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A good way to use all those photos that are not good enough for the albums is to make a large collage. Get one of those large clip frames (I got mine at a car boot sale) using blue tac arrange photos and then when happy with arrangement cover with the glass.Our days are happier when we give people a bit of our heart rather than a piece of our mind.
Jan grocery challenge £35.77/£1200 -
An addition to an earlier tip on using a pencil lead to free a zip - chalk works too!0
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After defrosting your fridge, Scraped and cleaned. Smear a thin layer of Vaseline around the whole inside of the freezer so next time when you are scraping the frost a good chunk of it will come off easier and quicker.
Then apply Vaseline again after cleaning for next time.0 -
After cleaning inside toilet bowl with toilet brush, leave the brush inside the toilet bowl with little bit of bleach to soak and then flush before putting back in to brush pot.0
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Don't buy expensive kitchen roll, (such as Bounty)! When was the last time you used a sheet of kitchen roll twice? Ie, mopped up a spill, wrung it out, put it to dry and then used it to mop up another spill! Buy cheap shops own brand roll packs, which are more than adequate to do the job.keep smiling,
chinagirl x0 -
When I only have a small spill to clean up, or I want to wipe a bit of oil round a frying pan or wok before putting it away, I use half a piece of kitchen roll. I don't like waste, so I tear a piece (of cheapo supermarket own-brand) in half and tuck the other half into the end of the roll for next time.
It works for me, and you COULD use half as many rolls, even of the cheap kind.
Surplus paper napkins, ie. from MacDonalds, (if you ever go to such places!), can also be pressed into service as kitchen roll, rather than throwing them away.
(Most used kitchen roll goes into the compost bucket - it all rots down!)A penny saved is a penny gained0 -
Surplus paper napkins, ie. from MacDonalds, (if you ever go to such places!), can also be pressed into service as kitchen roll, rather than throwing them away.
OMG! Have to say, my gran use to there (KFC, too) for the napkins and to use the toilet, everytime visit her, i am now starting to see Toilet roll without the roll. She's deny's it though!0 -
Remember;
You are still using 60% of electricity if you have any kind of electricity on Standby. e.g; T.V, Radio, DVD/Video Players, yes! and even the P.C's!0 -
To save time, and gas/electric when cooking vegetables, bring to the boil, continue boiling for a minute or two and then turn the heat off and leave the lid on.
They will continue to cook. You'll need to experiment at first so that you can get them cooked and ready at the same time as the rest of the meal. The time you leave them for depends on how you like them ie: soft or crisp.0 -
sparky61 wrote:To save time, and gas/electric when cooking vegetables, bring to the boil, continue boiling for a minute or two and then turn the heat off and leave the lid on.
They will continue to cook. You'll need to experiment at first so that you can get them cooked and ready at the same time as the rest of the meal. The time you leave them for depends on how you like them ie: soft or crisp.
Also, get ingredients out of the fridge a little while before cooking, so they warm up to room temperature and use less fuel to cook. (Obviously be careful with meat, fish, etc.) The same applies to thoroughly cooling items to be refrigerated/frozen.
When cooking frozen food that needs defrosting, defrost overnight in the refrigerator, (check it's completely defrosted before cooking), which saves a bit of electricity on keeping the fridge cold.A penny saved is a penny gained0
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