Monday, August 12, 2013

Unique Picture frames

My hubby wanted some pictures in picture frames to put on his desk at work. He picked two out and printed them on 4x6 photo paper, and I went about looking for frames. I could only find 5x7 frames, and I don't have mat board or the stuff to cut it with, so I used scrapbook paper. They came out so cute, I think I'm going to do it this way every time!


These were old frames I had in a box somewhere; I wiped them down and cleaned the dust off the glass, and they ended up looking adorable! I think I'll go shop Savers and D.I. for a few more to collage a wall with (possibly sand them and repaint them too). Hehe! 

Friday, July 19, 2013

A Zillion Meals

I have been making lots of fun meals as of the last two or three months, but I just don't seem to have had the time to post them. So I'll do a quick run down of things I've tried with links to the recipes, and then tell you about my new adventure with the food plan I started tonight!

About a month and a half ago we bought a Blendtec - Classic Series (blendtec.com) - a fancy blender that competes with the Vitamix (vitamix.com), but is less expensive with only minor differences. ($330 at Costco; Occasionally on sale for $300. Amazon and other sellers sell it for between $400 and $550, fyi.) It came with a fancy recipe book and it helped us learn how much liquid to fruit/veggie to frozen ratio to put in the jar in order to make the perfect smoothie/ whole juice/ milkshake, etc. My husband has a heavy-on-veggie smoothie every morning for breakfast. I have a milkshake about every 3rd day, and we share a icey fruit smoothie every other evening. It's great! We've also noticed our digestion systems have been performing much better than before. :-D

So, because of having this blender, we were going through fruits and veggies quadruple-y faster than before. So we started ordering produce from a co-op called Bountiful Baskets (bountifulbaskets.org). It costs less getting fruits and veggies from there than it would if I bought the same amount of stuff from the store. However, we won't know what's in the basket till we pick it up on saturday morning. However, that hasn't been a big deal for us, because we'll eat and enjoy most anything, and we're familiar enough with the blender, we don't need to work too hard to follow the 'official' recipes.


Next, we've gotten quite a few things in the Bountiful Basket that I've never used, purchased and sometimes even seen before. So each week I get on Allrecipes.com and find a recipe with good ratings that uses that unusual ingredient. Here's a list of our most recent adventures:

Chilean Milkshake
http://www.lafujimama.com/2013/06/chilean-banana-milkshake/
I had this growing up, but not in recent years until I ran across this blog. I got 80% through making it before I realized it was just a double recipe of the one I made as a kid. My only suggestion is occasionally using blueberries instead of vanilla. It's Incredible!!!

Napa Cabbage Salad 
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/napa-cabbage-salad/detail.aspx
I got a huge Napa Cabbage in our Bountiful Basket, we barely managed to fit it in the fridge... Allrecipes seemed to have 30 versions of this, so apparently there's only one mainstream way to use a Napa Cabbage. I liked this recipe, but I probably won't go buy Napa Cabbages every month.

Key Lime Cookies
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/key-lime-cookies-ii/detail.aspx
These cookies were great! Only thing I'd do different is put it in a better storage container - I kept accidentally leaving the lid off on my rubbermaid, and the cookies dried out and got crunchy too fast. Oops. I'm also only so so on having lime peel in them.

Tostones (Fried Plantains)
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/tostones-fried-plantains/detail.aspx
I always thought plantains were some sort of weird huge banana and when I found this recipe, I was convinced it'd be a dessert. However, think "banana flavored potato."It was good. It's often served with rice and beans (actually a Winco bulk recipe of beans - I'll get to that later), and that's what we made with it.


Lettuce and Tarragon Soup
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/lettuce-and-tarragon-soup/detail.aspx
Great for using up lots of lettuce - we had a gazillion heads of it with Bountiful Baskets coming every Saturday. Not as wonderful as leftovers, though.

Plum Flummery
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/plum-flummery/detail.aspx
LOVE THIS! Kind of like Jello meets Pudding. We've made this twice in 3 weeks with the plums that come with Bountiful Baskets. I generally don't like plums, but in this, Love it.

Beets and Greens
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/beets-and-greens/detail.aspx
I'd never purchased beets before, and had only had a bite or so here or there, enough to know that 'I think I like it...' Great recipe and I'd definitely make it again. Less desireable as leftovers, however.

Perfect Mashed Potatoes
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/chef-johns-perfect-mashed-potatoes/detail.aspx
I love this recipe - I'm getting pretty sick of "easy and fake mashed potatoes", however, my husband would prefer a creamer version than this - so add more butter and milk!

Sauteed Garlic Asparagus
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/sauteed-garlic-asparagus/detail.aspx
Great way to use asparagus and enjoy it. Delicious. Also, check out this blog to discover better ways to store your asparagus in the fridge!
http://www.alwaysorderdessert.com/2011/05/how-to-store-asparagus.html#.Uei-7GR4bpU

Now for tonights Dinner adventures:
Yesterday upon listening to Dave Ramsey's on KNRS, he mentioned a company called eMeals.com - you pick a meal style - classic, vegetarian, low carb, low fat, natural & organic, gluten free, etc and they send you a weekly meal plan (You can sign up for dinners only or do 2 or 3 meals a day with food plans. Groupon.com occasionally runs deals with them). They also compile a weekly grocery list, you check off what you already have and go to the store, buying only 2 lemons, 1 large tomato, etc, so that you aren't buying more than you can use or eat in a week or so of time. Less waste.

I went shopping to day with that list, and it took me less time to shop than usual, but more than I expected, simply because I didn't know where everything was or what everything was. However, I'm sure I'll get faster as I learn. The hardest ingredient to find was Farro, which I did not succeed in finding. I called about 4 health food stores after leaving Winco (who didn't carry it,) to see if they carried it. All said 'No' but one said they were looking for a supplier for it. I ended up buying Spelt as a substitute (found at Good Earth Natural Foods). There were several substitutes that were recommended on various websites including Bulgar, Barley, and Brown Rice.


I would like to mention that for one week of dinners with eMeals, my checkout cost (plus the spelt), rounded up to the nearest dollar was $55. (actually that's 6 days not 7; I skipped one meal because I am not a fan of Scallops.) If there are 4.5 weeks in a month, that's $248 for dinners. And I'd like to mention I bought 4 TYPES OF MEAT (6 chicken breasts, 1/2 lb pork loin, 1 lb. 2 (4oz) Salmon fillet, and 1 lb. flank steak). I usually only buy one type per week, and we go a little heavier on veggies - that is, when I remember to cook dinner. Sometimes we end up eating chips and snacks.

What I'm trying to say is that between January and June of this year, my grocery budget has wavered between $230 and $500 - with a median close to $370. Using eMeals to help me plan and cook, I'm predicting, it will make my budget a lot more regular, and cost less on average. But we're not having "beans and rice, rice and beans" either. On my way out of Winco, I'm often tempted to grab a chocolate bar or treat of some kind, but this time I wasn't. Why? Because I am getting spoiled with steak! Who wants crappy candy when you're getting a gourmet meal?

So today's recipe was Creole Pork Chops and homemade Creamed Corn. I'm never going to back to canned creamed corn again!!! Homemade was like sweet candy in my mouth and I didn't add sugar! Just husked corn, butter, chicken stock, salt and pepper. Wowzers.


I'd post the recipe here, but eMeals.com threatens to kick me off their site if I play in that water (legally, recipes cannot be copyrighted, but they could probably still throw a fit about me sharing stuff - "meal plans" whatever that means, and I probably wouldn't go through the hassle of running it through court, so I'll just say it's on eMeals in the "Clean Eating" Meal plan section). I'm not sure how that differs from other meal plans, but we kept switching plans until we realized there were limits to it... Can't switch again until August 16th. Oh well. A picture will have to do.




Almost lastly, upon perusing the bulk section at Winco (wincofoods.com/recipes/), I discovered that there were items there that looked fun to try and many of them had recipes to go with them... sitting right next to them. I've tried a couple of them... and they're on the website (theoretically), but it's not easy to search without a bin number, so I may have to go find those before posting. I considered doing that now, but it's almost midnight, so I'm going to end this rather long food post.

Oh, oh, one more thing... I've been visiting an Asian food store - it's within walking distance of my house - I either bring a recipe with me or have the person working there help me pick one... then they walk me through the store and get the ingredients for one meal. I've done yellow curry and vietnamese spring rolls so far. It's very exciting learning asian cooking and realizing it's not as hard as it looks!

Note: An alternative to eMeals, for if you would rather specifically pick the meals you want to eat each night, I suggest looking at Allrecipes.com pro version. They do basically the same thing as eMeals, but you pick your meal plan and it costs less per month for the membership. Don't worry about trying to pick recipes with similar ingredients because your only buying exactly what you need for each recipe, so it likely won't save you any money. But perhaps, after you've done it for a couple or few weeks, you might pick recipes where some of the ingredients are in their peak harvesting time - they'll be on sale and taste better.


Great Cooking!

Monday, October 22, 2012

Chili Cook-off 2012


My LDS ward had a chili and soup cook-off competition this last weekend. I created my own recipe from 'special ingredients' I had learned people put in their recipes last year. This year I brought that dish. I thought I'd win a slot for sure... but the judges were different...

However, my neighbor said she Loved my dish and that she's generally fairly picky, so she's asked for the recipe. This is a copy of the recipe I am giving her:


Keshia's Sweet and Spicy Chili

-Saute 1 lb hamburger (rubbed with red curry paste) and chopped green garlic-chives. After it's browned, add flour (to thicken and absorb grease) then add to soup pot.

-In soup pot put:
5+ cups water
5 sm. cans tomato sauce
EZ chili powder1/3 c. sugar
cinnamon1/2 bag frozen peas
1 c. cooked beans
1/4 c. dried onion
2 bay leaves
salt to taste
Bring to boil and let simmer 10+ minutes (to mesh flavors).
-----------------------------------
*NOTE - this is the recipe I put together after last year’s chili cook-off. I did it just a bit different this year - 
-2 lbs. hamburger + abt. 1 Tbsp red curry paste. 
-no green-garlic chives; I used green onion tops from the garden - walla walla onions. 
-6 cups water
-1.5 cups DRY kidney beans, soaked overnight, and cooked before adding to soup
-No dry onion, but 1 pint home-canned walla walla onion. (1-2 fresh med-large sweet onions, chopped, from the grocery store would work. Sauté them in oil or butter first before the meat goes in.)
-3 bay leaves
-Simmered in crockpot for 3 hours. 
------------------------------------
I’m glad you liked my recipe! 

Oh, PS, ‘Red Curry Paste’ can be found in Asian grocery stores, but likely you can just skip that ingredient and it’ll turn out about the same. Red Curry Paste consists of: dried red chili, garlic, lemongrass, salt, shallot, Galangal, Shrimp paste (shrimp, salt), Kaffir lime peel, pepper. 

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Canning, Dehydrating and Saving Produce

We bottled our Walla walla onions using our pressure cooker. You've never smelled anything better than these onions right out of the pressure cooker! Wowzers! Super sweet! I seriously think this in my new favorite smell. 

We used the following instructions we found on the internet:

According to the USDA, use onions of 1-inch diameter or less. Wash and peel onions. Cover onions with boiling water; bring to a boil. Boil 5 minutes. Pack the onions into hot jars, leaving 1-inch headspace. Add ½ tsp salt to pints; 1 tsp to quarts, if desired. Fill jars to within 1-inch from top with boiling water. Remove air bubbles. Wipe jar rims. Adjust lids and process.
Process in a Dial Gauge Pressure Canner at 11 pounds pressure OR in a Weighted Gauge Pressure Canner at 10 pounds pressure: Pints or Quarts:40 minutes
NOTE: Sea level pressure is 10 pounds. Pressure has to be increased as altitude increases by ½ pound per 1000 feet.

 I believe since this paragraph was written, however, that sea level pressure has been changed to 11 pounds. Below, pictured is onions on the left, roasted peppers centered, and cucumber relish on the right. 

Roasted Peppers (from Pesto Pressure Canner and Cooker Instructions and Recipes, 2010)

PEPPERS—HOT OR SWEET (INCLUDING BELL, CHILE, JALAPEñO, AND PIMIENTO)
Preparation of Chile peppers—Cut two or four slits in each pepper, and blister using one of the following methods:
oven or broiler method: Place chile peppers in a 400° oven or broiler for 6 to 8 minutes until skins blister.
Range-top method: Cover hot burner, either gas or electric with heavy wire mesh. Place chilies on burner for several minutes until skins blister.
Allow peppers to cool. Place in a pan and cover with a damp cloth. After several minutes, peel peppers. Remove stems and seeds.
Preparation of other peppers—Remove stems and seeds; blanch 3 minutes.
Hot Pack: Small peppers may be left whole. Large peppers may be quartered. Pack peppers loosely in clean, hot Mason
jars, leaving 1-inch headspace. Cover with boiling water, leaving 1-inch headspace. Adjust jar lids.
Process at 11 pounds of pressure – Pints 35 minutes. For processing above 2,000 feet altitude, see page 11 for recommended pounds of pressure. 


Altitude and Pressure Chart for Canning Vegetables
Altitude
2,001 – 4,000 ft.
4,001 – 6,000 ft.
6,001 – 8,000 ft.
Processing time is the same at all altitudes.
Pounds of Pressure for Pints and Quarts 
12 lbs.
13 lbs.
14 lbs.

I don't usually blister the peppers; the skins aren't tough enough out in Utah for this to be a concern. It's actually a lot harder to try to get the skins off, and they're not at all unpleasant to eat anyway. 

 Cucumber Relish
(from an old canning book such as a 'ball blue book')
12 lg. cucumbers peeled
4 lg onions
6 green peppers, stems and seeds removed
4 tsp each celery seed and mustard seed
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp ground cloves
1 Tbsp ground turmeric
3 1/2 c. cider vinegar
2 1/2 c. sugar

Put the cucumbers, onions, and green peppers through a food chopper, using a medium blade or chop. In a 5 or6-quart saucepan, combine vegetables, celery seed mustard seed, salt,chives, turmeric, vinegar, and sugar. Quickly bring to boiling, stirring constantly; reduce heat and simmer for about 3 hours or until reduced to about 5 pints. 
Prepare 5 pint-sized canning jars, following step 1 under Processing with a canner on page 31. (wipe rims, put heated lids on, etc.) Proceed with steps 3-9. Process for 15 minutes. Makes 5 pints. (Don't forget to adjust for altitude.)




Bread and Butter Pickles
6 cups sliced/chopped/speared cucumbers

Mix:
2 cups brown sugar
1/2 tsp turmeric (optional)
1/4 tsp ground cloves
1 Tbsp mustard seed
1/2 tsp celery seed or more
2 cups mild cider vinegar
Bring slowly to boiling point and boil 5 minutes

Put cut cucumbers in a jar, then fill with vinegar brine with 1/2 inch headspace. Clean the top of the jar, put lids on, and water-bath for 10 minutes. Adjust for Altitude. 
1,001-3,000 ft = +5 minutes
3,001-6,000 ft = +10 minutes
6,001 - 8,000 ft = +15 minutes
Yield 4 pints. Store for 4-5 weeks+ before opening for best taste. 

(as I was typing the original recipe, I realized I didn't follow even half of the instructions listed. So, I retyped the recipe to be what I actually do, and included correct water-bath instructions. The original recipe actually says you don't need to water bath it to seal it... so I must of gotten this recipe from an un-reliable source...)


Italian Tomato Sauce
Yield: about 7 pints or 3 quarts
4 quarts chopped, seeded, peeled, cored tomatoes (about 24 large)
1 cup chopped celery (about 2 stalks)
1/2  cup chopped onion (about 1/2 medium)
1/4 cup chopped green pepper (about 1/4 medium)
1 Tbsp basil
1 Tbsp oregano
1Tbsp minced parsley
2 tsp crushed red pepper (optional)

Combine all ingredients in a large sauce pot. Cover and cook 10 minutes, stirring occasionally to prevent sticking. Ladle hot sauce into hot jars, leaving 1 inch headspace. Remove air bubbles. Adjust two-piece caps. Process pints 20 minutes, quarts 25 minutes, at 10 pounds pressure in a pressure canner. (adjust for altitude.)

I tend to vary this recipe from week to week, depending on if I have celery, onion or peppers. Most weeks, I have left all 3 of those out, and added 1-2 cups of shredded zucchini to each quart jar. I also don't usually blanch (peel) my tomatoes or de-seed them when making it into sauce; rather, i run it through a food processor and can that extra fiber into my meal. 

I've also noticed that tomato varieties play a large role in how runny your sauce is. Celebrity tomatoes tend to be very meaty, so there is no need to extract any juice before putting it through a food processor. Other varieties seem to have a lot of juice. Methods to take some of that extra juice out (and possibly can the tomato juice separately), is streaming the tomatoes in a juicer first; or, mashing quartered tomatoes in a colander while catching the juice in a bowl under it; or, after it's all been through a food processor, cooking it down in a pot for an hour or 3 (without the lid) so the extra juice can evaporate out, or else, in a crockpot (without a lid) over night. The last resort - say you've sealed that sauce into jars and it's still too runny - add that water/cornstarch combo to thicken that sauce right up, as you use your jars for dinner meals. 


We have zucchini coming out of our ears, so we tried drying some zucchini for food storage. I did some sliced (for use in lasagna and meaty casseroles), and some grated (for use in spaghetti and casseroles). There's instructions out there for how to re-hydrate these veggies before, use, but I have yet to go look for those...


Lastly, I dried my cheyenne peppers. I got a needle and thread and just strung it through the peppers, then left them to hang in my kitchen. I don't have an A/C, so my kitchen is plenty warm enough for them to dry properly, but if yours isn't, or you're in a more humid area, hang them outside in the sun, or use a food dehydrator. Station the dehydrator outside your house, though, so you're eyes aren't burning in a couple of hours. 

Drying (thin-skinned) Peppers and Chiles

Drying, Smoking, Powders, and Spice Blends
Drying is the oldest and most common way to preserve pepper pods and works well for most peppers—except for the very meaty ones such as jalapeños, which are smoke-dried and called chipotles (see below). To dry peppers, select those that have reached their mature colors, or are just starting to turn. If they are picked while still green, it is very likely that it will never turn the mature color. Avoid any pods that have black spots, because these will mold or rot. On dry days, the peppers can be placed on metal racks and set in the sun. Placing them on a surface that collects heat, such as a car hood or roof, accelerates the process. They can also be hung individually on a clothesline. Another method to use is a home dehydrator—just follow the manufacturer's instructions. Jalapeños and several other chiles will dry well in a dehydrator. Cutting the thick-fleshed chiles in half, or into several pieces helps to speed up the process. Some of the larger growers use forced convection solar dryers, which reduces the time for sun-drying by 65 percent.
Dehydration also works for fresh New Mexican or poblano peppers which are first roasted and peeled (either green or red), and then placed in the sun to dry. Lay long strips of the peeled pods on nylon window screening, cover them with cheese cloth, and place them in semi-shady location with good air circulation. The more humid the climate, the more sun that should be applied to the drying pods. This process makes chile pasado (chile of the past, see below), which will turn an unappetizing dark color, brown or almost black. However, when the chile pasado is rehydrated in water for about 30 minutes, it regains its green or red color. One ounce of this chile pasado is equivalent to ten to twelve fresh pods.



Monday, September 17, 2012

Our Garden is Producing!

Keshia and Dave's Apartment Garden has been flourishing too. These are our cherry tomato plants. They are about 6 feet tall in this picture... almost 7 feet in a couple of spots. They regularly grow up the bottom of the next window above it, and then flop over because they're too heavy to hold themselves up. They've done this about 3-4 times now... however, they've only done it 1-2 times when I took this picture. 


These are some of my herbs: I have, from left top to left bottom, pesto basil, thai basil, (dead sweet basil); middle top to bottom: cilantro (end of season), parsley, cinnamon basil; and on the top right: chives, garlic chives, mint, and to the very far right: walla walla onions and a rose bush. I use grass clippings as mulch to keep the weeds down. 

These are our beef steak tomato plants. They look respectable in the picture, but since then, they've grown so big, they're like one huge bush that's threatening taking over the grass. They're so heavy that even my heavy duty cages can't quite hold them up anymore. I've been mildly frustrated with these plants however, because they haven't produced a lot of tomatoes. There's a good chance it's because we failed to prune them regularly. They're also in partial shade. 

On the other side of the rose bush, we have our Huge Sunflower coming up!


This is back in our highland garden. Celebrity tomatoes in the middle; winter squashes to the left, and peppers and onions to the right. Far back there on the right are zucchini plants and huge sunflowers.  

Dave sporting his hard working self. He does most of the work to make this garden look so good!

We took out the onions this week (July 24th), and planted red potatoes that didn't quite stay cold enough in the cellar this last year. As we were planting them, we realized the roots had already started making baby potatoes! So we popped those off, took them home, and made a tasty soup! It was so Good! Other ingredients are corn, tomato sauce, diced tomatoes, onion, grated zucchini, couple bay leaves, and... I might have put in some basil or parsley, or perhaps some red curry paste; cinnamon or a bit of brown sugar. I really don't remember. 

Here's my pregnant self, in front of our growing cherry tomatoes! 

And the Sunflower is almost about to create its flower!

This is one week's worth of produce (August 11th)! We were so surprised by how many boxes we got, and how amazing it all looked, we had to take a picture!

Produce includes Zucchini, tomatoes, Parsley, cucumbers, banana peppers, bell peppers, cheyenne peppers, blueberries, and anaheim peppers. 

Next Blog - - what did I do with all of this stuff?

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

To Save, or Not to Save, ye Books?

I come from a family where my father buys items that are a good deal that "we might need someday" and "I could use this... i think" and "this is valuable, I must save it!" My mother buys only what we need... unless it is sewing material. Then, "the woman with the most cloth when she dies, wins" and I think I could add, 'unfinished crafts' to that.

I was always the organized child, most likely to throw something away. But upon adulthood, I learned that I'm more like my family than I thought I was. In college, I knew whatever I didn't take with me to college, had a chance of never finding its way back to me... being buried in my father's collections. I could only fit a third of what I owned into my college dorms. However, I soon discovered that this one-third I owned, was more than many college students owned as a whole. Apparently I saved a lot more stuff than most people do.

Getting married was even more of an adventure. As we combined our belongings, my new husband says to me, "You own a lot of stuff. Why are you keeping this? Or this? What about that?" And I would explain, "It's valuable and could be worth a lot someday" and "my friend who died a couple years back gave this item to me" and "My future kids would probably like to use this/ play with this/ read this." But this wasn't completely a one way conversation. There were quite a few things he had that I wanted to know why he was keeping too.

Over two years have passed and we are preparing for our first child. Maybe I'm experiencing the "nesting" syndrome, but then again, this isn't altogether unusual behavior for me. I live in a small 2 bedroom apartment... probably somewhere between 600-900 sq. feet. We've had free furniture come and go; we've had phases of hobbies; I'm constantly trying to create more space without throwing out items that still have some life in them. We often buy medium-high quality appliances, cookware, select furniture, electronics, etc. and I'm constantly moving things around to make it convenient to use and store.

One category I've been collecting stuff in is books. As a teenager, I loved the library room my grandparents had in their house. They had bookshelves built into the wall as well as a work desk. The room was furnished with a computer, piano and comfy couch to lounge on. I enjoyed spending long afternoons in there, especially in the winter when the sun would shine through the window and keep me warm while I read.

For many years I have been collecting various types of books to go in such a library of my own... in a house I hope I will someday be able to afford. I liked the classics, mostly, but also children's books, and favorites from middle school and high school level fiction. Then a dictionary or so, reference books, and a pile of my favorite self-help books and some religious study novels. I have 2 Billy bookshelves a little more than full of books right now (if you're familiar with IKEA's Billy Bookshelf). I have things on there that I'm saving for my future kids to read... even stuff they won't be able to read until they're in high school. I have books that I think I should read, like "The Federalist Papers," even though I hate reading history books. I have books about various topics such as astronomy that were printed 30 years ago, and when I'm honest with myself, I really never will get around to reading those. I found a huge collection of books for 50 cents each at a second-hand type store, and bought a zillion... thinking I won't have to worry about local library deadlines with these books... that I want to take my sweet time reading.

But I think I've finally accepted the reality that I will likely never read random books that don't have deadlines. I won't read about astronomy from a beat up book that's over 30 years old and has almost no pictures. There's a good chance I'll never finish "The Federalist Papers." And an even better chance that when my kids reach the age of attending high school, they'll say, "Mom, I don't like to read that kind of genre. And, if I am going to read a book, it'll be on my eReader or Tablet." Alas, technology. I may have spent all those years carefully storing and preserving something just to find out that my kid doesn't want it.

These revelations have lead me to do what I've been doing this morning; purging my bookshelves. I have 4 bookshelves in my tiny little apartment, on top of having 5 utility shelves that are holding cookware and food. Somehow, I've got to make room for a crib and a nursery in my second bedroom. Truth be told, I could maybe move to a larger apartment, but I love my landlord, and I love how little I pay in rent. In the long run, I'll help me save for a house. Secondly, I am of the opinion, (and maybe this was derived from living in my parent's house) that if the number of bedrooms equal the number of people divided by 2, you should be able to fit, however possibly tightly. Or in other words, there should be 2 people per bedroom at maximum and everything everyone owns should be able to fit somewhere, even if it's not aesthetically pleasing. If you can't, you've got a stuff problem, not a size of apartment problem. But that's just me. And this is a simplified equation, of course. Obviously you wouldn't want a teenage girl in the same room with a boy of nearly any age.

So back to purging bookshelves. What did I have left to say about this? Oh, yes, I'm embracing technology. I'm saving only my favorite 10 books in hardback copy, (and my scrapbooks, which unfortunately take up 2.1 shelves) plus some college textbooks relating to my degree... in case I ever need to study up on it to get back into the job market. My husband thinks that's silly to save those textbooks. If he's right, I'm not willing to see that reality, yet. Most of my reference material... if I decide it is worth keeping, and I actually WILL use it again, I'll scan and make a digital PDF of (I think it's important to mention that we have 3-4 backups of all our digital material, so I feel confident in storing important information there, without a hard copy. If you are interested in this option, consider purchasing an external drive to save backups to, and/or purchasing a Crashplan subscription or another iCloud backup service. I don't suggest a single external drive is a sure way to never loose your data. We learned that the hard way when our computer hard-drive failed the same month as our external hard-drive did).

From now on, I'll read library check-outs and eBooks. Library check-outs because 98% of all books I read, I'll never re-read and because the deadline gives me the motivation to finish the book... if it's actually worth finishing. And eBooks that were printed over 100 years ago are Free with a Kindle account (classics are my favorite!) and my local library also provides eBook check-outs. The last thing I may still consider are going to those bookstores that allow you to buy a book, then come back and exchange it for another when you're done. A lot of self-help books and a few other types, I've noticed, are really difficult to read within a library's allotted check-out time.

DVDs, VHS and Music CDs

On a related topic, how many of you readers have an extensive DVD/VHS collection and/or music collection that's taking up a significant amount of space? Is it frustrating to you? Have you found that they are difficult to sell for a decent profit? Especially because you know you paid full-price for them and they're still in great condition?

I have a bit of this problem too. My husband and I rip all of our music and DVDs to our computer (which is networked to our TV via an Apple TV device), and just end up having to box up our media and store them just to prove that we legally own them... if the question ever even comes up. Neither of us really want to store something we will likely never use again... so we've resisted buying more videos and gone with Netflix, Hulu, and Redbox. Like books, we rarely watch a movie more than 1-3 times. If we plan to or will likely watch a movie 4+ times, at that point, it is generally worth purchasing rather than spending the money to rent it that many times. This equation was formulated off of what Blockbuster would generally charge to rent a movie out in 2009.

If you have an extensive media library, you might consider Crossies.com for digitization services, off-site storage services, and ease of selling videos for a higher profit. Crossies is still a very new company, however, and these things may take a lot of time to be processed until they're a little more on their feet. If you know of another company that offers these services and have impressed you, leave a comment, because the rest of us would like to know about it!


P.S.

I decided to google 'digital books' after writing this post... and realized that I should clarify, that I don't plan to buy an eBook reader for a couple of years, nor buy eBooks. There are still a lot of formatting and compatibility issues going on with eBooks and various eReaders, and I don't want to get stuck with loosing all my purchased books because The Barnes & Noble Nook format is no longer supported... and other such problems. Instead, I will use the local library and bookstore exchange programs until such a time as eBooks are more reliable to purchase, own, and afford in some cases. I also have a shelf of books I plan to skim or read before selling, etc. Until this shelf is mostly or totally empty, I'm going to avoid buying, book exchanging or otherwise acquiring any more books to read.

See related links for further information.
http://www.pcworld.com/article/219335/the_pitfalls_of_ebook_buying_what_to_look_out_for_before_you_purchase.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_e-book_readers

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Origami Earrings

I found some amazing origami earrings on KSL.com classifieds. I don't know how to make them (yet) but I'm sure they could be figured out. Or help the lady out and buy the ones she's made!





http://www.ksl.com/index.php?nid=218&ad=21030930&cat=74&lpid=&search=jewelry
$5 in West Jordan, UT   84084
Lorena @ 801-867-8865