Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Homemade dairy


You've heard me shout from the rooftops about our local milk.  I won't bore you with the details of it again.  However, I will try to entice you by showing you all of the things I can do with this awesome milk.  It's not homogenized (we get 8oz of cream on every gallon) and it's low vat-pasteurized.  That means it kills the bad bacteria but keeps all the good stuff including vitamins and minerals.  Conventional $1.99/gallon milk is often made of powdered milk, is ultra-pasteurized (kills every.thing.), they add the vitamins back in, and the cows never see the sunshine or are treated properly.  Whoops, I bored you again didn't I?  Sorry ;)

Homemade butter with a food processor or blender & with a stand mixer
Homemade yogurt in a yogurt maker (the crockpot recipe was a bust :(
Homemade sour cream & homemade cream cheese

I've got my eye on a few used yogurt makers on eBay and may stop by the thrift stores tomorrow to see if I can find one.

We go through a 1/2 gallon of yogurt, 16oz of sour cream, 1lb of butter, and 8oz of cream cheese a week.  That's on top of the 4-5 gallons of milk we drink.  The milk costs $5/gallon (my 10th gallon is FREE and I've already recieved 2 free gallons).  The 1/2 gallon of yogurt is $4.89, the sour cream is $2.89, the butter is $2.50 and the cream cheese is $3.00.  None of these are organic or all-natural because we can't afford it.  It bothers me when we can't buy organic for something we eat so frequently.  So, the above recipes and the yogurt maker will ease my mind and certainly taste better :)

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

WinCo deals


As some of you may know by my past posts, I don't really like the feel the WinCo.  It's too Wal-mart-ish for me.  But sometimes I run in there for a few things and yesterday I bought our favorite healthy treat, Green Goodness.  I got three huge jugs of it because I read it can help with PMS and/or PMDD.  I sadly have the later and it blows honkey butt, trust me.  Anywho, I was also out of paprika and chile powder, both of which would have cost me $2/each to replace.  Instead I went to the bulk section and got enough of each to fill the spice containers for $.30/each.


I also found whole wheat macaroni noodles which I have never seen but always wanted to buy.  Hip-hip-hooray!

Here is a link to WinCo's bulk prices http://nwcouponlady.blogspot.com/2009/12/winco-foods-bulk-bin-items-and-prices.html

What do you buy in bulk that saves a ton of money?

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Taking a short break

We've had a family emergency this week and I don't have much time or energy for the internet this week.  I'm sure I'll be back next week to follow up on the stockpiling and lots of etc :)

We're all okay, but prayers would be appreciated :)

Monday, July 19, 2010

Emergency Stockpile


This past week I mentioned to The Hubbs that I would like to start filling our basement with items and food that we will need in case of an emergency.  I'm not an alarmist, but I want to be prepared for most anything.  I don't want to do it all at once, but maybe $5/week when I go grocery shopping.  This week Fred Meyer had a coupon for canned tomatoes and beans 2/$1 with a limit of 10.  I bought the limit and put all of them downstairs in our tiny basement (basically a furnace/storage room).  I made sure they don't expire for a few years.  I also bought a 100-pack of matches and a few weeks ago I bought 6 candles for $1 at a garage sale.  I made sure they weren't scented, because the scents often give me headaches.

At the top of my list are:
Distilled water
Canned tuna/meats
Canned/dried fruits
Batteries
OTC ointments/medicines
Bandaids/gauze/etc
First aid manual

We would like to purchase a generator, but it's not a necessity.  I will be buying what I can 2nd hand of course :)

While I was searching for an emergency stockpile list online I found this WONDERFUL site:
http://www.jrmi.org/JRMI-Emergency-Stockpile-List.pdf
and these ones:
http://www.demesne.info/Family-Safety/Emergency-Food.htm
http://www.getreadyforflu.org/clocksstocks/stockpilingchecklist.pdf
http://health.jfcountyks.com/pdf/HouseholdEmergencyStockpile-JCHD.pdf
http://knol.google.com/k/jason-day/how-to-create-an-emergency-stockpile/1r6k84kqs0mpa/25#

So many things I would have never even thought of :)

Do you have an emergency stockpile?  What things would be at the top of your list?  Leave your comments below :)

This week's deal



I headed to Kohl's Saturday afternoon while the babies were sleeping and went on the hunt for a bathing suit.  I wanted something modest, but that would support my bust.  Very hard to find either of those qualities, let alone together in one suit.  I tried on a dozen or so suits and didn't buy one.  I was frustrated and feeling dejected.  I ended up buying a slimming pair of shorts (the kind you would wear under a dress, I can't think of the name now) and 6 pairs of socks for Miss A for fall.  I spent an additional $10, but I'm okay with that.  Both were things I needed.

My hunt continued today after I went grocery shopping and my mother-in-law watched my kidlets.  I ran to the Union Gospel Mission and actually prayed before I went in that I would find a suit.  I browsed through stuff and really wanted to find a bike trailer, but they didn't have any.  Then I headed over to the swimsuits (they have a LARGE selection) and found a one-piece Lands End fuchsia suit that is modest and holds the girls up!  WOOT!  It was $7 and looks brand new.  I came home and washed it with my other suit and Miss A's suit on the delicate cycle and all is well.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

I'm here

kind of.

I had a busy week last week and my birthday was this past Friday so I was blessed with a wonderful weekend of celebrating.  I'm exhausted and will get back to posting this week, I promise :)