Recipes

Why You’re Overpaying at the Dollar Store

I like to occasionally go to one of our many dollar stores around town. I learned a long time ago that you can find some really great deals! But, you must watch what you are buying. In many cases the items are smaller than the items you will find in a regular store even though the items may have the same brand name, it may be closer to its expiration date, or even and item you could find in a regular store for less than 1 dollar. Read on this is a great article and great food for thought!

By Kelli B. Grant 
With frozen dinners, party balloons, shampoo and more priced at $1, the dollar store can seem like a great place for bargains. But that’s not quite true — and savvy shoppers are catching on.
Cash-strapped consumers have flocked to dollar stores — many of which defy their names by selling higher-priced items — since the recession hit, but now those stores are starting to see a slowdown, reports The Wall Street Journal. Several of the big chains said in quarterly earnings reports that they failed to meet expectations because customers are buying more low-profit items like food and cleaning supplies, and fewer high-profit ones such as clothes and home goods.
But coupon experts suspect at least part of the shift can be explained by the so-called “extreme couponing” trend that teaches shoppers to stack stores sales, coupons and other discounts to pay just pennies on the dollar for their purchases. “People are getting smarter,” says Teri Gault, founder of The Grocery Game. “Sales with coupons will almost always beat prices at dollar stores.” A shopper could get a 12-count box of Nature’s Valley granola bars for $0.79 at the grocery store with a sale and coupon, for example. On a per-bar cost, that’s 80% less than the dollar store price of $1 for a pack of four.
Beauty and healthcare products are an equally bad deal, says Stephanie Nelson, the founder ofCouponMom.com. “I would never pay $1 for toothpaste,” she says. “You can get it for free at the drugstore with coupons.” Vitamins, razors and shampoo are other items easily snapped up free. There may also be quality concerns with such dollar store items, which may have been manufactured abroad or purchased from overstock lots that were stored improperly, she says.
There are still a few good dollar store deals, however. If you’re throwing a party, paper plates, tablecloths and plastic utensils are typically cheaper than at the grocery store, says Mary Hunt, the founder ofDebtProofLiving.com. Small toys, balloons and candy for favors are cheap, too, while gift bags, wrapping paper and greeting cards can be half the price at drugstores and stationary stores.
This article is part of a series related to being Financially Fit



Recipes

A Convection Oven Summer



This is my GE Convection Toaster Oven (well a picture of it from walmart.com). This was one of the gifts my husband got me for Christmas. It has really come in handy so many times. For instance when our oven when out Easter weekend this worked like a charm to get everything I needed to cook cooked.


I have decided that this wonderful creation is going to become my new best friend this summer. If I cannot cook it either on my stove top burners, the microwave, the fryer, or in this convection oven, then it’s not going to be made.

Not only will using this verse the oven keep my house cooler, but it will also keep my light bill down. Our light bills are always high, and it’s always hot during a Texas summer.

The long and short is if I can I will be converting my recipes to fit in my convection one way or another. It will toast (not very well), broil, and bake! It even has a rotisserie on it which I have never used. Let the Convection Oven Summer Begin!

Update: My oven died in November of 2013 so it was 3 years old when it died!

Recipes

Pink pork won’t kill you according to the USDA


I love this article because this was my Mom when I was a kid we never had pork unless it was bacon, or ham. My Mom was scared to cook with it, and never would. Still today she won’t. That trend continued with me because I rarely cook it myself. 



If you’re one of those pork connoisseurs who prefers your chop or tenderloin to be pink in the middle, rest assured: As of Tuesday, the USDA says you’re in the clear as far as food-borne illness is concerned.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service has lowered its temperature recommendation for cooking pork to 145 degrees — down from 160. (This means that pork will be held to the same standard as beef, veal, and lamb.) Moreover, it is recommended to let the pork rest for three minutes after removing it from the grill or oven; the temp will continue to rise slightly while killing any remaining pathogens.
Of course, there’s an inherent irony in the fact that the USDA is lowering pork’s minimum temperature …
It’s that professional chefs have been cooking pork this way FOR YEARS! Now home cooks and backyard barbecuers can finally catch up to the restaurant standard without worry. But the question is: Will they?
The USDA’s longstanding 160 degrees recommendation is so ingrained in our minds, it may be difficult for some to adjust to the new temp, explains Rob Weland, a chef at an upscale restaurant in Washington:
People have been taught this for generations and it’s going to take a long time to get this removed … It will be good for the next generation not to be so fearful so they can enjoy pork in a way they may not have been able to in the past.
Pork producers have been lobbying the USDA for years to lower the recommendation, arguing that improved feed and housing methods — namely, moving hogs into bird- and rodent-proof buildings — reduced the risk of pathogens and disease. From the consumer point of view, it’s surprising to learn they were successful this time around given all the recent horror stories in the media about how factory farms are harmful to animals, the environment, and most important, the public.
But if there’s nothing worse to you than a piece of overcooked pork, news about the lower temp recommendation will surely make your day. Bring on the pink pork!
What temperature do you cook your pork to?
Image via VirtualErn/Flickr
Written by Kim Conte for CafeMom’s blog, The Stir.

Recipes

Elmer’s Flower Jewelry Holder @Elmers #DIY

With summer steadily approaching soon the kids will be out of school. If your kids are anything like I was they will be bored by the first day of summer. The princess loves crafts and I have no doubt she will love this one. Check it out Elmer’s has come up with a great idea!




Appropriate For: Every Day

Supplies Neededs:
  • Elmer’s® Foam Board™, White, 20″ x 30″ x 1/2″
  • Elmer’s® CraftBond™ Extra Strength Glue Stick
  • Elmer’s® CraftBond™ Ultra Stix All®, Clear
  • X-ACTO® #1 Craft Knife* with extra blades
  • 12″ x 12″ scrapbook paper, (2) pink print; (1) orange print, (1) green polka dot
  • 4 1/2″ diameter clay pot
  • Pink and yellow paper shreds
  • 2 5/8″ x 3 3/4″ cylinder floral foam
  • 12″ length of 5/16″ diameter wood dowel
  • (15) 3/8” – 1 1/2” buttons of coordinated colors
  • 24″ length of 1/2′ orange plaid ribbon
  • 32″ length of 3/8″ pink stitched ribbon
  • (8) 3/4″ brass cup hooks
  • Cutting mat
  • Old newspapers
  • Ruler
  • Scissors
  • Pencil
  • * An adult should use X-ACTO® Craft Knife

Instructions

  1. Use pencil to draw your own flowers or trace patterns onto Elmer’s® Foam Board™. Ask an adult to use X-ACTO® #1 Craft Knife (with new blade) and cutting mat to cut out Foam Board™ flowers. (Hint: Score lightly first and then press more firmly to cut deeper, with several passes of the knife. Replace blades often.) 
  2. To cover large flower, apply Elmer’s CraftBond™ Extra Strength Glue Stick to front of flower and attach pink paper. Turn over flower and ask an adult to use X-ACTO® Knife and cutting mat to trim excess paper, even with flower edges. Repeat process to cover small flower with orange paper.    (Optional: Repeat process to cover backs of flowers.)
  3. Use Glue Stick to attach pink or orange ribbon to same-color flower edges, trimming excess with scissors. Apply Glue Stick to back of small flower and position on center of large flower. Use Elmer’s® CraftBond™ Ultra Stix All® to layer a 1” button onto a 1 ½” button and glue to center of small flower.
  4. Cut 1/2″ x 12″ strip from green polka dot. Apply Glue Stick and wrap around rim of pot, overlapping ends at back. Trim excess. On front of pot, use Ultra Stix All® to randomly attach buttons, layering as desired
  5. Place floral foam in pot using Ultra Stix All® to secure. For flower stem, use point of scissors to make starter hold in bottom edge of flower. Push dowel into flower and other end into floral foam. Cover floral foam with paper shreds.
  6. Plan placement of cup hooks on five outside flower petals and tree o inside flower. Gently push point of cup hook into Foam Board™ to start and then gently twist into foam. (Note: If loose, remove, apply a dot of Ultra Stix All™ to cup hook and re-insert.)

Recipes

What you may not know about doing laundry.

by Real Simple Magazine, on Thu May 19, 2011 6:29am PDT

By Sarah Stebbins

Clothing and Outerwear

Button-Down Shirts.

Unbutton the shirt. Unfasten all buttons, including the tiny ones at the collar, before laundering. Otherwise, the agitation in the machine and the weight of other garments may cause buttonholes to tear.
See More: Surprising Cleaning New Uses


Apply a stain remover. It’s a good idea to pretreat collars every time you wash them. “Once stains from body oils build up, they are very difficult to remove,” says Chris Allsbrooks, a textile analyst at the Drycleaning & Laundry Institute, in Laurel, Maryland. Use a stain remover or spot-clean with a mixture of water and liquid detergent. Pour it over the area, then rub with a soft toothbrush. It’s especially important to spot-clean permanent-press shirts and other items that have been treated with resins so they retain their shape, because these fabrics tend to hold soiling.
See More: Laundry New Uses for Old Things


Use the permanent-press setting. Wash permanent-press shirts with all-purpose detergent on the permanent-press setting, which is gentler than the regular one, uses warm or hot water, and has a long cool-down rinse to further minimize wrinkling. Opt for the dryer’s permanent-press feature, which has a cool-down period at the end. Wash non-permanent-press shirts on the regular cycle in cold or warm water.
See More: Organizing New Uses for Old Things


Sweaters

Wash cotton blends on gentle. Many knits made of cotton, synthetics, or blends can be machine-washed in cold or warm water on the gentle cycle with all-purpose or mild detergent. To combat wrinkles and stiffness, dry items on low for 5 to 10 minutes before laying them flat on a mesh sweater rack or a towel.

Use a zippered pillowcase for delicates. Place a wool, cashmere, or fine cotton sweater in a zippered pillowcase; wash on the delicate cycle with cold water and lay flat to dry.

Test silk sweaters for colorfastness. Delicate knits, like crochet and silk, are a different story: Dry-clean these, or test for colorfastness (to see if the color will bleed, place a dab of detergent on a dip a cotton swab in detergent and hold it on the fabric for two minutes) and hand-wash in cold water with mild detergent. Some knits may stretch out; reshape after washing and lay flat to dry.
See More: How to Speed Clean Your Kitchen

Socks

Never lose a sock again. One of the most frustrating aspects of doing laundry is the number of socks that suspiciously go missing. Forget putting out an APB: Simply pin each pair together before throwing it in the machine. No sorting, no matching necessary afterward.
See More: Quick Cleaning Solutions for Every Room

Jeans

Wash jeans in cold water. Most denim is top-dyed, meaning only the surface of the fibers is colored. To keep jeans from fading or acquiring white streaks, wash in small loads in cold water (with more water than clothes) with all-purpose detergent. This cuts down on abrasion, says Allsbrooks.

Stretch the legs to prevent shrinkage. “It’s common for jeans to shrink in length” when washed, says Steve Boorstein, author of The Clothing Doctor’s 99 Secrets to Clothing Care (Fashion Media Group, $5, amazon.com). Hold them by the waistband and legs and gently stretch them vertically before drying. Dry on low or medium heat; overdrying causes unnecessary wear and tear, so take jeans out when the legs are done but the seams and the waistband are slightly damp.

See More: The Worst Cleaning Jobs Made Easy

Hats and Gloves

Wash knit hats and gloves like sweaters. Follow the same instructions based on different fabric types. Cotton blends can be machine-washed cold on delicates, wool and cashmere on the delicate cycle with cold water, and so on.

Spot-clean structured hats. Newsboy and baseball caps could become misshapen so its best to keep them out of the washing machine.

Hand-wash leather-trimmed gloves. You can hand-wash gloves with small sections of leather if the leather is the same color as the knit; otherwise bleeding may be a problem. To dry, insert the handle of a wooden spoon in one finger and set the spoon end in a vase. This will help the glove retain its shape. 

See More: How to Solve 19 Kitchen Cleanup Conundrums
Down and Polyester Coats

Wash adult coats in warm water. You can wash down coats in front-loading machines with a mild powder detergent and warm water on the gentle cycle. (If you have a top-loader, take these coats to a dry cleaner; most top-loaders have agitators that can compress and displace down filling and prevent pieces from tumbling freely.)

Use towels for speed drying. Smaller items, like children’s jackets, whether filled with down or polyester, can go in a front- or top-loader on the gentle cycle; tumble dry on low. Put a few clean, dry towels in the dryer to help soak excess moisture and speed drying.

Read the Rest: How to Do Laundry