I am sure many of you have heard of the blog Farmhouse On Boone by Lisa Bass.
I came across this toddler dress tutorial from the Farmhouse On Boone YouTube channel.
I am sure many of you have heard of the blog Farmhouse On Boone by Lisa Bass.
I came across this toddler dress tutorial from the Farmhouse On Boone YouTube channel.
I finished reading Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell. It took me a while to get though this book.All 654 pages! I had to check it out twice from my library and renew it 4 times.
I invented this recipe last week. My children asked me to make it for breakfast three mornings in a row. I'd say that makes this recipe a keeper! :)
1 cup Quick Cooking Oats
2 cups water
2 TBS. Sugar
Dash of Salt
3/8 tsp. Ground Nutmeg
1 tsp. Vanilla Flavoring
1 Egg
1/2 cup Milk
3 TBS. Butter
In a 2 quart sauce pot, over medium heat combine oats, water, sugar, salt, nutmeg and vanilla.
Heat until boiling. Reduce heat to a simmer and cook for 5 minutes.
In the meantime, beat the milk and egg together until smooth.
Once the oatmeal has cooked, temper the egg mixture with a few spoonfuls of oatmeal. Then pour the egg mixture into the oatmeal pot. Stir thoroughly. Cook for two minutes while stirring.
Turn off heat and add butter. Stir until the butter has melted.
Enjoy!
Tightwad Tip Number One should be: don't buy cereal.
But, if you buy cereal, reuse the bags. They are heavy weight, thick plastic, and don't get holes poked in them very easily.
My favorite use for cereal bags is filling them with chicken backs for freezer storage. There are a lot of sharp boney edges on chicken backs. They inevitably poke holes in zip top bags.
To close the cereal bags use one of the twist ties that, of course, you save from every bread bag. (Wink)
That is my tip for the day!
And before I go, if you are a true Tightwad who doesn't buy cereal, you can always ask your neighbors and friends to save their cereal bags for you. I am not joking! I have a Tightwad friend who actually does this! (And she never buys zip top bags.)
I really want to make some freckled dolls, Anne-of-Green-Gables-esque.
I purchased a permanent fabric marker with a fine point tip.
I have these five doll bodies finished. (HERE is my pattern.) I can't wait until the legs and hair are sewn on to try this marker.
I may regret this, but here goes......
I'll test it on the back of a doll's head first. If it turns out terribly wrong the hair will cover my mistake and no one will be the wiser.
That went surprisingly well!
Let me finish a doll completely before I show you the face.
I got the legs sewn on while I was at the playground with the children.