it only been 3 weeks since I made this?



Sunday, February 27, 2011

MAKING Low Allergy Body Soap

LOW ALLERGY BODY SOAP

Engredients

500 grams of caustic soda
1 ½ litres of rain water (or distilled water)
1.5 kg  rendered animal fat 
1.5 kg of olive oil. (Please measure by weight.)
Directions
With great care and wearing the rubber gloves and some eye protection, add the caustic soda to the water in a large plastic bucket....and stir until dissolved. Make sure you are in a well ventilated area and take extra care not to breath in the fumes. There will be a chemical reaction with will cause the water and caustic soda to heat up. This liquid will not only get hot it will now be capable of burning you like an acid so be very careful. Set aside to cool till lukewarm.
WARNING - Do not add water to caustic soda, you must add caustic soda to water - in that order.
In another pot heat the fat and olive oil until it is all liquid and add this to the bucket of caustic solution. Stir for 5 minutes. At this stage you may add a small amount of essential oil to give the soap a fragrance.  As I wanted a low allergy soap, I stayed pure to the recipe, not adding any essential oil to perfume the soap.   Using a stick mixer, mix until you reach trace, then pour into shallow containers that you have sprayed with the cooking spray or olive oil. (It took me 9 minutes to make trace, and this will vary according to the temperatures of your oils.)

After pouring both oils into the caustic solution.


You can see this has reached trace, see how it is doubling up on itself towards the left of the bucket.

Keep trays of soap in a warm place for a day.


The following day, turn your soap out onto a towel, wearing your rubber gloves, as the mix is still caustic. You will have to come back tomorrow, to see it cut.
Cut into bars. Let the soap rest and dry for 6 weeks before using.

RENDERING ANIMAL FAT FOR OILS - Part 2

On Friday I picked up the fat from the butcher, bartering with him, well I gave him a bottle of tomato sauce, a jar of pickles, and a jar of tomato relish.

I was prepared for .50c a kilo, for the fat as previously discussed. Upon handing over my goodies, he said, NO Charge for the fat!!! Brilliant...A butcher I will go to again and again...

So I brought home the fat and put it in the fridge...Over Saturday and Sunday I rendered the fat and turned it into oil for my soap, using it immediately to make the Low Allergy Soap.


First you have to remove any meat and blood spots that remain on the fat.

I then cut the fat into smaller diced pieces and added to the Whizzer.

Mincing the fat in the whizzer.

Melt the fat in a large pot over the stove....it must be on the smaller element on low....

(I once used the largest element and the fat started to smoke, even though it was on low. To save that batch I quickly put the pot of smoky oil in a sink of cold water to reduce the heat of the oil as quick as possible....You have to do this as soon as it smokes....and I can not recommend that it will always be saved. I was just lucky and acted quickly).

After straining the liquid fat, pour it into manageable sized vessels....and leave to set overnight on the bench. You will see that the fat in this jug has set and there is a small amount of waste on the bottom of the jug.

Scoop out the fat away from the waste and return to the stove.....When this was melted again, it formed a skin on the top...Strain it again, if you get this skin on top....you will now have a usable oil for soap making.

Seeing the oil was already melted, I started to make the LOW ALLERGY SOAP.
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