flour | Eyes Ever Opening [entries|archive|tags|friends|userinfo]
The Madwoman of Menotomy
[ website | neitherday.com ]
[ journey | spirituality, madness, travel]
[ opinion | politics, psychiatry, religion, polls]
[ read | poetry, stream]
[ see | the madwoman, art, photography]
[ hear | voice posts]
[ free stuff | backgrounds, icons, mood themes, wallpapers]

Household Hints

Date and Time  - Oct. 4th, 2007, 10:54 am

Current Mood  - awake awake
Current Music  - air purifier

From the The Universal Household Assistant or What Every One Should Know (1884):

   Household Hints. — Do not deposit wood ashes in a wooden vessel or upon a wooden floor.
   Never use a light in examining a gas-meter.
   Never take a light into a closet.
   Never read in bed by candle or lamp light.
   Never put kindling wood on top of the stove to dry.
   Never leave clothes near a grate or fire-place to dry.
   Be careful in making fire with shavings, and never user any kind of oil to kindle a fire.
   Keep all lights as far from curtains as possible.
   Always fill and trim your lamps by daylight, and never near a fire.
   Good nice pie-crust can be made by always observing the following rule. One-quarter of a cup of shortening to every cup of flour used; to be mixed as dry as possible with cold water, and mixed only with a knife.
   Take sweet butter only for baking purposes, and never fail to thoroughly beat together your butter and sugar, if you would be sure of good results in cake baking.
   Have metal or earthen vessels for matches, and keep them out of reach of children. Wax matches are not safe.
   Ground mustard mixing with a little water is an excellent agent for cleansing the hands after handling odorous substances.
   Cut hot bread or cake with a hot knife, and it will not be clammy.
   Salt extracts the juices of meat in cooking. Steaks ought therefore not be salted until they have been broiled.
   In boiling dumplings of any kind, put them in the water one at a time. If they are put in together they will mix with each other.
   Do not cut lamp-wicks, but trim them by wiping off with a scrap of paper.
   Never boil vegetables with soup stock, for if you do it will certainly become sour in a short time.
   Boil your cream for coffee, and see if the coffee will not taste better, as well as keep hot longer.
   Pin-cushion covers made of cheese cloth embroidered and trimmed with lace, wear well and keep their looks.
   Some one says that leaves of parsley, eaten with a little vinegar, will destroy the odor of breath tainted by onions.
   Hot liquid lye is recommended for removing obstructions in waste pipes. Or let the potash dissolve over night in the pipes.
   To wipe dust from papered walls, take a clean, soft piece of flannel. Of course it must not be damp, but the dry flannel will remove the dust.
   Varnish the soles of your shoes, and it will render them impervious to dampness, and will also make them last longer. This is a good plan.
   Clean the mica in stove doors with vinegar. Take clinkers out of stoves by putting a few oyster shells into the grate, when they will become loosened, and may be removed without injuring the lining.
   Save the droppings from spermaceti candles, tie them in a cloth, and keep to smooth rough flat-irons.
   Never starch napkins.
   An old black bunting or cashmere dress may be made to serve a further period of usefulness by being made into a petticoat.
   Between two evils choose neither.
   Writing a will does not shorten life, and yet many men fear it will.
   Save old suspender rings, and sew them on the corners of kitchen holders to hang them by. It will be easy then to flip them on to a nail, and they will not be so likely to get lost.
   Powdered borax with a little sugar, blown into the cracks and crevices with a small bellows, will drive away house-ants.
   Have a high stool in the kitchen to sit on when tired, to continue your work if necessary. Perched on its top you can wash dishes or iron with ease. A low stool placed on a wooden chair forms a substitute, but a poor one. A soft sheep-skin mat is restful to stand upon.
   There is nothing better for cleaning brass or copper than coal ashes. They are also good to scour knives and forks with. For tin, whiting or fine sand is best.
   To cleanse jars or jugs or any earthen vessel slaked lime is good, or warmed lye.
   To keep a stove smooth, take a coarse and pretty large piece of flannel, roll it hard, and dip it in fine sand. Proceed to rub your stove whenever you are through cooking. Almost any stove will look better for being done the same way occasionally. Boiled starch is also very good to keep a stove looking well; put it on where it will not burn off — around the back and sides where it doesn't get very hot.


Link4 comments|Leave a comment

First Coat

Date and Time  - Aug. 27th, 2006, 08:01 pm

Current Mood  - accomplished accomplished
Current Music  - traffic in the rain

Just applied the first coat of polyurethane to the new staff. There is definitely a learning curve, and the process has gone much smoother than the last time. Properly prepared and knowing better what I'm doing, this time there was no eternal sticky and no need for flour.

In 48 hours the second coat will go on and 72 hours after that the new staff will be good to go.

Link1 comment|Leave a comment

Serpent Staff

Date and Time  - Feb. 7th, 2006, 06:37 pm

Current Mood  - cheerful cheerful
Current Music  - budgies singing

I haven't fallen down once since the rapture I experience a little over a week ago. Not once. Something was awakening. The unwinding of the Kundalini. I have noted much symbolic significance in what I have called my cane. It is more than a cane, it is my staff. I realize now that I did not need my staff because I had trouble walking, but that I had trouble walking because I needed my staff. Now I have found it and seen what it is, I do not need it to walk around, but I do need it for my journey. It was meant for me.

I have come to see my staff in the form of a serpent, the handle being the serpent head. The serpent is not an animal I would have picked out to associate myself with. The squirrel, the skunk, the Canadian goose, and the raccoon. Those have been the animals I have felt kinship with. But now I walk a new path. Not really new a new path, as I've always walked my path, it's just I realized before that I was walking.

----

Today is the first day I have been able to take my staff outside since I sealed it with polyurethane 6 days ago. I put the coating on it so that I would not have to worry about taking it outside in the elements. I was worried that snow and rain would take their toll on it, and it would not be long before it crumbled of rot.

Putting the polyurethane on proved to be more adventure than I had anticipated. More accurately: putting the polyurethane on the staff was easy, getting it off myself was difficult. I don't have any paint thinner, and not much else works as a solvent for polyurethane. I tried water and soap. I tried rum. My hands were sticky and the stick was spreading. The brushes I placed in a plastic bowl of soapy water and I hope that they are still able to be fully cleaned when I do get paint thinner. However, my hands and my arms were my more immediate concern and I lacked the correct solvent.

It then occurred to me that there was another approach to solve the problem. I needed the polyurethane would take hold of rather than something that would take hold of the polyurethane: flour. I worked the flour over my hands and arms and between my fingers letting it form a thick paste with the polyurethane. That paste I could then simply scrape off my skin. It worked, and I am now free of the stick of the polyurethane. I will, however, make sure I have paint thinner on hand if I try this again, so that I can do the clean-up the proper way.

Link3 comments|Leave a comment

Stressball

Date and Time  - Oct. 23rd, 2003, 09:13 pm

Current Mood  - optimistic optimistic
Current Music  - people yabbering in the hall

Today in stress management we made stress balls, the type you squeeze when you're stressed out. We made them by filling balloons with four and sugar.

[info]purpleglitter's visit went really well. I'm very glad she came again. She says she'll pick me up tomorrow if I get out. The doc says I have a 50/50 chance.

posted by [info]purpleglitter

Link3 comments|Leave a comment

navigation
[ viewing | most recent entries ]