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Thursday, January 19, 2023

Thrifty Thursday

Hello dear friends!   I thought I better hurry up and get a Thrifty Thursday post out before I run out of Thursdays for the month! 


First a picture of the sun shining through the kitchen window, because it has been so long since the sun has shone, I want to remind myself, that it does.  It has certainly been a mild, albeit drab winter so far. 

I've been doing a lot of canning this week.  There's been some really great buys on meat.  I bought hamburger for $2.99 a pound and bacon for $2.50 a pound!  Are prices going back down or is this the calm before the storm?  Are the prices on meat going down because the farmers are culling their herds because they cannot afford to feed them?   Or because there's less demand as fewer people can afford to buy it? Or is it because things aren't as dire as many have predicted?  I have stopped trying to reason why things are the way they are, and just take advantage of the windfall. Whenever you find a bargain, be ready to take advantage of it!  Another thing I bought this week was shortening.  We use a lot of shortening for baking bread and because if I'm going to bake something, it is usually a pie, not to mention we love our pot pies and I bake a lot of biscuits and scones instead of buying store-bought bread (which is getting scary expensive). Anyhow, for the past couple of months the six-pound cannisters were priced at $24!  And that was if I could find them.  That was quite an increase from the $13 I was used to paying.  That's just crazy! Shortening was almost expensive as butter (which is another astounding price).  Then the other day, I was in my Mennonite store and they had it priced at sixteen dollars.  So, I grabbed a couple of cans up, straight away. So, most of my grocery budget went to meat, which I canned, and shortening this month. 

Oh!  A funny thing about shortening.  I been seeing a lot of YouTube videos about making cake-release for greasing your pans.  Basically, it is shortening and flour.  Oh, you mean like greasing and flouring your pans?  What a novel idea! Then it occurred to me that most of the people born after 1980 have never actually greased and floured their pans, since those cooking sprays have been around that long.  I remember when they came out, I thought they were the greatest thing since sliced bread. Ha!  You see, when I was a little girl and I asked to help with the baking, the chore that was eagerly offered to me was to grease and flour the pans.  The job that no one wanted.  That and chop the nuts in one of those spring-loaded contraptions, that never got the nuts all chopped in the same size. So much chopping and jar shaking!  It is a wonder I ever learned to like baking with those two things as my introduction to baking.  

Just as vital as carefully shopping is to use all your resources.  During the winter when our woodstove is burning all day long, we keep a tea kettle atop it and always have instant hot water for tea or cocoa.

I've also become quite adept at cooking atop the stove and even bake things like biscuits and scones. Just place the pans on top, when the bottom is baked, carefully turn them over and bake the tops.  This week I've baked beans, made a stew and some soups.  No electricity or gas needed.  At the moment there's a fruit compote bubbling away. We had some apples and oranges that were becoming wizened in the root cellar, so rather than throw them out, use them up.  I also had some cranberries left over from baking Andrea's orange-cranberry bread (which was delicious, BTW) and some dried fruits also. Here's the recipe, but it's very flexible and you can use whatever fruits you have on hand.

Warm Winter Fruit Compote

1/4 C. butter or margarine
1/2 C. confectioners' sugar
1 tsp. cornstarch
1/2 C. orange juice
2 tsp. grated orange rind
1 C. pineapple chunks, drained
1 C. mandarin oranges, drained
1 C. peach slices, drained
1 C. apples, peeled and chopped

In a large saucepan, combine butter, sugar, orange juice, cornstarch and rind.  Cook over low heat, stirring constantly, until mixture is thickened.  Stir in the fruit. Simmer until warm. Serve warm with a dollop of cream atop.  

Or you can use it for a topping for your oatmeal.  Use whatever fruits you have at hand and think would make a tasty combination.  Since I was using my home-canned fruits which I can in syrup, I omit the sugar. If you think it would be too sweet, use less sugar.  If you like really sweet things add an additional 1/4 cup of sugar.  

Oh!  While speaking of oranges, kind of, here's a thrifty tip from my friend Matty.  She slices and dries her old oranges and uses them in her tea. Drying fruit is another way to use your fireplace.  Just slice them thinly, string them up and hang on the fireplace fender.

I get teased a lot about my constant rearranging of my furniture.  I even make rooms into entirely different rooms.  Sometimes our dining room becomes our sitting room, and the living room becomes our dining room to suit our needs.   You might not think of this as a money-saving thing, but the reason I do it because it keeps me from becoming bored with my surroundings.  It's a lot cheaper to stay home and rearrange the furniture than it is to go out and spend money.  I rarely have the urge to go on expensive vacations just because I need a change of view. Ha!  This week I rearranged my kitchen cupboard:

Another good thing is by putting all my collections in one place, in this example it's my redware collection, I can see that I have enough.  No need to collect any more. That is, unless I find an amazing piece, say from the 1700s, for an unbelievable price.  I have purchased all   these pieces from garage sales and thrift stores.  When I do find a better piece, I gladly donate a lesser piece to the thrift store, so that someone else can have the thrill of finding something they wanted. And it keeps my collections from becoming too much.  We simply do not have the space in our tiny home for large collections.

Another thing I do to keep from climbing the walls during the winter is to have lots of projects going. This week I made a small quilted piece and knitted this tam;

We've been watching the Road to Avonlea series in the evenings, and I always admired those floppy big tams the children wear, so I knitted this one up from two skeins of thrifted wool and mohair yarn.  Total cost, one dollar.  

How to Knit a Victorian-Style Tam

With size 7 16-inch circular needles cast on 80 stitches.  Work K1, P1 ribbing for 10 rounds. 
Next round increase stitches by: * knitting three stitches, then knitting into the front and back of the next stitch, repeat from *until the end. 100 stitches.
Knit 32 rounds plain.
Crown: K 18, K 2 together. repeat to end. 
Knit next round.
K 17, K2 together. repeat to the end.
Knit next round.
Continue in this pattern, decreasing 1 stitch between the K2 togethers, until you have 10 stitches remaining, changing to double-point needles when the stitches can no longer be worked on circular needles. 
K 2 together, repeat to end.
Break off yarn and thread the remaining five needles through the needle.  Pull tight and tie off.
Block your tam over a dinner plate to give it that classic tam shape.

Thrift stores are an amazing source for crafting items.  When Ran and I make our big day out, we always stop at a few. Here's my thrift haul for this month:


Sorry about the lighting.  As I wrote earlier, it has been dark, dark, dark here lately.  I spent a total of just a little over $15 and here's what I got:

A woolen scarf made on Wales.
Over 1 yard of a pretty plum corduroy fabric, that it will be enough for a simple skirt.
2 skirts for summer.  Always be thinking ahead.
A Kim Diehl quilting book (sells for $24 in the quilt shop)
A gray t-shirt for Ran
2 stacks of vintage Workbasket magazines for ten-cents each.
Several cross stitch leaflets, including a nice one that is just alphabets for making up my own samplers.
A package of elastic. 10 cents.
An antique tracing wheel
2 earthenware plates
A purple wool blazer for using the wool for crafts
A little vintage device that guarantees making buttonholes "as easy as sewing on a button" (the instructions are twenty pages long, I think not)
2 pairs of silver earrings for 75cents each.  Must have more than 75-cents of silver in them.
A little woolwork pillow for Spring
And this pretty vintage wool tartan blanket made in Scotland:


Blackie loves it.

So that has been the past couple of weeks in thrift.  Always look for sales and ways to reuse and use less. Rejoice in the little things.  And find ways to creatively make your dreams come true.  It's not the things you have or don't have it's the ways you use and enjoy what you do have!

Hugs

Jane




23 comments:

  1. Oh Jane! It is always so lovely to read your post and know I am not alone in my ways.🧡 I say,” you don’t have to have the best stuff, to have the best life.” There is so much we can do with little on hand! We live in 1268 sq ft with five wonderful children, some people may think what a small home but in many parts of the world it would be a palace. I love to rearrange our furniture too, it’s fun to be creative, our homes are like a canvas. We also love Road to Avonlea!! I found the whole series on eBay awhile ago and felt it was worth it. Thanks for the recipe and tips for cooking on a wood stove, we have one but I have not tried cooking on it. Take care and stay warm!

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    1. Hello Brooke! My grandmother always said if you have roof over your head and clothes on your back, you're rich. Our woodstove is not a cookstove and has a very small surface, but you'd be amazed at how many things can be made on it. I'd start with some crockpot recipes. The low slow heat works virtually the same way. My favorite is baked beans. The house smells so wonderful with a pot of beans baking away. Road to Avonlea is such a wonderful wholesome series. Perfect for families to watch together. And I must confess, I get a lot of my wardrobe ideas from it! I spied a shawl on one of the shows that is up next up on my needles. And I had all the colors of yarn in my stash! Have a wonderful day!

      Hugs
      Jane

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  3. I love your thrift store finds. And the compote will be so good on hot oatmeal! Your home looks so inviting and pretty. Especially with the wood stove...surely your cat would rather sit next to that! lol. I've seen demonstrations at one of our DuPont museums of cooking on a wood stove. One was biscuits (while on a school field trip with my kids) and we had to come home and make biscuits...they were so inviting to watch make as a staple. They also made cookies.
    Such a soft-looking hat!
    Our grocery store has some good sales lately, and I was wondering why....since prices are supposed to have gone up so much! Well, eggs are up to $4.29 still. They would normally be $1.38 with all our chicken farms. But bird flu has caused a lot to be destroyed. I haven't bought meat recently, but I did briefly look at a roast today at the store and it was on sale for $5.99/lb. It was just a chuck roast and at $18 I thought that was expensive. Chicken thighs and drumsticks are 99 cents a pound! Hamburger is $4.99. So I'd say, chicken is the way to go! (Here at least!) hugs, andrea

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    1. Hi Andrea! It's a humble little place but we enjoy it. Blackie is a wild cat, and I don't think he likes to be too comfortable. Sometimes I think we are like those families you read about that find a stray puppy and it turns out to be a rare species of bear. So, if one day if you read about a family in Port Austin MI that adopted a rare miniature black panther or something to that effect, you will know that is us. Ha!

      I think the reason chicken is so inexpensive at the moment is because they butcher a lot of chickens for wings this time of year for the Superbowl, and they need to sell the rest of the chicken. I bet wings are still sky-high. I saw lamb for $3.99 a pound the other day! And it wasn't a reduced price! I 'm not going to question why prices are what they are, I'm just going to make hay while the sun shines!

      Hugs
      Jane

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  4. Oh the warm fruit compote sounds so good! I have several out of date cans of fruit. That will be a perfect use!

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    1. This is one of the recipes from my old receipts book, Angela. It's perfect for using up those older cans of fruit. It's not important to use the exact proportions of fruit. Just use what you have. I just had a little dish about an hour ago. It's good stirred into yogurt also.

      Hugs
      Jane

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  5. I too am canning. I got BSCB for $1.29/limit 2 pkgs. Bought 2 and canned them into 7 pints. Also canned tomato soup from frozen tomatoes. Tomorrow it is carrots, from about 6# of raw carrots left from a church function. No one else wanted them as they were regular carrots and they would have to be peeled and cut up. I took them and will can them, free food. Then I have more frozen tomatoes and I want to can some soup. I am embroidering some cotton dish towels I already had in my stash with transfers and floss I already had as well. I will add them to my present drawer. This is the time of year to get these things done. Love seeing and reading your posts.

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    1. Good for you Julie! Take advantage of anything you can find. Someday someone might want those carrots that they turned down now. Yep, winter is always a good time to get those gifts made. Come springtime, there's so much to do. Hope the weather is as mild in MN as it is here in MI!

      Hugs
      Jane

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  6. Julie, my carrots have always had to be peeled and cut, either slices, rounds, or grated for a salad. Jane your op shop finds were gold.Our local op shop does so much for our town and the wider community, families benefit so much, and local supermarkets donate shorter sell by date bread and rolls.

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    1. Just goes to show how spoiled we Americans have become, Jean, that peeling and cutting up carrots is too much of a chore for some. Mine have to always be peeled and cut too, because they come from my garden. Ha!

      The thrift stores that I frequent do a lot for the community also. They hold food pantries, and my very favorite has a restaurant that you pay what you can. It's a real boon for the poor, especially the elderly folks on a fixed income. I don't mind spending money there.

      Hugs
      Jane

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  7. My 3 besties and I went to a nearby town and went to 2 thrift stores, out to lunch and also picked up beef bones at the butcher shop in that town. They give us bones for free. At the butcher in our town we have to pay for bones. Anyway we all wanted to make beef stock so we each took a box and a plastic bag and brought home bones. The only things I got at the thrift store was a couple 500 piece puzzles for just over $2.00. The day with friends was priceless. I canned up my beef bone broth on the day it snowed . Makes things warmer that way :)

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    1. That sounds like a fun day out Nannie! What a nice butcher. I doubt any butchers around here would give anything away for free. Good way to use your resources, I try to pick the coldest day, also. Have to do up the winter squashes soon. It's good to know that you like to do jigsaw puzzles too! More and more people I talk to are returning to old-fashion entertainment like jigsaw puzzles. Good inexpensive entertainment, especially when you can get them from the thrift store!

      Hugs
      Jane

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  8. so happy to stumble across your blog again! Love your content/helps, and inspiration to do more! Thanks, Mindy in KY

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    1. Thanks Mindy! I hope you are having a pleasant week.
      HUgs
      Jane

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  9. I immediately focused on the Kim Diehl book--I have several purchased when I worked at the quilt shop in Wyoming. Much as I like the look of her projects I've made only one--I can't get my head around machine applique with invisible thread. I've taken some of my quilt pattern books to the library and some to the Mennonite mercantile where such things are swapped. I need to go through the shelf again. I'm about at that point in life where some serious sorting and giving away of items is needed. Surely I've done that in each of our many moves, but some things have accumulated.
    The Amish/Mennonite 'surplus' stores in our area continue to be a great blessing; we are blessed as well with the produce canned and frozen from our garden and the local produce auctions.
    About once per month I have to go in Wal Mart for pet supplies and a few household items. I'm always astonished to notice the prepared food products others are buying--a great deal of it sugar filled. Such a need for the incentive to prepare 'real' food.

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    1. I just love to look at quilting books, Sharon, and like you I seldom make any of the projects. And when I do, I never use the instructions, as I am a complete failure at using a rotary cutter. I just like to see how they use the quilts to decorate, so for the 50-cents or so the book costs, I'll enjoy it for a while than pass it on.

      I've really gotten rid of a lot of things over the past few years. I'm hoping if I downsize enough, I can convince Ran to build me that off-grid cabin in the woods I've always wanted. Ha! Never going to happen! But I can dream, can't I?

      Whenever I go to the grocery store, I am astonished at what others are buying. So many of those things could be made cheaper and healthier at home. And I'm not buying the convenience argument either. Today I made a wonderful soup from some stock I had frozen from making a pork roast and jars of home-canned cabbage, turnips and carrots. It took me all of three minutes to prepare. That's the kind of ideas I try to get across here on this blog. Well, you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make them drink!

      Hugs
      Jane

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  10. Hello Jane, I’ve been away but was happy to see your thrifty post.
    About meat prices, that’s great you’ve found some bargains but I fear the worst is still to come. Our oldest has beef and dairy cattle and they are having the hardest time finding hay and what they do find is crazy expensive. I’m glad we like beans :)

    Your thrift purchases are great. I went in to only one thrift store so far this month and saw nothing I wanted. But lots of people were in there with loaded shopping carts.

    Your earthenware must be regional. I’ve never seen it in Oklahoma. Yes, like things together always look best in my opinion and your collection is so nice.

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    1. That is what I hear also, Rhonda. So maybe my suspicions about farmers culling their herds is the correct assumption? Did you notice beans are even getting expensive? Used to be able to pick up a one=pound bag for a dollar and now it's hard to find them for under two dollars.

      Redware is popular in New England. It's also called slipware. It's quite pricey, but I've managed to find all mine at garage and estate sales. I rarely see it, but when I do, you can be sure I'm happy to spend a few dollars on it. Ha!

      HUgs
      Jane

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  11. Prices are indeed confusing. We are like you and are buying what seems to be a great deal each week. This week a 10 pound boneless pork loin for 1.48 a pound. The canners will be going tomorrow. I have no idea where the price has been but we did buy the 6 pound can of Crisco at Sam's today for 13.48 and I was happy to get it for that price. My daughter and I like to thrift shop together and refer to it as renting what we find and we have no problem using something until we are tired of it and then donating it back.

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    1. Hi Lana! I like that idea of "renting" from the thrift store. I've rented dresses for special occasions and all of my books are rent also. Ha! I just checked on Tuesday at our local Walmart and the 6# can of Crisco was over $20, so you got a good deal. That's another thing, prices are all over the place. It's hard to gauge just what is exactly a "good" deal. It is always good to stock up whenever you find a deal, as well know!
      Hugs
      Jane

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  12. Jane,
    I just wanted you to know how much I appreciate your blog! It is so refreshing and an encouragement to me each time you share little bits of your life,your frugal ways of wisdom, and your many sewing and knitting projects.
    Thank you for investing in my life! May God give you the strength and courage to go forth!
    By Grace Alone,
    Kim

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    1. Hello Kim! Hope you are doing well! God is good indeed. Ran and I have been talking a lot of this week about how He always provides, whether it is something physical or spiritual. I am just so in awe! I suppose I should write another post soon. I have too many ideas and trying to put them into something cohesive has not come to me yet. In due time, the Spirit will move me, I am confident. Hope this little message finds you in good health and in good cheer!

      Hugs
      Jane

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