Friday, December 6, 2013

Homemade Laundry Detergent

1 bar soap
1/2 cup borax
2 small boxes of baking soda (or 1 cup washing soda if you are too lazy to make your own)
3 jugs (these can be milk or water jugs or even empty detergent containers, though if you are using a container that isn't one gallon, you will need to measure your water with a measuring cup.)
3 gallons of water

Take 2 of the small boxes of baking soda and spread out in a couple of cake pans. Bake at 450 degrees for 1 hour. At this point, take a pan out of the oven and look at the powder. Is it shiny still? Put it back in the oven for another 10 mins, then check it again. Is it matte and kind of grainy? (Compare to unbaked baking soda if you need to.) If so, take it out of the oven and allow to cool. Realize that when baking soda changes to washing soda, not only does it's use as a cleaner change, but it cooks down so you end up with less volume. You won't need all of the washing soda you made for this recipe, but just save the rest of it, because you can use it to make homemade dishwasher detergent.

So now we can start making the detergent. Grate the bar of soap with a cheese grater. Add 1 quart of your water to a saucepan. Melt the soap shreds in the water over medium heat, stirring constantly. If it starts to foam up and you think it might bubble over, remove it from the heat for a minute and then return to burner. Once soap is dissolved (this is the most tedious step), add in 1/2 cup of borax and 1 cup of washing soda. Stirring well after each addition. Let cool slightly, but not to the point where the powders get hard again. After cooled a bit (enough not to melt the jugs you are pouring it into), pour the soup solution evenly into the 3 jugs. This can be messy. I ended up mixing well and using a measuring cup and adding it one cup at a time to the jugs through a funnel. Once you are done with that, if you are using gallon jugs, you can just fill them the rest of the way up with water (Do this slowly so it doesn't foam up. If you start getting a lot of foam on top, you can wait a half an hour or so and then finish adding water.) If you are not using gallon sz jugs, you will need to add 2 gallons and 3 qts more water evenly into the 3 containers.

Now close your jugs up, shake them really good, and set them somewhere out of the way and forget about them for about 24 hours. The next day, shake it up again really well and you are good to go! You will want to shake it up every time before you use it. If you have small lumps of powder in your solution, that is perfectly fine, just make sure you are shaking it each time so that the lumps are evenly distributed throughout your loads. I use about 1/2 a cup per load for my HE machine. I like to double this recipe so I have enough to last a while and only have to melt the soap once since that's the step I hate the most.



This recipe IS NOT cloth diaper safe.

Slowcooker Hawaiian Chicken

This chicken is lovely served over rice. It is definitely a family favorite!

1 can or 1/2 of a fresh pineapple, chopped or crushed (with juice if canned)
1 family pack of chicken (I used thighs, but any would work)
1 can of coconut water (my can was 17.5 oz, but any similar sz would work)
1/2 cup unsweetened dried coconut
3 tbs Tamari (or Bragg's Amino Acids or soy sauce)
1 tbs minced garlic
1 tbs minced onion
2 tsp ginger
2 TBS coconut sugar (or you could use brown sugar or honey)
Bell Peppers/Onions cut in strips or Sweet Potatoes cubed, optional
(Other veggies might work here too. Just add what your family will eat or even no veggies at all.)
2-4 tbs arrowroot powder (or cornstarch), optional
Salt (to taste), optional

Add all ingredients except chicken, salt, and arrowroot powder. Mix together in crock pot. Remove skin from chicken if it has it. Rinse chicken and add it to crock pot. Cook on high 4-5 hours or low 6-8 hours, stirring occasionally. About 30 mins before you are ready to eat (also a good time to start rice cooker), you can taste the sauce and add salt if needed. At this time, if you prefer a thicker sauce, you can stir in some arrowroot powder to thicken it (mix well or you get gelatinous lumps) and cook for another 30 mins to thicken.

(If you would like to make this into a freezer meal, you can throw all ingredients except arrowroot powder into a freezer bag and freeze before cooking. You can either add the coconut water or just leave it in the can until the day you are ready to cook, your choice.)


Slowcooker Cafe Rio Chicken

This is my go to recipe for chicken nachos or tacos. You could also use in burritos or on salads, but I love them the best on nachos. 
  • 2lbs boneless chicken or 3 lbs chicken with bones
  • 1 cup Italian dressing ( I make mine homemade, but store bought is fine too!)
  • 1/2 tsp minced garlic
  • 1 pkt ranch dressing (or 3 TBS homemade ranch seasoning mix)
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1/2 tbsp chili powder
  • 1/2 tbsp ground cumin 
Place all ingredients in crockpot. (Or if you would like to make this into a freezer meal, you can add all ingredients into a freezer bag at this point and freeze.) Cook on High 5-6 hours or Low 8 hours. Shred with fork before serving. 

Cooking and Canning Tomatoes, Onions, & Green Peppers (Fajita Vegetables)

Our family goes through a lot of sautéed tomatoes, onions, and green peppers. It is the base for a lot of my husband's favorite Tanzanian dishes, but also is a great way to have fajitas ready in a hurry. I searched the internet high and low, but couldn't come up with any recipes that said that this was an ok combination to safely water bath can. So, after doing some research with a few canning pros, I was urged to give it a shot. And they turned out fantastic! Now I can take advantage of sales on these vegetables in the summer months and still enjoy them even when the price on them sky rockets in the colder months. 

Ingredients:
Equal amounts of tomatoes, onions, and any color bell peppers 
A splash of olive oil
Garlic salt (optional)
Lemon juice





I like to do giant batches of these whenever I find the produce on sale. This was 10 bell peppers, 12 yellow onions, and 32 Roma tomatoes (about 4 lbs). The veggies are chopped just a bit bigger than I would have liked, but the kids helped chop and anytime I don't have to do all the work by myself, it's a good day, so I'm not complaining.


I throw them all in pans in evenish amounts, drizzle a generous amount of olive oil over them, sprinkle on some garlic salt and cook them over medium until they're dry and the onions and peppers are translucent. They will get wetter before they get dry though as the tomatoes cook down. 


When they are done, in freshly sanitized jars (either run them through the dishwasher or boil them), add lemon juice (2 TBS for quart jars, 1 TBS for pint jars, 2 tsp for 8 oz jelly jars) to the bottom of the jars. Then fill the jars up with the sautéed fajita veggies,  leaving 1/2 in headspace. 

Then I put the same amount/size of jars that I want to process on my rack or on top of some extra rings in my waterbath canner (empty, with the lids on). Add water. You want to cover the top of the jars by at least a couple of inches. Remove your empty jars. Put canner full of water on to boil. Remove the lids from jars. Put the disc shaped lids in a small pot of boiling water for 5 mins. Remove them one at a time with a magnetic lid lifter and put on the jars of fajita veggies without touching the underside of the lids. Add the rings. Start another pot of water to boil (empty with nothing in it) Once your water is boiling, in your waterbath canner, add the jars and lower them into the water. Start a timer. I process mine for 1 hour and 15 mins. This could vary slightly depending on your altitude. (I'm in Missouri.) Throughout this time, keep an eye on the pot. If the water ever starts to boil down where it's not covering the jars anymore, add water to the canner from the pot of boiling water and add more water to the pot for the next time. 

After 75 mins, turn off the burner to your canner, raise your rack (if using one), and remove the jars using a jar lifter. Place them on a towel on the counter. Let them sit until cool. You will hear a popping noise as the jars seal. After they are completely cool, feel to see if the lids are firm. If they have some give to them and you can "pop" them up and down, that means that the lids didn't seal and you will need to stick that jar in the fridge and use it within the next few days. For all of the jar lids that are firm, you will need to remove the rings, wipe down the jar and the rings carefully to make sure there is no remaining food/juice outside the jar that might spoil. Now these are good to store in your pantry!