Friday, August 16, 2013

Sew Cute Snowman Craft Pattern

Sew Cute Snowman Craft Pattern
My daughter and I made several of these last winter and sold so many
They make great gifts and you can also order from us as well, just email me for info
You will need:

Scrap of greenery or garland
button
Couple of material scraps
Hot Glue
20" jute
furniture button for nose
old sweater - arm works best
muslin
orange paint
permanent marker pen
Poly Fiberfill


Cut 2 snowman head pieces out of muslin following the cut line of the pattern. Sew on the stitch line shown on pattern, leaving about an inch to turn the piece inside out. After stitching, turn inside out and stuff firmly with the Poly fiber Fill. You can just hot glue shut the hole you used to stuff (or sew it if you are ambitious!). I just hot glue and make sure that is the very top of his head so it is covered up when you add the hat.

Hat:
Use about 8" of a sleeve from an old sweater. (If the sweater arm is too large for his head, you can cut it on the seam and make a new seam - either sewn together or lightly hot glued together. Place the sleeve on the snowman's head so about 2" of the top of his head is covered by the sleeve, and roll the bottom section up about 1 1/2", forming a cuff. Hot glue onto his head all the way around. Now loosely tie a piece of jute around the top of the hat. Using about 10" of another piece of jute, tie it so it is a circle and stick one end into the top of the hat, far enough in so when you tightly tie the top of the hat, it will form a secure loop for hanging. Tightly tie the jute on the top of the hat. Cut the ends off and add a small button to the center (see picture).

Face:
Using a permanent marker (might want to mark it first with a regular black pen for placement) add the snowman's dots that make up his eyes and mouth (see photo). Paint the wooden button orange and hot glue as picture shows. Make a bow from material scraps and hot glue to the bottom of his face.




Thursday, August 15, 2013

Goldfish Crackers Made From Scratch

Aren't these the cutest Crackers and made with love
the kids can even help


you can get a cutter in different sizes here or even Hobby Lobby
http://www.amazon.com/Makins-USA-Clay-Cutters-Package/dp/B004HJ4AII/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1376628232&sr=8-3&keywords=Mini+Tiny+Fish+Cookie+Cutter


Ingredients
1 C all-purpose flour
4 T cold unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
8 oz cheddar cheese (This is the fun part! Pick out whatever type of cheddar that you like! I used orange cheddar for half of the fish, as shown above, and white cheddar for the other half, as shown below. Both cheddars that I used were extra sharp because that's how I like it!)
1/2 t salt
1/2 t fresh-ground pepper
A fish cookie cutter. I got mine from CopperGifts.


Direction
Pulse the flour, butter, cheese, salt, and pepper together using a food processor until the mixture resembles coarse meal.
Pulse in 3 to 4 tablespoons of water, one tablespoon at a time, and only enough so that the dough forms a ball and rides the blade.
Remove, wrap in plastic, and chill for 20 minutes or up to 24 hours.
Line 2 baking pans with parchment paper and set aside.
Roll the dough out to 1/8-inch thickness. (If you roll it thicker, it will still work, but the crackers won't be quite as crunchy. This dough rolled out so easily; you'll wish that you always worked with cheddar!)
Cut out as many crackers as possible.
Place them 1 inch apart on the prepared baking pans.
Bake at 350 F until golden and crisp - 15 to 20 minutes.

DIY:Jars and Bottle Ideas



I have a thing for Jars and Bottles, old or new, I sew something in them and want to recycle but getting the labels off, wrecks my NAILS.

Well here is the answer

My best trick how to Easily Remove Labels!

Once the paper is removed you are left with this icky residue.

Baking Soda and Vegetable oil are all you need!

Apply and let sit for about 10 minutes

Wipe Off and Rinse with Soap and Water! Voila!



It works, I use it

***

I learned today:

Did you know....(Kraft) Parmesan cheese lids fit Mason jars? Use for sugar, flour, coffee beans (or grounds), bath salts...... The possibilities are endless! You could even paint the jars and use for gifts.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

DIY: Foaming Soaps





“I bought a Dawn Direct Foam pump for my dish washing soap a long time ago. Now I just purchase regular dish soap with my coupons and sales (usually free), and then refill it! 


Just fill the direct foam bottle about 2/3 with water, then 1/3 of the way with soap Be sure to leave about a 1" space at the top of the bottle for room.. Put the water in first or it will be too foamy and you wont be able to fill the bottle up till the foam settles. I add a few drops of olive oil or any oil you like to use will work , this keeps the pump working good. Then, stir it very gently so you don’t make bubbles in the bottle. It seriously stretches the life of my dish soap!!”


Now… I put this to the test, and absolutely love it! I added about 6 tbsp Of your favorite dish soap to my bottle,  

Give it a try ~ save money
***






I. Love. Fluffy Soap! It’s true ~ I love the foaming suds… but not the price.

Homemade Cleaners are a simple way to save BIG, so one day I decided to make Homemade Foaming Soap! I’ve been doing this trick for years now… and you can too!
What You’ll Need:
Liquid Hand Soap {Softsoap, Dial, antibacterial or other} *If you use the thick creamy soaps, you will need to thin it down before adding it to the Bottle. The clear-based soaps foam best!*
1 Empty Foaming Hand Soap Bottle {Bath & Body Works, Dial, etc.}
***

Homemade Peppermint Foaming Hand Soap
Ingredients
1/4 parts peppermint scented castille soap (or plain)
3/4 parts distilled water
2-3 drops peppermint essential oil
a foaming soap dispenser

Method
Mix water then soap.. Drop in and mix in oils. Pour into a foaming soap dispenser. That’s IT!
Now isn’t that easy??
***
Here's one more recipe that I sometimes use
 liquid Foaming hand soap
Here is the easy recipe

Fill a foaming soap pump (like this one) 1/3 full with Castile Soap (I like Dr. Bronner’s in Peppermint, Almond and Lavender for hand soaps)
Depending on the size of the bottle (and your smeller), drop 10-30 drops of Thieves, Purification or Tea Tree Essential Oils (they are all powerful antibacterials).
Fill the rest with filtered, distilled or regular tap water

Flatten your tummy with these delicious foods!

Flatten your tummy with these delicious foods!
 
Watermelon
This fruit is 92% water, which can help fill you up and rid your body of excess sodium. Plus, this super-sweet, vitamin-C-rich fruit clocks in at less than 100 calories per cup or large wedge, so it's a great snack for people trying to lose weight!
Greek Yogurt
This creamy treat packs about 20 grams of protein per cup, filling your stomach quickly without excess volume or calories. Yogurt also contains potassium, which rids the body of sodium, and beneficial bacteria called probiotics that reduce stomach gas and bloating.
Cucumber
Due to their extremely high 96% water content, the inside temperature of a cucumber can be up to 20 degrees cooler than the outside air, making them a refreshing, low-calorie food. Plus, they're slim-sational: One whole cucumber equals only 45 calories!
Unsweetened Iced Tea and Coffee
Calorie-free and full of antioxidants, these refreshingly cool beverages fill you up and help flush out extra sodium. Instead of sugary lemonade or soda, pour a glass of unsweetened iced green tea for an afternoon treat.
Jicama
Expand your produce horizon and try jicama, a low-calorie root vegetable with a crisp texture and slightly sweet, nutty flavor. A great source of potassium, which has anti-bloat properties, jicama is a high-volume, low-cal snack at just 50 filling calories per cup.

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

10 counterfeit products we commonly consume

I can not believe this when I read it and I am still having my doubts but if it's true I am also raving MAD
Most astute shoppers might guess that a pile of supposed Louis Vuitton handbags being hawked by a shady sidewalk vendor for $20 a pop are probably not authentic. But how about a lovely-looking bottle of extra-virgin olive oil on the shelf of the supermarket? Even the savviest of shoppers might not suspect that behind the label lurk 12 ounces of, say, humdrum corn oil. Welcome to the world of food fraud.
 
In a country where we have relatively strict labeling regulations, many food manufacturers still manage to swindle shoppers by adding fillers or diluting the real deal with less expensive ingredients, without the knowledge of the consumer. And in fact, it’s become so prevalent that the U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention, a nonprofit that sets standards used by the FDA, set up a database to track the infractions. Called theFood Fraud Database (FFD), it describes food fraud as the "deliberate substitution, addition, tampering or misrepresentation of food, food ingredients or food packaging, or false or misleading statements made about a product for economic gain." It has a shocking number of entries.
 
And while a knockoff purse may pose little more harm than embarrassment upon its discovery, phony food can be a cause for concern. It can lead food allergy sufferers dangerously astray. As well, some items being used aren’t meant for human consumption, while others contain toxic components such as lead or melamine. While the list of foods on the database is extensive, here are some of the most commonly-consumed ones to be on the lookout for.
 
1. Orange juice
What could be complicated about orange juice? It is made from oranges, juiced — except when it’s not. That some juice makers feel compelled to regularly pump up their product with non-orange ingredients seems farfetched, but they do it. And in fact, orange juice is one of the most popular items to have suspect ingredients sneaked into the mix. The FFD is chock full of faux orange juices, one of the most shocking reveals a mixture of beet sugar, corn sugar, monosodium glutamate, ascorbic acid, potassium sulfate, orange pulp wash, grapefruit solids, and a byproduct from a water distillation system. 
 
2. Honey
Honey laundering has been making headlines lately due to a large-scale case in Chinawhere stocks are commonly tainted with a potentially dangerous antibiotic – launderers mask the honey's oririn and the defiled product is whisked through the system to unwitting consumers.
 
Also at play, cheaper honeys are increasingly passed off as more expensive varieties. Honey is one of the most commonly mislabeled foods, representing 7 percent of food fraud cases. Last year, Food Safety News tested honey and found that 75 percent of store-bought honey didn’t contain pollen. People are still buying a product made from bees, but with no pollen food regulators are unable to identify the honey’s source. Consequent testing found that a third of all phony honey was imported from Asia and was contaminated with lead and antibiotics.
 
The National Honey Board says regulations do allow for pollen to be filtered out as part of the removal of “bee parts” and other organic matter, but there is still cause for dismay. The FFD lists a bevy of non-honey ingredients, such as sucrose syrup, sugar syrup, partial invert cane syrup, corn syrup, glucose syrup, high-fructose corn syrup, beet sugar, and a whole host of non-authentic sweeteners. The good news is that the tests from Food Safety News found all of their samples from farmers markets, co-ops and whole food stores like Trader Joes were authentic.
 
3. Truffle oil
This one comes as a shock to any self-respecting foodie upon its discovery. The fancy truffle oil that home chefs and beloved restaurants drizzle across pizza, pasta, and salads … isn’t flavored with real truffles. No, most commercial truffle oils are created by mixing olive oil with a synthetic petroleum-based flavoring agent, commonly 2,4-dithiapentane. The collective sound of gourmands’ hearts breaking when The New York Times did a story on the practice was nearly audible; all that dreamy reverie spent on a chemical created in a lab! Real truffle oil may be hard to find, but check the label for truffle “aroma” or “essence” to spot the imposter oils, both of these terms are not USDA-approved food descriptions.
 
4. Blueberries
In 7 nutrition bars that are worse than candy, we discovered that the Berry Blast PowerBar (you know, the one with pictures of berries blasted across the wrapper) contained, ta-da, no berries whatsoever. Berries, and blueberries in particular, have become a superfood darling and consequently, commonly faked – there’s a pretty lengthy list of retail food items that contain words or photos suggesting that real blueberries were used in the products, when in fact, they weren’t.
 
The nonprofit Consumer Wellness Center reported that many "blueberries" in popular products they found were nothing more than glops of sugar, corn syrup, starch, hydrogenated oil, artificial flavors and artificial food dye blue No. 2 and red No. 40. And these are from popular manufacturers such as Kellogg's, Betty Crocker and General Mills. If you see bagels, cereals, breads, muffins, cereal, and other items that promise blueberries, closely check the ingredient list for, you got it, actual blueberries. Also to note, artificial food dye blue No. 2 and red No. 40 likely indicate “fake blueberries at work here.”
 
5. Milk
Fake milk being sold as the real McCoy? It seems unfeasible, but it’s not. Milk is one of the most commonly adulterated food items out there. A look at the FFD turns up pages of search results for milk, with a nightmarish list of adulterants. For starters: Melamine, non-authentic animal sources, formaldehyde, urea, hydrogen peroxide, machine oil, detergent, caustic soda, starch, non-potable water, cow tallow and pork lard. Gulp.
 
6. Fish
Between sustainability issues and mercury levels, many of us are obsessively diligent about the fish we buy. So it’s depressing and distressing to discover that a study by Oceana from 2010 to 2012 found that 33 percent of the 1,215 samples they analyzed nationwide were mislabeled according to FDA guidelines. The samples were collected from 674 retail outlets in 21 states.
 
Samples labeled as snapper and tuna had the highest mislabeling rates (87 and 59 percent); only seven of the 120 samples of red snapper purchased nationwide were actually red snapper, the other 113 samples were another fish.
 
At the same time, farmed fish gets sold as wild catch and scallops are sometimes stamped-out whitefish. And buyer beware: A Consumer Reports study included a "grouper" sample that was really tilefish, a fish that contains frighteningly high levels of mercury.
 
7. Saffron
Few spices are as exotic or expensive as saffron, and consequently, few spices are knocked off as frequently. Commonly standing in for the costly crimson threads, according to the FFD, are creative adulterants such as marigold and calendula flowers, turmeric, corn silk, poppy petals, died onions, gypsum, chalk, starch, borax and glycerine, tartrazine, barium sulfate, sandalwood dye, colored grass, and red-dyed silk fiber.
 
8. Olive oil
Researchers have found that olive oil is the food most vulnerable to food fraud. In most cases consumers are getting a lesser quality than what is labeled – regular olive oil instead of extra virgin, or a cheaper, non-Italian variety being sold as Italian. But olive oil is also frequently diluted with imposter oils such as hazelnut oil, corn oil, sunflower oil, peanut oil, vegetable oil, soybean oil, palm oil and walnut oil. One sample even contained lard.
 
In rare instances, varieties of non-food-grade oil may be added in. In one notorious case, more than 600 Spaniards died in 1981 after eating a non-food-grade, industrial rapeseed oil that was sold as olive oil.
 
9. Pomegranate juice
Pomegranate juice is another food category undone by its own popularity. Ever since pomegranate juice hit the market, it has been lauded for its high antioxidant content, for which consumers are willing to pay a premium. So it’s with no little amount of frustration to find that “pomegranate” juice is often diluted with grape or pear juice, sugar, and high-fructose corn syrup. There have also been reports of completely "synthetic pomegranate juice" that didn't contain any traces of the real juice at all.
 
10. Coffee
If you buy whole beans and grind them at home, there’s less of a chance that your morning joe has been "enhanced" with the confounding oddities that find their way into ground and instant coffee courtesy of sketchy coffee producers. The following have been found in these forms of coffee: Twigs, coffee husks, roasted corn, roasted barley, roasted soybeans, chicory powder, rye flour, potato flour, burned sugar, caramel, figs, roasted date seeds, glucose, maltodextrins, starch and roasted ground parchment. 
 
The moral of the story? Don't be scared by all of this, but be aware. Buy whole foods when you can. Shop at trusted co-ops and farmers markets when possible. Know that well-known names and bigger brands should be somehwat reliable, since they have a lot to lose if they're busted for mislabeling. And look out for deals that seem to good to be true; that super cheap saffron could well be nothing more than died daisy petals. 

DIY: Skin Care Recipes-Making Lotions

I love to pamper myself and I take good care of my skin. I tan so it's very important to be extra careful and take the extra time, which really  is only a few minutes per day and I deserve that and so do you. When should you start taking good care of your skin? Well I hope for your sake, your mother and father did the day you were born and they continued to show you the love and nurturing you needed to grow up not only loved, but beautiful as well. You should use lotions daily  no matter what age, this world; the ELEMENTS are hard on skin from the minute you are born and you need to fight back with gentle care. So if you haven't Start today, Right NOW. USE your lotion.

Lotion is extremely easy to make, because it only requires three basic ingredients and only takes about ten minutes to take. Like many DIY products, it’s easy to customize your lotion, so if you’ve got specific needs due to your skin type or you just want a specific scent, you can make it!


I’ve seen tons of variations on scents out there, but a few of my personal favorites are chamomile, peppermint, wintergreen and ginger for athletes (sore muscles!), coconut for your face, and rosewater and almond oil for normal, everyday use. Of course, there are other hugely popular scents like lavender, vanilla, tea tea, mint, etc..

BASIC LOTION RECIPE
Remember: You can customize your own lotion by adding your favorite essential oils or using shea or cocoa butter in place of the coconut oil (this will give you more of a body-butter thickness).
Ingredients:
  • 1/2 cup almond or olive oil (option to infuse with herbs)
  • 1/4 cup coconut oil
  • 1/4 cup beeswax
  • Optional: 1 teaspoon vitamin E oil, 2 tablespoons shea or cocoa butter, essential oils, vanilla extract or other natural extracts
Steps to make it:

  1. Combine ingredients in a large jar.
  2. Fill a medium saucepan with a bit of water (an inch or so) over medium heat.
  3. Make sure you have a lid on the jar and then put it in the water. This way, the ingredients start to melt.
  4. Shake or stir occasionally to make sure everything stays even. Once everything is melted and looking good, you can convert it to whatever jar you’ll be keeping it in
***
Winter Moisturizer


2 Tbsp. apricot kernel oil
1/4 cup walnut oil
1/4 cup stearic acid powder( I purchase this from candle making supply 
companies)
1/2 tsp. baking soda(works best if it is fresh)
1 Tbsp. aloe vera gel
1 cup water

Combine oils and stearic acid in a heat resistant container. Combine the 
baking soda, aloe vera gel and water in another heat resistant container. 

Heat the oil mixture in a water bath until the mix is a clear liquid and all 
the stearic acid powder is melted.

Heat the water solution until just boiling in the water bath .Slowly add 1/3 
of the water solution to the oil solution and stir.The combination will foam 
slightly .

Pour this into a blender and stir. Add the rest of the water mixture in a 
slow steady stream and blend on high. The mixture will be  a white fluffy 
cream.

Spoon the cream into a container and cool completely.

Massage a small amount into your face and neck.Store in a cool and dark 
place. Makes 12 oz.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Eggnog Lotion

2 egg yolks
1/2 cup heavy cream( half and half works well for this too) 
1 Tbsp. rum
1/4 cup light oil(canola, almond, also walnut will work well)

In a blender mix together the first 3 ingredients. until well blended .With 
blender still running, slowly add the oil in a steady stream until well 
combined. Pour the creamy lotion into a container and store in the 
refrigerator.
Makes 8 oz.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



Body Lotion

2 Tbsp. cocoa butter
2 Tbsp. castor oil
2 Tbsp. vodka

Mix together the cocoa butter and castor oil and heat gently to melt the 
cocoa butter. This can be done in microwave or water bath. Add the vodka and 
stir well.Allow the mixture to cool completely and stir once more to blend the 
lotion. 
Makes 3 oz.

***
Jaffa Moisture Blocks


I've got a great one for you today. This is an astoundingly easy recipe for the best moisture block EVER. It's really amazing - it's creamy and rich but also light. It smells faintly like chocolate. I use it all over - well, let me amend that slightly - on my body, my hands, my face and my lips.

In case you're not sold yet - this moisture block is made out of edible ingredients, is travel-friendly (as in, you can take it on planes because it's solid), and is great even for sensitive skin.

The downside to this recipe is that you have to spend a bit of money to get the ingredients the first time around. But you can use most of these ingredients in cooking, too, and these little moisture blocks make great gifts. So think of it as an investment.


***********
Jaffa Moisture Blocks

Makes about 4 small blocks
15 min cooking time + 30 min cooling

Adapted from Bodyworks

Ingredients
60 g raw cocoa butter, preferably organic
1 tsp coconut oil
1 tsp avocado oil
1 tsp almond oil
1 tsp olive oil
1 tsp jojoba oil
1000 IU vitamin E (this was 2 capsules for me)
15 drops bergamot essential oil (or your choice)

* Use organic ingredients when you can. Especially if you're going to be using this as a lip balm. Be sure you're not allergic to any of the ingredients, too - we can't have you breaking into a rash or anything.

**What's 'jaffa'? It's a chocolate-orange candy here in Australia. But basically the choc-orange combination is referred to as 'jaffa'. A little bit of culture for you.

***I've actually modified the ingredients a little ... taking you back closer to the original, except that the original used regular cocoa butter and 10 drops of lavender essential oil + 5 drops sandalwood or patchouli essential oil. I *have* changed the recipe slightly for the version I'll be selling, but if you want to make this yourself it won't be too different - promise!

1. Melt the cocoa butter gently in a saucepan - and by gentle I mean low heat and stirring regularly. When it's melted, remove it from the heat and add all the vegetable oils and vitamin E. You'll have to prick the vitamin E capsules and squeeze out the contents. Stir well.

2. Let the mix cool down slightly and then add the essential oil. Mix well. I use bergamot so my moisture block has a lovely chocolate-orange scent, but you can try other essential oils if you prefer. The original recipe called for 10 drops of lavender + 5 drops of patchouli or sandalwood.

3. Pour the mixture into small muffin or chocolate molds and set in the fridge to cool. After 30 min or so the mix should be solid enough to pop out of the tins and store in a jar.

4. To use, rub directly onto skin. Body heat will melt the moisture block just enough to smooth it over. If you live somewhere really warm, you may need to store your moisture blocks in the fridge during the summer.
***
Lemon Balm Skin Cream

This will tighten and smooth normal to combination skin.

3 Tbsp. dried lemon balm leaves
1/2 Cup Boiling Water
1/2 oz. beeswax
2 oz. lanolin
1/2 cup wheat germ oil
1 tsp. propolis powder (bee glue)

Pour boiling water over lemon balm leaves in a clean bowl.  Steep for 10 
minutes. Strain through a fine sieve, collecting liquid in a clean bowl. 
Allow to cool; discard lemon balm leaves.

Melt beeswax and lanolin in a heatproof glass set in simmering water. 
Stir in wheat germ oil. Add herbal infusion by teaspoonful and stir 
until well blended.  Remove glass from water.

Add propolis powder to tepid cream and carefully stir it in until 
blended.  Let cream cool completely.

Stir cream thoroughly and transfer it to clean containers with 
tight-fitting lids. 

Store up to 3 months.
***
Extra Lovely Moisture Oil

Adapted from Bodyworks: Restoring Well-being with Homemade Lotions, Potions and Balms

Ingredients
1/4 c cold-pressed apricot kernel oil
1 Tbs coconut oil
1 tsp dried calendula flowers or tea (these are marigolds, you might even have them in your garden!)
3 vitamin E oil capsules (available at pharmacies)
6 drops lavender essential oil
3 drops frankincense essential oil (optional)

1. Put the calendula into a dish and pour the apricot kernel oil over it. Leave to infuse for 15 min or so. Then strain the oil (like you do with tea) into a glass bottle.

2. Poke a hole in the vitamin E capsules with a skewer and squeeze them out into the bottle with the oil.

3. Add the rest of the ingredients, mix or shake, and use a little bit at a time on face and hands and body. (It's an oil, so careful you don't accidentally pour too much out!)


Some notes about making your own beauty products:

1. Always keep essential oils out of the reach of children.
2. Make small batches and replace every few weeks or month - we don't use the same preservatives as commercial brands (a good thing, but our beauty products won't last as long)
3. Try to store your beauty products in dark jars or in the cupboard out of light or in the fridge.
4. Always use clean utensils and a clean working area.