DIY: Drano

Do-it-yourself Drano is all about saving HEALTH and MONEY!

First of all, Drano is harsh stuff.  I am very sensitive to strong chemical odors. Many chemicals cause me to have trouble breathing. Not fun at all. Drano is one of them. I also don’t like those harsh chemicals eventually going back into the ground. They are some seriously crazy toxins. However, sometimes you just have to use it. Or do you?

We were having problems with a pipe in the basement. Of course it was the pipe the utility sink drains into, and of course, the washer drains into the utility sink. Talk about a mess!!!

We had a little Drano left from several years ago and tried it. It didn’t work. We figured we just didn’t have enough and 3 days later (yeah, no laundry being done!!!) my husband finally got another bottle of Drano. He dumped half in the over flow pipe and half down the drain. IT STILL DIDN’T WORK. AT ALL!! We tried periodically for the next day, hoping it just needed some time. Nope. Nothing.

He was going to get more Drano but I didn’t feel like spending more money on something I didn’t like, didn’t like me AND costs money. That junk isn’t cheap.

I started searching online and found a recipe I wanted to try. All it took was products I already have.

Supplies:

Bowl

 

Measuring cup

 

2 cups boiling water

 

1 cup Baking soda

 

1 cup Table salt

 

1/4 cup Cream of Tartar (or knock off, Angel Cream) – If you live near Amish or bulk stores it is usually MUCH cheaper and has a better quantity. This expensive little bottles in the grocery are not large enough and way over-priced.

Mix the dry ingredients together really well.
Pour 1/4 cup mix down clogged drain.
Pour 2 cups boiling water down drain.
Leave sit 1 hour.
Flush through with fresh water.
You have (hopefully) a cleared drain.

We used 1/2 cup down the drain and 1/2 cup down the overflow pipe since we knew the clog was a distance down the pipe. We then poured 4 cups boiling water down the drain and the pipe.

It didn’t completely clear out immediately but the water was going down MUCH quicker and not coming out the overflow pipe. We used the plunger (you can also get small drain plungers) on the drain. The force flushed whatever remnants of the clog were left and cleared the pipe right away.

Forget Drano. Now I have a product that is: right in my kitchen cabinets and doesn’t take extra space, safe for the kids, safe for me, and costs so much less.

I think I am going to pour some down every drain just to make sure they are all clear. After all, the product is safe so I don’t have to worry about passing out from the odors or overloading the septic with unnecessary toxins.

 

Recipe~French Toast made with King’s Hawaiian Sweet Rolls

On Saturday, I spent the day at Bloggy Boot Camp and one of the event sponsors was King’s Hawaiian. Have you ever been to Hawaii? I have, and I’m here to tell you, put it on your bucket list! Go there! Seriously, make it happen. When Courtney from King’s Hawaiian was talking to us on Saturday, I was finding myself incredibly envious of her–she gets to live in Hawaii! Well, we all got some King’s Hawaiian products to try, and a few other bloggers mentioned that King’s Hawaiian recipes are very popular right now. We even got a book of them. But I woke up Sunday morning, inspired to try my own. I really wanted something easy to do, that I was pretty sure I couldn’t screw up and my kids would eat it.

So, I sliced my sweet rolls horizontally:

In a bowl, I mixed up 4 or 5 eggs, with about a half cup of skim milk and a dash of vanilla and a dash of rum extract. I always whisk it really well. I put a bit of butter in a pan to melt. I dipped the sweet rolls in the mixture and plopped into the pan. I did 4 at a time. The sweet rolls come sort of connected when you get them–you’ll see what I mean when you open yours. So I separated mine into groups of four. You know that episode of Seinfeld, when Elaine just wants to eat muffin tops? I felt the same way about this, except I just wanted the bottoms. The bottoms just cooked up better. The tops, being rounded, were a bit more difficult to cook without squishing. Still, both parts were very yummy! Oh, when I first put each group into the pan, I sprinkled it with a bit of cinnamon & sugar mixture. Cooked both sides on medium heat until browned, and served with syrup. My 5-year-old had seconds and thirds…which means it was good!

To recap:

  • eggs
  • skim milk
  • dash of vanilla extract
  • dash of rum extract
  • sprinkle with cinnamon sugar while in pan
  • serve with syrup

Next time, I sort of want to try to make it overnight, as a French toast bake. I have so much trouble making those, so that they aren’t soggy. But I think these sweet rolls are firm enough and dense enough that that may not happen. I’ll keep you posted.

 

Special thanks to King’s Hawaiian for the rolls to try. I was not compensated for, nor was I asked to do this post. All opinions are my own.


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Garbage Day~ways to eliminate waste and save money~lunch meat

For my newer readers, I try to do a weekly post about garbage. Yes, garbage. Well, trying to use up food so that it doesn’t become garbage. Throwing food away is just like throwing money away. Tuesday is our garbage day, so on Mondays & Tuesdays I try to use up what will go bad, and together with my readers collaborate on ideas on how to use it.

This week I want to focus on lunch meat. And here, it’s lunch meat, not cold cuts. We’re lunch meat snobs. I know that with coupons and catalina deals, I could get much of the prepackaged stuff much cheaper than what I purchase. But we just don’t care for it. We prefer the D&W, Boar’s Head and other premium brands. And since I’m already buying into the philosophy of bringing our lunches to work instead of eating out, I’m saving money. But a few weeks ago, on garbage day, I realized I was tossing a few slices of this, a few pieces of that……..and it can quickly add up to $10 or more. I don’t know about you, but I don’t care to toss a $10 bill into the trash every week.

So here’s how I started saving money on lunchmeat-first step, buy less. Instead of purchasing a whole pound, I cut back to 3/4 of a lb. If we run out, we take PB&J or leftovers or something else.  I’m saving money two ways, not only am I not throwing out a few pieces each week, I’m not spending the money in the first place. Instead of spending $10 on a lb of something, I’m only spending $7 or $8 and my weekly grocery bill is less.

In the event I do have a few pieces left over, here are some ideas that I use for Monday or Tuesday night dinners.

Hot sandwiches: I use the lunch meat to make a hot/grilled sandwich and we have it for dinner. A hot sandwich is inherently fancier than a cold sandwich. Grilled cheese & tomato, hot ham & cheese, grilled turkey-add in some swiss, some sun dried tomatoes, some pesto….and it’s much better than the usual turkey sandwich.

Omelettes: Uses up eggs too. Take whatever lunchmeat and cheese you have, dice it up and toss it into an omelette.

Fritatta/Quiche: same as above, just as a whole dish instead of one serving. A quiche has a crust, a frittatta does not.

Easy Quiche recipe-I modify what ingredients I put in it. Easy fritatta recipe.

Dogs: When my lunch meat is a bit older, not completely rotten, but a day or two past when I would eat it, I give it to the dogs. I have one dog who takes 12 pills a day and I am always looking for creative ways to get her to take them, so I often use lunch meat. No, I don’t feed my dogs rotten food and they’ve never, ever gotten sick. Just like, cheese that is maybe a bit dry around the edges, moreso than what we would eat.