Sunday, April 24, 2011

Freebies this Week



Free issue of Elle Magazine care of some online newsletter I subscribe to (no, I will not be accepting their reduced value subscription)
Sample Dove Damage Therapy 59ml hair conditioner

I also redeemed another $5.00 amazon.ca GC from Swagbucks. The Christmas account is growing.

On the "move to Vancouver Island and get a life" newsfront:
Hubby told his boss of our intent, and he was told there may be possibility of a job somewhere on Vancouver Island with the same company he works for now. With four teenagers to support (plus post secondary education) this would give us some financial relief. The only problem is we are not sure when that opportunity may happen. So after a long discussion we have decided: We will wait until Spring 2012, if no opportunities have arisen we will move without full time employment and make the best of it. In the mean time we are saving our money for that move and 6 months to 1 year without a stable income. Sounds a bit crazy but after losing yet another relative this week to cancer(hubbys cousin same age as he is) we wish to live our lives how and where we want. No more delayed gratification. We have practised that our whole lives.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Turkey with Stuffing without breaking the Budget
















We have a very busy family (four of which reside in 2 households) therefore when we are all able to meet up in the same place for a meal we celebrate. Tonight is turkey night for seven. The first time I cooked a turkey (age 33) was a bit scary. Luckily I happened to have my Mother visiting and was walked through the process. About 20 turkeys later and zero failure rate! According to my Betty Crocker cook book there is no difference between fresh and frozen turkeys. I wait until the turkey gets to .99 cents per pound and buy a young frozen turkey - 12 lbs in this case for seven - and there are always leftovers.

Here is a step by step Turkey cooking/stuffing recipe process:

1. Unthaw your turkey 2 days ahead - start out on the counter and finish in the fridge. If you prefer to thaw entirely in the fridge check the night before you are set to cook to ensure it will be completely thawed. If you run out of time you can also place the turkey in a sink full of water which speeds the thawing process.

2. Extract turkey from plastic casing - be sure to remove the neck piece and giblet bag that the meat packers leave inside the cavity. You can use those if you wish in making broth for future meals. You can also cook those outside the turkey as they add to gravy flavouring.

3. Thoroughly wash the bird. Salt the exterior-I never used to salt but find it makes the skin taste even better. Drizzle olive oil or rub butter/margarine over breast area

4. Place the bird breast side up. Most roasting pans come a small rack that make it easier to remove the bird when done roasting. I pour 1 cup water in the bottom to mix with the juices and butter/oil for basting.

My Mothers Stuffing Recipe:
3/4 cup chopped white onion
1 1/2 cup chopped celery (include some leaf bits for extra taste)
2 1/2 tablespoons poultry seasoning
2 teaspoons pepper
1 - 1 1/2 loaves of bread (any kind except rye) torn up into small 1 inch pieces
1/2 - 3/4 cup margarine
Water/Vegetable stock/Chicken stock as moistening agent

In a saucepan on the stove melt the butter, poultry seasoning, pepper, onions and celery just until butter melts and onions are starting to turn opaque then remove from the heat. Pour the mixture over the bread and add 1 - 2 cups of water or stock so that the mixture is just moist when thoroughly mixed.

Adjust ingredients to taste. I always make it exactly as above as hubby loves this stuffing. If you use less butter you must make sure to add extra hot water to give the stuffing some moisture. I prefer to stuff the bird (take your rings off first) with the stuffing putting excess under the skin beside the legs. I also prefer to use fresh bread (or recently thawed) versus day old or croutons that they sell for this purpose as find it tastes better. You could save bread ends for the month or two prior to turkey day for this purpose. I had a bag in the freezer for this purpose but hubby went and fed my bread ends to our little geese friends in the back yard :)

Some prefer not to stuff the bird for fear of botulism. I always immediately remove 100% of the meat and stuffing before we sit down to eat so generally that eliminates the risk but if you don't want to stuff I would recommend the above recipe used with 1 - 1.5 cups of chicken stock added - cook for 1 hour 325 - 350 degrees Celsius (same temperature as bird - you could even make a tin foil pouch of this if you don't have enough room in the oven for the 2 dishes)

Once the bird is stuffed make tin foil covers for the wings and leg/stuffing area otherwise the stuffing gets too dry or burnt in that area. Make a little tin foil tent over the whole bird (that is removable to baste every 1 -1 1/2 hr). I wonder why the roasting pan comes with a lid that all cookbooks tell you not to use when cooking turkey?



My 12 lb bird bakes at 325 degrees for 4 - 4 1/2 hours. We serve it with mashed potatoes, gravy, cranberry sauce, corn or salad. If you want to entertain more people I would add more side dishes.

My Turkey feast for 7 cost(approximates):
Turkey $12 (12 lbs frozen young)
Celery .50
Onion .50
Bread $2
Gravy (I buy gravy mixes as still can't make a great gravy on my own) $2
Potatoes $2
Butter/Margarine $1
Corn or salad $1
Cranberry sauce $1

Total cost $20 with leftovers

Happy Easter Everyone!

Friday, April 22, 2011

The Trash Rescuers, Simple Living and Getting a Green Life


As I get older I need and want less "stuff". The child of an overworked single mother who disbursed plenty of love but struggled to feed her family I learned how to live on little. With adulthood came an extreme work ethic ingrained by my mother and with the fruits of my labour came the "stuff", all that I had missed out on (or so I thought). Now in my early forties things that are much more important to me are family, happiness and experiences, not the "stuff".

I avidly recycle, first forced to do so by my town but now by choice recycling approximately 80% of our household waste. Cooking is a hobby now, not so much a chore. I would like to work less and live more as have recently been diagnosed with a chronic fatigue disease that will not kill me but will be a factor every day for the rest of my life. Gardening interests me (when we get to a better climate with more than a 2 month growing season)as a means to sustainability. I like small living spaces but have yet to convince my hubby and stepchildren. People who throw away perfectly good "stuff" make me angry. I have a huge appreciation for nature now and wish to protect it.

Part of the reason I buy second hand, use coupons and live a frugal life is to get to the dream of living that life. Plus, I kind of like it. It makes me feel good. One day I will live in a smaller house paid for by cash with a little spot to grow tomatoes and herbs and I will take long walks on the ocean collecting seashells with my hubby.

Today is Earth Day and I would like to share some websites and blogs of people I follow and admire and who are making a difference and living the dream:

ClickClackGorilla: The blog of a girl who used to have a 9-5 job, and left to explore the world and get a life. She is now living in an extremely small trash picked trailer in Germany trying to live life to the fullest.

Love and Trash: Website collection of articles on recycling, buying used, sustainability, green living with sense of humour

Faircompanies.com: blogs, videos and articles on everything Earth Day is about: Simple living, small spaces, green, recycling and world politics. Multilingual website offering articles in English, French, Spanish, Dutch, Italian and Portuguese.

ncfreegan: A dumpster diver's tales of a trash rescuing to help feed his family in a tough American economy.

These Days in French Life: An American girl living with her husband and daughter in France cooking from scratch, dumpster diving, gardening, living on less. One of my favorite photo blogs (Flicker).

Foraged Food Flicker Stream: Photos of food foragers finds (retrieving Earth's bounty for free)

urbandumpsterdiver: Tales of a woman Dumpster Divers finds living through homelessness and back in the USA. A very strong woman who freely shares her finds with others including food banks.

Happy Earth Day!

Sunday, April 17, 2011

My Latest Contest Win and My Two Cents



I picked up my latest contest win this week (as mentioned in previous blog post) 2011 Collector Edition Harvey Ellis Wedding Mirror made by Stickley Furniture

Value: $299

It is very pretty and both hubby and I like it and are trying to find a good place in our home to hang it.

I had a friend over for dinner last night and she said "you are so lucky!" Luck? Really I am not that lucky at all. I enter a lot of contests and at some point, you are bound to win! I only enter contests for companies that I know and trust therefore avoid scams and disappointment. This win has been just what I need to get motivated to enter a few more contests as I had slacked off over the winter.

My Two Cents
I use coupons and strongly believe in stockpiling groceries so that my family only pays the lowest possible price for the things we use every day.


Recently TLC has been running a new show called Extreme Couponing. So far I have been a little disappointed. Why:
Buying diapers for a baby you don't even have yet?
Buying 73 bottles of mustard just because the price is .43 cents after tax?

This is likely a case of the right idea with some misdirection.

Yes, if your family will use 73 bottles of mustard in the next two years by all means buy them - but I feed anywhere from 2 - 6 people at a time depending on which kid has landed at our dinner table for a meal(4 step kids) and we go through maximum 6 bottles of mustard in 1 - 2 years. Tying up your money in something you will never use seems a little misguided. I have personal maximums - 2 years worth on non perishables, 1 year on perishables. Every six months I have a good look at the stockpile and donate anything that I won't use in time by expiration to the food bank or shelter so that nothing goes to waste.

On the bright side the show does have a few couponers who donate to food banks, shelters and their churches, so I will continue to watch.

No great deals this week other than my Easter Turkey for .99 cents a pound which really is not that cheap but is as cheap as it gets here in Alberta. Spring is having a smack down with winter - we had another blizzard on Friday so no raking the snow mold off the front yard as planned this weekend. The Canadian Geese are bound and determined to stay until the ice melts so I wake up every morning to their chatter. Have a great week everyone!

Monday, April 11, 2011

Geese, Speeding Tickets, Freebies & A Win!





Today is a complete day of high and lows.

Lows because my dear husband, who is an awfully good husband 99% of the time got another speeding ticket by mail today...Good wife mantra: silence is golden.

High because finally the snow is melting quickly and the Canadian Geese are migrating back to have their babies on the ponds behind our house. I caught a great picture of a male goose trying to catch a girl goose's attention today sitting on our neighbor's roof. I did not realize webbed feet can land on asphalt shingle roofs (kind of like Rudolph but more feathers and noise) until moving here. The geese are all paired up staking out their claim two hundred feet apart from the next pair. The second photo is to give context at how hearty these birds are (or optimistic) as they seem to "hatch" the ponds waiting for the ice to clear. When the first set of geese landed two weeks ago there was no open water nor any food. I took some old bread out to them to tide them over until the big thaw.

High because after opening "our" speeding ticket in the mail (my name is on registration too so comes in my name along with his) I listened to our voicemail messages and have apparently my first win of 2011! A mirror valued at $299 (click this link only if you want to see the prize from Finess Home Furnishings)! I will post pictures once I have claimed my prize! I really have not been entering contests for the last two months, this must have been one I entered a few months ago.


More freebies in the mail and with the newspaper this week:
Kelloggs Fibre Plus cereal sample
Dove Men Care free shampoo/conditioner sample

Two tops at Goodwill $12.98 total spent


and not pictured, a Spring Red Jacket purchased last weekend $70 - yes, something new! But, at 30% off of course. I have been searching for a Spring Jacket for months at Goodwill and finally gave in and splurged.

Happy Bargain Hunting Everyone!

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Small Space Living Extreme!

For one year of my life when single I lived in a 300 sq ft studio above a garage on Vancouver Island (the year before I met hubby). Cost? $600 per month. Why on earth would I spend so much money to live in such a tiny space? Full ocean view 20 steps from the beach. The studio was above the owners detached garage set on a hill above their house. So while they paid $1,000,000 for the full ocean front property I got the same view for $600/mos. It was so worth it. Frankly, besides my current house it was my favorite living space. At the time I had recently sold everything I owned so could easily fit my few belongings into it. It held: shower/bathroom with door for privacy, mini kitchenette with hot plate and mini fridge, table and 2 chairs, love seat and desk area. I only moved due to relocating back to Alberta when I met hubby.

Check out this small space living at its finest - 12 x 7 ft in Manhattan: