Day 6: Two Words: Mason Jars


Maybe it’s living within a few miles of a Ball plant, or maybe it’s sentimental memories of my grandmother’s pickled beets and my great grandmother’s English Relish, but even though I’m not a canner, I LOVE mason jars. They’re the perfect organizer.

They’re durable, transparent and timeless. You can put flowers in them for a classic country bouquet, or serve sweet tea (or beer) from them for a hearty portion, but my favorite use is organization.

My kitchen countertop is lined with “staple foods” in mason jars. Oatmeal, beans, peas, barley, cornmeal, powdered sugar, powdered milk, bulk spices and home-roasted coffee. It’s great to not be tripping over this stuff in my small pantry, and also to have meal-planning so front-of-mind.

I haven’t found these difficult to clean. I dust them as I wash the countertops. I can monitor supplies (and the kids do too!) and add to the grocery list as needed.

I bought my jars new, but if you just want them for organizing bric-a-brac, (office supplies, crayons, colored pencils anyone?) try thrift stores or freecycle for cheap or free jars.

This post is part of a series I’ve entitled “Frugal August” and is inspired by (though not copied from) the book The Complete Tightwad Gazetteby Amy Dacyczyn. My tips are meant to build on hers, but generally are not duplications.

IMAGE SOURCE: Flickr

Day 5: Mailings and Envelopes

I hate junk mail, but I open it all. I salvage return address labels, and business reply envelopes.

Some people attempt to be removed from lists by mailing the letter back with a request for removal from the list—but be cautious, as this often works the other way around.

What I do instead is compost the solicitation (if it’s not printed on glossy paper) and salvage the envelope by putting a label over the return address section and applying my own postage.

Please note that if you do this, you need to cover the pre-printed barcode at the bottom of the envelope, or your mail will be mis-directed. I use white correction tape for this job.

Also, I save the opened carrier envelope, and use that for grocery list or office supply store lists. I put my coupons inside and keep the envelope on the fridge. It’s also great for keeping track of errands (dry cleaning receipts, etc).

If you’re really a stickler and you don’t want to label over an address to re-use them—I read in “The Complete Tightwad Gazette” that you can microwave your envelopes for 20 seconds and the glue will release—then turn them inside out and re-seal. (Personally, I think it’s more efficient to buy discount envelopes than go to this effort).

This post is part of a series I’ve entitled “Frugal August” and is inspired by (though not copied from) the book The Complete Tightwad Gazetteby Amy Dacyczyn. My tips are meant to build on hers, but generally are not duplications.

IMAGE CREDIT: Freedigitalphotos.net

Day 4: Get energy smart.

Do an energy audit on your house. One night, I walked into the living room and discovered that there were 24 blinking LED lights on.

In the dining room was the piano (electric), which had been left on and one little red LED was there. Six phone/ipod/Bluetooth/laptop chargers sat atop the piano—all plugged into a power strip which was also left on (though nothing was charging).

We live in a very energy-efficient house, but we weren’t a very energy-efficient family.

Here’s few ways to triage your energy use:

*unplug it, even if it’s not in use. Most appliances drain a tiny amount of energy even if they’re plugged in but powered off. Unplug the coffee pot, the entertainment center and even the piano, or plug your appliances into power strips that can shut off the whole “block” at once.

*Even if you hate the look of those new efficient lightbulbs—put them in your porch light. In most homes, the porch light gets the most use of any, averaging nine hours a day. I was recently given one of these lightbulbs (usually $5) in return for signing a petition—we also occasionally get them from the utility company.
They don’t look good in our recessed lighting but we have found that they’re especially handy in the vaulted sections of our ceiling—where the bulbs are exceptionally hard to change!

*hang your clothes up to dry—in the shower, laundry room, patio or outside. It’s more efficient and better on your clothes. I found a nice clothesline at the dollar store for…. Wait for it…. A dollar.

*Be thoughtful about your energy use: boil only as much water as you need and think of ways to re-use it. I have a large kettle with a strainer for pasta. I cooked pasta in the strainer, but below I put the garbanzo beans to boil (they were going in the same salad anyhow). After the beans and the pasta were done, I tossed the “pre-compost” bucket into the water and boiled another 10 minutes. Three dishes prepped with one boiling of water and only one pot of water, none of which got dumped down the drain!

* Adding a low-flow showerhead will save you on your energy use as well, by using less hot water to run the shower.

This post is part of a series I’ve entitled “Frugal August” and is inspired by (though not copied from) the book The Complete Tightwad Gazetteby Amy Dacyczyn. My tips are meant to build on hers, but generally are not duplications.

IMAGE CREDIT: freedigitalphotos.net.

Day 3: Love Beans

They’re not just the “musical fruit” but a great source of fiber, vitamins, minerals and protein! They’re extraordinarily versatile.

I’ve lined my kitchen with canning jars full of staples—around the back wall of the countertop that I can’t reach anyhow (I’m vertically challenged). This way I can always see what I have on hand. Pasta, black beans, split peas, orange peas, lentils, garbanzo beans, whatever. Some days it’s like dinner roulette—I grab a jar and set beans to soak, and just make up a meal around them.

Today I soaked about 2 cups of garbanzo beans, which I ended up boiling with whole-wheat pasta and turning into a fabulous cold pasta salad with veggies and a home-made vinaigrette.

If you’re like me, your prior experience with beans might be limited to split-pea soup and refried beans. Take some time to explore bean recipes from other cultures.

At the Ethiopian market I discovered a powdered garbanzo bean product that is spiced. It’s called “shiro” and when re-hydrated and boiled in hot water becomes this wonderful sticky, savory paste. You can also make home-made hummus with garbanzo beans or fava beans. Another wonderful Ethiopian food is a spice called “berebere” (only buy this at an authentic ethnic market, or you’ll get completely the wrong thing). Mixing berebere with baby lentils tastes a lot like ground beef. Consider the diets of vegetarian or fasting or vegetarian ethnic groups (Ethiopian Orthodox people fast on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays, which means no meat—hence, lots of beans for protein). It’s my understanding that hindus and budhists are often vegetarians also. Take a look at the diets of these cultures.

Many beans are good hot or cold, but here’s my rule of thumb: Beans should only be served cold if they’re smaller than a peanut. If they’re bigger than that, they tend to have too much of that pasty-bean texture that is just so bland.

This post is part of a series I’ve entitled “Frugal August” and is inspired by (though not copied from) the book The Complete Tightwad Gazetteby Amy Dacyczyn. My tips are meant to build on hers, but generally are not duplications.

Frugal August

I’m writing a 31-part series (one post per day for those who are counting) of frugal tips.

These tips are inspired by (but not stolen from) a book I’m reading called “The Complete Tightwad Gazette,” which in true tightwad style, I borrowed from the library. The book is a compilation of several years of newsletters composed by Ann Dacyczyn (pronounced like decision). Sadly, Ms. Daycyzyn is in retirement, and while essential to the last recession, is rather absent from this one.

My tips are inspired by hers, but mostly updated to meet more current needs and audiences (i.e. my tips require a lot more Internet access than hers).

If this series is a success, I’ll be directing the blog more towards frugal living—so please let me know what you as a reader would like to see. I’m struggling with where this blog should go next—as it’s served so many purposes already—showing how we not only survived a layoff, but thrived. By the end of April we were focusing on getting out of debt and debt-busting strategies. Now that our family will be debt-free except the house by the end of the year—I can’t help but wonder what direction to take pennywise family.

Your feedback will be a great help to me.

Jessica (The Pennywise Mom)