Exploding ketchup and other tidbits
Exploding ketchup and other tidbits
You have sent in so many interesting penny-pinching tips lately that we thought we would share as many as space allows. You have also been busy joining the oily rag community with the Oily Rag Club now having reached 1600 members.
First from KW from Auckland, in response to last week’s call for favourite potato recipes: “You need 6 large potato, 1 packet cream of chicken soup mix, 250 grams sour cream, 1/2 cup grated cheese, 1/2 cup melted butter, 1 cup milk, 1/2 cup chopped spring onions, and salt and pepper to taste. Partly cook then grate potatoes. Combine butter, soup, milk , sour cream, onions and grated cheese. Combine with seasonings and potatoes. Pile into lightly greased pie dish, top with a thin layer of breadcrumbs and a little more grated cheese and bake for about 45 minutes at 180 degrees.”
Twin Mum from Masterton has a grease stain remover. “Try making a paste of baking soda and a few drops of water. Work the paste into the grease stain and rinse with warm water. Repeat a couple of times if needed. The baking soda will help remove the grease while also removing any smell”.
Natz from Nelson has a
couple of tips. “If you want original looking furniture go
to hospice/opp shops or look in the local paper
(buy/sell/trade) and buy cheap furniture, take it home, sand
it down and paint it whatever colour you want. It's cheap
and gives you a hobby while furnishing your home with the
colours you want. “
And, “I am on a low income and
started a coin jar in February. I only ever took money out
for the bus. I have just taken it to the bank and cashed it
in. It turned out to be $309. Just goes to show how quickly
it can build up!”
Keith from Wanganui has an old
family remedy for a sore throat. “My granny gave me a
handed down cure hundreds of yeas old: one level spoon of
sulphur and one teaspoon of honey. Mix enough up for three
days. After standing the medicine for a good two hours, take
it three times a day for three days by letting it melt
whilst going down your throat. For three days. You will be
amazed just how good this old hand me down is compared to
expensive Strepsils and the like.”
Joan from Wellington
has a tip for those with fireplaces or woodburners who
don’t know what to do with their ash. “Ash can be dumped
in the garden to add alkalinity. I use it to absorb oil from
pots and pans and then wash. I also use it on stovetops to
absorb splatters, then just wipe clean. I got this tip from
an Indian lady who says for places with no water, this is
how they clean their kitchen utensils.”
MG from
Hastings has been causing ketchup chaos! “I was given a
catering size can of pulped tomatoes, so decided to make
ketchup, using a tried and tested recipe. All went well and
I found plenty of containers to store it in. The problem
came a couple of months later when I opened one of the large
bottles to fill up the table bottle. The contents exploded
all over the kitchen, the benches, the floor, the walls and
the curtains, not to mention myself. I was supposed to store
the large bottles in the fridge to stop them
fermenting!”
For hundreds of oily rag tips, more
old-time favourites and other titillating tales of penny
pinching gone wrong please contact us at www.oilyrag.co.nz.
* Frank and
Muriel Newman are the authors of Living off the Smell of an
Oily Rag in NZ. Readers can submit their oily rag tips
on-line at www.oilyrag.co.nz. The book is available
from bookstores and online at www.oilyrag.co.nz.
ENDS