A Gathering of Days at Abundant Blessings Homestead


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Homekeeping Information

Home Management Basics
A Home Management Binder How-To
**Here are the forms for making it!**
Making Laundry Soap Tutorial
Canning U.S.A Website...how-to canning everything!
Ladies of Grace Bible Studies
Various Herbal Salves & Ointment Recipes
Herbal Remedies
The Flours and Grains Post




Handskills Tutorials

Make Wool Longies from a Sweater
Make a Skirt from Blue Jeans
Sew Your Own Jar Toppers
Make A Peasant-Style Skirt
Yo-Yo Quilt How-To Tutorial
Making a 6-Gore Skirt pictorial
Family Homestead Skirt from Jeans
DIY: Baby Bibs from Dishtowels
The Diaper Hyena...links
Diaper Sewing Patterns
Mama Bird patterns
Pull-on Fleece diaper cover
Mama to Mama patterns'
Free Diaper Pattern
The Frugal Baby Online
Diaper Patterns Online
Homemade Mommy Pad Tutorial

Gehman's Country Fabrics: Country Rose & Tropical Breeze Fabrics




Godly Stewardship

Glad Rags
LunaPads
Hillbilly Housewife
LDS Preparedness Guide
I do not endorse the LDS philosophy, but there are many good things to be taken from this PDF manual. Please enter with a prayer-filled heart and caution as you read.
How to Stock a Pantry
The Pantry
Sensible Stocking
Menus 4 Moms
How to Save a Dollar a Week
The Grocery Game blog article
Organized Home Pantry
LDS Food Pantry Listing
Several Pantry Frugal Sites
Vintage Projects -- build everything yourself
this site has instructions for building a rototiller, a cement block maker...LOTS of useful homestead items!
72 Hour Bug Out Kits




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Blogger Friend School 2007
From the Desk
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Women Of The Homestead
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In The Barn
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My Favorite Places Online
The Homestead Garden
Being Quiverfull



Gifts from Friends




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Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Life without a refrigerator...roaming thoughts

Shared in The Homestead Kitchen

Ok, I'm browsing the web, looking at alot of MotherEarth News and such, trying to get an idea of why I actually need a refrigerator.

The general consensus seems to be that in reality, I don't.  I've grown accustomed to one, I like the convenience of having one (there's those ice cubes again!), but good grief, back a handful of years ago, a lot of folks simply didn't have one.  My own grandmother lived a great deal of her life without one.  My entire life has had one involved.

A great deal of what's in your fridge absolutely does NOT need to be there. If you're interested in trying this, just start by taking all these things out of your fridge, and putting them in a pantry type situation:

Butter/margarine - shelf life about 2 weeks
Eggs -shelf life at least a week
Cheese - keep covered, shelf life variable- taste when unrefrigerated hugely better
ketchup/mustard - shelf life - forever
honey - shelf life - forever
onions/garlic - shelf life - 2 weeks
tomatoes - shelf life - 4 days
cabbage - shelf life - 1 week
cooking oil - shelf life - months
peanut butter - shelf life - months

Of course, for most folks—and that includes us—the list of refrigeratables goes beyond milk and meat. Here's how we dealt with other common edibles:

Fresh fruits and vegetables, in our experience, tend to keep very well without refrigeration. In fact, some fruits (cit rus, apples, and others) require no chilling at all. Grapes will store for quite some time if their stems are placed in wet sand.

Lettuce leaves, we've learned, remain fresh when their stems are submerged in a little water at the bottom of a jar or container. Even whole heads of lettuce can be kept this way (a head is set on top of a water-filled glass so that its stem just touches the water). Okra, carrots, greens—in fact, most anything with a stem—will keep well in water much the same way that flowers stay fresh when arranged in a filled vase. Once again, for what it's worth, we allow only the tips of the stems to touch the liquid.

From a family of pot-makers, Mohammed has made ingeniously simple use of the laws of thermodynamics to create the pot-in-pot refrigerator, called a Zeer in Arabic.

Here’s how it works.

You take two earthen pots, both being the same shape but different sizes, and put one within the other. Then, fill the space between the two pots with sand before pouring water into the same cavity to make the sand wet. Then, place food items into the inner pot, and cover with a lid or damp cloth. You only need to ensure the pot-in-pot refrigerator is kept in a dry, well-ventilated space; the laws of thermodynamics does the rest. As the moisture in the sand evaporates, it draws heat away from the inner pot, cooling its contents. The only maintenance required is the addition of more water, around twice a day.

To give an idea of its performance, spinach that would normally wilt within hours in the African heat will last around twelve days in the pot, and items like tomatoes and peppers that normally struggle to survive a few days, now last three weeks.

One thing we did have was a cellar. Dad dug a hole some four feet deep and about the size of a small room, built walls another foot or two higher with rock or slabs, placed beams and more slabs across the top, and covered the whole thing with dirt (except for the sloping entrance, which was protected by an inclined door). Our home canned goods, vegetables, butter, and milk were kept there, and they always stayed cool in summer and free from frost in winter. Apples came from the underground storage area crisp and juicy.

The cellar was a great convenience, of course, but at various times of our life on the farm we made do with simpler arrangements. Once Dad made a trapdoor in the porch and dug a hole underneath about two and a half by four feet, and deep enough to hold a roughly constructed box. During the summer months, we'd put our milk and churning cream in covered pails which we wrapped in wet cloths and lowered into the "cooler". Then we'd pour water into the box and let it drain out through the seams, so that the container and the surrounding soil were kept moist at all times. The under the porch system worked very well.


 

There is certainly some things to think about with all I've been reading this morning.  I'm probably not going to freeze very many eggs.  We'll make up plenty of noodles, pound cake and some Angel Food cakes for the freezer.  Much more appealing than little baggies of golden yellow liquid, I think.

I don't know that I could go cold turkey without the fridge.  I could go cold turkey without a lot of things around here, but I don't know about the fridge.  I'm rather attached to it.  I drink water, but I'm terribly addicted to my sweet tea still.  I'm working on that.  And those ice cubes...it's just not the same to pull them from a bag.  I'm spoiled, I know. 

Then there's Dewey.  I don't know that he'd totally go for the idea of no fridge.  A life time of doing things one way make for harder changes you know.  Foods belong in the fridge.  Left-overs belong in the fridge.  There are simply certain rules I've grown up with over my 40 years, and many of them include a refrigerator.

But I love these articles.  I love the idea of knowing I can manage perfectly well, actually better in many cases, doing things the 'old fashioned' way.  Milk is a poor way to collect calcium, so going without the gazillion jugs in the fridge might not hurt at all.  Cheeses and such that we can adjust to, as well.  I've kept eggs (my farm fresh, not store-bought) out on a counter for a short time without issue as well.  I guess I could get out the shovel and dig a small cellar.  Would be nice to have one anyway.

Then again, in the back of my mind, I picture Ann-with-an-e, standing in Marilla's cupboard, looking at the mouse floating there in that crock.....  :::shudder:::  see the evils of watching television?

Sources of Notes here:

Make Do Without a Refrigerator

A Refrigerator that Runs Without Electricity

Little Blog in The Big Woods....no refrigerator for 30 years

Good Food Without Refrigeration




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Thoughts

Tuesday, May 13, 2008 - Thanks for the great info.!

Shared by CatherineAnn


The refrigerator in our rental home is old and either gets too cold or won't get cold enough....depending on whether I have perishables in there or not ;) ! Perhaps I should just unplug it and try the jar method. It doesn't make ice cubes anyway LOL!
This really does give one "food for thought", though.
Blessings,
Catherine


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Tuesday, May 13, 2008 - Untitled Comment

Shared by southernbelle


Very interesting reading!


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~26 qts potatoes ~13 qts green beans ~3 qts english peaas


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Searching out Resources for Raising our Boys into Godly Men and leaders of their homes
Parents Raising Children
this is the only article I have viewed at the site...
Pilgrim's Progress Online Study
some of the page links are missing here...simply change the 'pplesson1' to a '2' and so forth...
a Homeschool Blogger raising boys for God
Virtuous Maidens Blog
Rearing Lords and Ladies
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Are we in the 7 year Tribulation?
The Lion, The Witch, and The Happy Meal
Vaccination Liberation Website
Avoid Harry Potter Books
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Maidens for Modesty


A Godly Family Plan

~~Devise a regular routine of living in our lives:
daily family & personal devotions
daily schooling
daily snack & meal time
daily chore assignments
~~Develop consistent & proper study habits

~~Teach proper table manners:
Eat and drink at table, seated properly
Wait for meal blessing quietly

~~Respect for other's property
~~Unfailing courtesy, esp. with siblings
~~You receive nothing you cry or whine for
~~Praises always for obedience and acts of respect

~~Respect the Sabbath/Lord's Day
~~Teach purity of language -- no slang terms
~~Recognize and accept differences in ability & personality
~~Accept that problems and interruptions will occur

~~Assign regular & consistent family chores
~~Maintain proper priority of work & study
~~Accept responsibility for the education of children at home

~~Accept responsibility for the education of children at home
~~Conquer the Will of your children, not their Spirit

~~Maintain consistent discipline:
encourage open confession & forgiveness of wrongs
praise all acts of obedience
allow no sinful act to go unpunished
never bring up past offenses
accept intention over perfect performance sometimes
maintain priorities

No indulgences of self will can be trivial, no denial unprofitable; Heaven or Hell depends on this alone. A parent who studies to subdue it in his child works together with God in the renewing and saving of their soul. The parent who indulges it does the devil's work, makes religion impractical, salvation unattainable, and does all that in him lies to damn his child, soul and body, forever.
Susanna Wesley








No indulgences of self will can be trivial, no denial unprofitable; Heaven or Hell depends on this alone. A parent who studies to subdue it in his child works together with God in the renewing and saving of their soul. The parent who indulges it does the devil's work, makes religion impractical, salvation unattainable, and does all that in him lies to damn his child, soul and body, forever.
Susanna Wesley


Bravado Bras at Nurtured Family


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We are a Christian family desiring to raise our children with the primary focus of Training their Hearts!
I have no greater joy, than to hear my children walk in truth... III John 1:4
Train up the child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it... Proverbs 22:6
Oh, that their hearts would be inclined to fear me and keep all my commands always, so that it might go well with them and their children forever!... Deuteronomy 5:29
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we are currently using: Ray's Arithmetic, Primary and Intellectual levels and for grammar lessons, McGuffey Readers and Working With Words.
Don Potter's Education Pages
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First Lessons in Math
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TimeLine of U.S. Presidents
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Crochet work
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Charlotte Mason Series in Modern English
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Our mission in life is not to go to some far-off foreign land, but to work at home and in our churches and home communities. Our goal should not be to leave behind riches and possessions, farms and homes for our children, but a priceless heritage they will cherish enough to work fervently to pass along to their children. It has been done for generations and with God's help it can still be done. In teaching our children, we are striving toward a deep understanding of who they are In Christ.
I am . . . a child of God, a gift to my parents and my country. I'm a person of great value because God made me.
I can . . . do all things through Christ who strengthens me. God has made me able to do everything required of me.
I ought . . . to do my duty to obey God, to submit to my parents and everyone in authority over me, to be of service to others, and to keep myself healthy with proper food and rest so my body is ready to serve.
I will . . . resolve to keep a watch over my thoughts and choose what's right even if it's not what I want.


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