Plastic sleeves can protect recipes from spills
When making a family cookbook, I typed and copied each recipe onto an 8-1/2-inch by 11-inch sheet of paper and stored them in a three-ring binder. To protect each recipe, I inserted the paper into a plastic sleeve. Now, when family members prepare a dish using my recipes, if there are food spills on the recipe, all they have to do is wipe off the plastic sleeve.
Pat Austin, via email
Dear Readers: To prevent odors from overwhelming your closet, mix a box of baking soda with 3 to 4 teaspoons of your favorite spice such as nutmeg, allspice or cinnamon. Place the mixture into plastic margarine tubs and poke holes in the lids. Your closet will be sweet-smelling, and so will your clothing.
Baking soda is an excellent tool to use for cleaning and deodorizing. I have put together a six-page pamphlet, entitled “Heloise’s Baking Soda Hints and Recipes,” that can tell you all about how to use baking soda to freshen up your home. You can get this useful pamphlet by sending $5 and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Heloise/ Baking Soda, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001. FYI: If your pet’s plastic toys are dirty and yucky, make a solution of baking soda and water. Scrub this solution over the dirty areas of the toys to clean them well.
Heloise
Dear Heloise: When growing up, I would see my mother hanging cloths on the clothesline, aka the “solar clothes dryer.” Instead of using two clothespins on each garment, she would use one on the left side of the garment and one on the right side, putting two garments together. This would use up less clothespins and still get the job done.
D. Hansel, Houston
Dear Heloise: I make my grocery list on my phone as a message to myself and keep it in my drafts.
Barbara Shaidnagle, via email
Dear Readers: If you have a large arrangement of fresh flowers, and some start to droop or die, you can replace them by filling in the spaces with dried or artificial flowers. Then, you can mix and match the different flowers, and it will create quite an interesting display.
Dear Heloise:
I took a tumble, landing on my left hand. Bones were fractured, and my hand swelled up. I was told to take off the ring on my finger lest the circulation would get cut off.
My son-in-law suggested using ammonia window cleaner to remove my ring. When the swelling went down, I applied ice to my finger, spritzed some window-washing fluid on the area, and the ring slid off beautifully.
Great save!