Thanksgiving In A Hurry!

Down to the wire and needs some help getting it all done? Here is a list of things that will help you get Thanksgiving dinner made and your house cleaned in time for Thursday! Print out the list and check it off as you go.
Today
clean bedrooms
put away clutter from all over the house
take out trash and disinfect trash cans
clean out frig
shop if you can, don’t forget napkins or paper towels
do some laundry

Monday
clean kitchen
shop for what you forgot yesterday
make frozen desserts
look for games and coloring books for children, color pencils, paper tablecloths are great for drawing on.
do some laundry

Tuesday
clean living areas
clean dining room
set out serving utensils, plates, glasses, cups, saucers, casserole dishes and pans; make sure you have enough or buy paper plates and cups!
make refrigerated desserts
cut up vegetables you will need for dressing, salads, etc

Wednesday
make casseroles that can be reheated
roast turkey – de-bone and wrap tightly in an oven proof pan, refrigerate. Reheat tomorrow. Save bones for soup.
make cranberry relish -
make ahead – mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, pies, cakes
get ice and drinks
set tables

Thursday
make rolls,gravy,salad,dressing
reheat turkey and casseroles
make tea or coffee
set out frozen desserts

 

Thanksgiving ~ Getting Organized

Getting organized to cook a large meal is essential. Getting yourself and your kitchen ready to cook that big meal is time saving and stress reducing.. Getting your house clean to the point that it satisfies you and gives you room to cook and show hospitality is also important.

Its time to get that Thanksgiving menu planned and all your recipes organized. Even if you will not be hosting Thanksgiving in your home, you can start thinking about what you might want to prepare to take to the meal in another home. These first couple of weeks of November are a great time to do lots of thinking, planning and organizing.

Now that you have that done, you can look in your pantry and cabinets to see if you have what you need to prepare and serve those delicious recipes. Check through all your cooking pans and pots and make sure you have everything you need. Do you need to purchase something? Borrow something? It’s not a good thing to need a spring form pan at the last minute.

Look through your serving dishes too. Do you have everything needed to serve your meal? Do you have all the utensils and glassware you need? Serving spoons? Plates? Dessert plates?

Now is also the time to start cleaning your house, deep clean the bathrooms and kitchen especially. Its the week to get your guest room ready and do all the heavy cleaning that you want to have done by TG. For help in keeping yourself on track this week with your cleaning, check out the Fast And Furious Fall Cleaning Series. Its not just for Fall, you can use it all year long!

For more help, check out the Thanksgiving Planner.  It is filled with detailed help on planning, cleaning, cooking and has all new recipes and devotionals for you.

Get Control Of The Laundry

The laundry can be really wild and woolly here.  Its probably that way at your house too. It just gets out of control so easily. Stains that won’t come out, mold or mildewy smells, ring around the collar… they all rear their ugly heads even after the clothes have been washed sometimes.

I’ve found a few ways to conquer the wild laundry. It starts with my arsenal of chemicals.  Yeah, that doesn’t sound too good.  It starts with my cleaning products.

Bleach -
Ah, bleach. What did we ever do without you? I heart bleach. I don’t go crazy with it, but there are simply some things  I would never have been able to get clean without it. It kills mold and mildew and if I am sure to rinse it out of your clothing well, it doesn’t usually make any of us itch or break out.

Borax -
If you can’t use bleach for some reason, Borax works almost as well at getting out mildew or mold smells. Good stuff.  I always keep it on hand but its for making homemade laundry soap.

Homemade Laundry Soap -
I don’t always get this made when I need it so I sometimes purchase commercial soap. You can find my recipe here. I am working on another, creamy recipe and will post that when I get time! Homemade soap doesn’t suds. I’ve made it with coconut oil and that will suds, but its expensive.  Homemade soap is actually soap, not detergent. It works extremely well and is very inexpensive to make. The key to success with homemade soap, and not causing your whites to be gray or dingy is to rinse it out WELL.

Stain Removers -
I keep Lestoil on hand for greasy stains. If you put it in an old dish soap bottle or other squeeze bottle, you can direct it onto stains. My husband can be messy eater, and he works with grease and oil at work so he gets greasy. Lestoil works.
Fels Naptha is great for stains, but its easier to use the Lestoil because its liquid. Fels van be wet and then rubbed onto stains before washing.  I don’t use commercial stain removers any more. They are extremely expensive and I have bleached too many spots on clothes using it.

Fabric Softener
– I really like Classic Downy. But they’ve messed with it so much over the years that its not the same. So I just choose to use white vinegar. The vinegar rinses out of the clothes, doesn’t leave a smell and makes the clothes very soft. However…..
In the winter time, I use dryer sheets. I cut the sheets into thirds and use 1/3 of a sheet for each load. That small piece of a dryer sheet is enough to keep static out of the clothes. And its not enough to leave much of a smell.

You can also use white vinegar for a rinse aide.  Vinegar will help the fabrics release the detergent or soap you used to wash. Getting rid of all the soap or detergent is crucial to good results after washing. Once vinegar opens up the fibers of the fabric, the fabric feels softer, too. Vinegar is cheap and won’t leave an odor after its rinsed out.

Other things I need for doing laundry:

A few good soaking pans – I use my large stainless steel canning pans. I have some plastic ones too. I soak a lot of clothes to remove stains. I also hand-wash a lot of clothes like lingerie, delicate blouses, etc.

A Drying Rack - I am rack-less right now but I am looking at one to purchase. I don’t care for the wooden ones that are free-standing, they get black and weak pretty quickly. I like wooden ones that are attached to the wall, but where in the world would I hang one in this house? So the search continues. Right now I hang a lot of clothes on clothes-hangers in the bathroom and outdoors.

A Clothes Dryer – Mine belonged to the country music star, Mel Tillis. Seriously. It was purchased at his yard sale many years ago. That’s odd to you? I guess its one of the perks of living near Nashville, Tennessee. We’re all just neighbors here. I can still hear sequins tossing around in the vent.

A good, hot dryer is an essential. I guess you could survive without one, I’ve gone long periods of time without one.   Did you know that you can actually kill germs on towels and other clothing by running them through a very hot dryer? You don’t want to over-do it but a good dryer that has a temperature control is a real essential, especially if you have children.

So that’s what laundry essentials are to me.  I can clean most anything with these items.  I’ve had some really bad stains in the years past. Things like tar or rumen fluid (don’t ask just google it). For those stains I’ve had to purchase some commercial solvents. What are your laundry essentials?

Next time ….. “How To Manage The Sheer Volume of Laundry!”

How A Homekeeper Can Live Within Her Means

Would you like to know how to always have enough money and how to live within your means? Here is a quick run-down on what we’ve learned to be content and rely on God. Grab a cup of coffee and put your feet up, relax and read.

The first and most important rule: Refrain from buying everything you want.

Does that sound too simple? Let me put it this way; it is the most foolish and immature thing in the world to think that you have to have whatever you want. It is equally foolish to think that because your friends or neighbors or fellow church members have something, you must have it too. It is not mature thinking to say to yourself that you deserve everything you want or that you must have everything you want. If buying something you want causes your finances to be strained, bills to be late and tempers to flare, then why buy it?

This may seem foreign to you, its kind of old-fashioned I guess. But I have stayed at home with our children for the past 29 years  and my husband has been the sole bread-winner. We decided that it was best for our children to have me at home managing things, than for us to have a second income.

Because I am at home, I am the home manager. My husband doesn’t make the decisions about the home, menus, minor purchases or even decorating. Those are my responsibilities. If I have questions or need input I ask him.  I give input when we are budgeting and make sure that small expenditures around the house are included. I manage that money to best of my ability. I consider myself to be self-employed and homemaking is my career so I work at it like I would work at a job.  So I try to be ready to give account of how I am spending my budgeted money and give account of my time and efforts if needed. I don’t make purchases that are a foolish expense and I don’t fulfill wants from the household money. I save what I don’t use for future Needs.

Rule number 2: Don’t desire what others have and don’t try to emulate them in all their purchases. If they have gotten what they have by hard work and good planning, then emulate their pattern. Work hard, save toward purchases. Now, you must realize that I am not saying that you shouldn’t have anything that others have. If I see that my friend has a certain kind of washing machine, for example, and I already need a washer, I may think, “That is exactly the kind of washer I need.”  When I go to buy the washer, I remember what my friend has. When I purchase it I’m not purchasing it simply because my friend has one.  I am purchasing it because it will fill a need in my home and I have saved my money in order to purchase it.

Rule number 3: Don’t buy on credit. You might think that you can’t survive without credit. We have not purchased anything on credit for over 25 years.  Here’s how we make purchases, especially large ones;

First we decide that we need something.  We’ve learned to distinguish between a “Need” and a “Want”, have you?  If it is a Want, we make sure there is no other pressing Need and then we start saving for the Want.  It is buying wants on credit that has gotten many a family into serious financial debt.

Then we shop around to see what we’d like to have, what we think we can afford and where we will purchase it.  I’m sure you’ve done that.

Finally, we save our money until we have enough to purchase the item. We don’t buy it on credit. we have learned to wait and postpone gratification. We’re saving for a washing machine right now, going to the laundro-mat weekly.  Believe me, it is most gratifying to pay for something completely and take it home and have it belong to us than to pay for it over time with interest.  So that brings us to …

Rule number 4: Really learn what a Need is and what a Want is.  I’m not telling you to completely deny yourself and your wants, I’m counseling that you learn to temper your wants and not give in to every desire. And I am telling you that its best to fit your wants in to your budget after your needs have been met. God promises to meet all our Needs (Philippians 4:19). We’ve learned that often He meets our Wants as well. When we have been faithful in being mature and wise in our handling of the money He gives us, He has blessed us. When we’ve made financial blunders, He has taken care of us but we have had to face the consequences of bad management.

I’d be amiss if I didn’t mention Rule number 5: Give from what God has given you.  Budget regular giving into your finances. God loves a cheerful giver (2 Cor. 9:7).  Don’t be stingy with your money and resources. If you are a Christian, then God is at work in you and part of the time, He works through your finances, not only to use your money for His Kingdom, but to change you into the image of Christ.

Rule number 6: Budget.  Set aside a certain amount of money for each bill and each expenditure. A budget can be hard to set up so I recommend help like Dave Ramsey or Crown Financial.  Crown Financial is what we used years ago to get hold of our spending and learn how to use money as a tool to do God’s work.   Budget your Christmas spending this year. Set aside some money each week, even if it is only a few dollars. I encourage you get off the Christmas Gift Treadmill because it only leads to frustration and poverty.  It has taken nearly 30 years to get our extended family on the same page with us, but this year,  probably due to the current economic crisis, they are willing to forgo gifts and spend time together!

And finally, Rule number 7:  Be sure that you DO budget what we call “Fun Money”.  Don’t deprive yourself completely. It just makes everyone grumpy.  We budget money to do something fun every week. Years ago we had to make it twice  a month instead of weekly.  But we have always, always made sure that the children had some fun whether it was a hamburger at a restaurant or mini-golf, or camping. We know that constant strictness with money makes people feel deprived and that leads to discontent.

Don’t worry about your children while you are learning to balance your needs and wants and set up a budget, involve them.  If you have been catering to your own wants, you’ve probably been catering to theirs as well.  So talk to your children about what you’re doing and bring them in on your plan to live within your means. Children are very resilient and will learn how to conserve and budget as well. And that will be a great life skill to pass along to them.

Being content with one’s circumstances is a great thing. It takes a load of care off your shoulders as the Keeper Of The Home. Paul said he had learned to be content in whatever circumstance he found himself (Philippians 4:12).  One key to content is dependence on God to meet your Needs. The other key to content is good management of resources. I hope you can lay hold of both!