PopsnTuff
Well-known Member
- Location
- Virginia USA
So true on that score, @PopsnTuff. I make special Christmas cookies each year that take pine nuts. Man oh man, but those little suckers have ratcheted up in price over the past five years or so!My grocers is already limiting one per person online....if you try to order another scent it wont let you, geez....word spreads fast.....
I don't remember it smelling like pine nuts Marg cuz I didn't use it much.....now eating the pine nuts I luv but they're too expensive, lol....
I have the same procedures as you @StarSong cuz not out and about much.....Pine scented cleaners turn my stomach. Indeed, most scented products turn me off. Laundry products, soaps, cosmetics, etc., are heavily laden with perfumes of one sort or another.
I don't regularly use disinfectants, not even in this Covid world. Not even sure why I would need to unless one of us got sick with something - a cold, for instance.
It's just hubby and me in the house. We mask up when we go out, use hand sanitizer frequently while out running errands, wash our hands immediately upon returning home, unload the groceries into the garage and place them in that pantry (rather than the kitchen), and wash our hands again after putting away groceries.
No need for special disinfecting dances in our bathrooms or kitchen. I wipe up the bathrooms daily using a little Comet and dish soap and keep the kitchen clean. (We don't eat meat or dairy so animal-related bacteria don't come into our home.)
YupSo....if I bathe in Pine Sol, I don't need a mask?
So....if I bathe in Pine Sol, I don't need a mask?
Hmm, how to put this, Pine Sol on the private parts-remember the song Ring of Fire?When I saw the thread subject line, my first thought was "Oh goodie! we can go swimming in public pools again - just fill them with Pine Sol".
Tony
Hmm, how to put this, Pine Sol on the private parts-remember the song Ring of Fire?![]()
Going off-topic for a moment because now you, @Aunt Marg and I have mentioned pine nuts. When visiting friends in New Mexico they had jars of unshelled pine nuts - apparently the trees grow wild there and the nuts are fairly inexpensive. It brought me back to very early childhood when I'd be given the task of shelling these nuts for my grandmother. Of course I ate about half of what I shelled.I have a jug of Pine Sol and I have had it years and years. Guess I should get rid of it now. We don't like the smell anymore.
I love pine nuts though, I dry roast them in a non-stick frypan and add them to veggie dishes and salad.
That's a shame you never took your friend up on her offer.Going off-topic for a moment because now you, @Aunt Marg and I have mentioned pine nuts. When visiting friends in New Mexico they had jars of unshelled pine nuts - apparently the trees grow wild there and the nuts are fairly inexpensive. It brought me back to very early childhood when I'd be given the task of shelling these nuts for my grandmother. Of course I ate about half of what I shelled.
My friends offered me a gallon jar of the nuts, but I truly wasn't up to the tedious task of shelling them. If I'd known then that I'd be sitting home for months on end with little to do, I would have taken them!
You may all return to your regularly scheduled program. I believe Pine Sol was the topic at hand.
Don't I know it!!!That's a shame you never took your friend up on her offer.
I just bought a tiny little package of pine nuts (140g package) a few weeks ago, and it was $13.
Yup. That's why my grandmother pawned it off on the kids. Also why I declined the unshelled nuts from my friend.Just found this: Pine nuts are one of the more expensive nuts on the market because of the time required to grow the nuts and the effort to harvest the seeds from their protective encasement.