It scares me to even look at the 'clean' setting on my oven. I can just see my Hydo meter spinning as the oven tries to heat up to 1,000,000 degrees@MrPants I use the baking soda and vinegar method too. I do have a self-cleaning oven but it’s old and I’m not willing to risk burning out the elements. I’m not stressed anymore on getting it sparkling clean.
Thank you! Another forum member mentioned this too. My oven is not bad yet, but I'd like to prevent it from getting horrible.I gently scrape off any 'chunks' of stuff with a plastic spatula then spread on a paste made from combining baking soda & white vinegar. If you have any old dishtowels, soak them in warm water and lay them over flat surfaces where you put the paste on (helps to loosen burned on stuff). Let all that sit for 4-5 hours (overnight is ideal) then wipe up the resulting mess. The oven racks go to the laundry room tub where they soak in hot water for a while then I grab a couple of SOS pads and take off all the crap. It's a pain because you have to rub off each wire separately so it takes a while but they come up pretty clean after that.
Does a decent job. Probably not as good as those caustic store bought oven cleaners but I hate those. Breathing in any fumes is brutal and if any drips on the wrong kind of flooring material, you've got a problem bigger than just a dirty oven.
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I have already gotten feedback that my tax filing has been accepted by both the Federal and State governments. I assume that they have a computer do a quick assessment to keep these thing moving along. The Federal IRS has told me that I should get me refund in a couple of weeks. South Carolina is a bit slower.I transmitted my taxes a few minutes ago and am happy to have this annual nightmare out of my hair.
If you remember anything....I could use some pointers!LOL at:
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Oh my, I was a Backgammon fiend years and years ago! Like you, I've forgotten everything.
Ok Ladies....follow me!Sounds excellent to me!![]()
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Perhaps we could do it as a group activity, to start every morning, (or perhaps when you get home from work, and when others get finished with household chores, etc)
And because @Trila started it; She should demonstrate for us, how to do special jumps with summersaults, etc!
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How are the knees, Rob ?Heading to the gym this morning. Circuit training then weigh lifting. Not that I lift a lot of weight...
Ummmm....you do have 911 on speed dial, right?!!Don't worry, @hollydolly ,
and all of the rest of us, with serious jumping challenges
(myself included!)
these are Mental Mattress Jumping Activities!!!
Except for @Trila 's demonstrations!![]()
I was raised the same way. To this day, I save old buttons in a jar! I used to love seeing the rag rugs at my Grandma's house when we visited...they always intrigued me!@Kaila and @Shalimar But...can we trust @Trila with demonstrating somersaults? And splits? Let's not even think about that! I mean...keep in mind her ability to break bones with no effort whatsoever...jussayin'
One more thing apropos "extra" fabric...back in the day, when the mantra was "use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without" that extra fabric became rag rugs. So help me, we had rag rugs everydamnwhere! Aunts, mother, grandmothers...when they weren't knitting, crocheting, sewing, they were braiding fabric for rag rugs.
I've been wondering for years what to do with my jar of old buttons.I was raised the same way. To this day, I save old buttons in a jar!
Those were the days!
Aren’t we supposed to save them forever, and upon death, leave them to someone.I've been wondering for years what to do with my jar of old buttons.
They are great for crafts! I've been adding some of the more unusual or decorative ones to tote bags, etc. I arrange them into shapes like dragonflies (of course!), or flowers, etc.I've been wondering for years what to do with my jar of old buttons.
Sounds like your aunt's skillset was, as they used to say, narrow and deep: Rag rugs and biscuit topped casseroles.My uncle used to tell everybody to hang on to anything that could be made into a braided rug because my aunt would snatch it up and make a rug out of it.
I went to visit them for lunch years ago when I lived in El Paso and they were in Tucson. (In those days, driving 300 miles for lunch was something we didn't give a second thought.) When I got there, all the windows were bare. WTH?
Me: Where are the drapes?
Uncle: Your favorite aunt made them into rag rugs.
True story!
She's the same aunt who could and would make just about anything edible into a casserole. She'd put leftovers in a casserole dish, throw on a biscuit topping and call it dinner. Uncle said he quit asking "What's for dinner?" because he knew it would be whatever they'd had the night before with a biscuit topping![]()
If this is an earnest question, you might offer them to an elementary school teacher. They're great for kids' arts and crafts projects.I've been wondering for years what to do with my jar of old buttons.
LOL to the first.Sounds like your aunt's skillset was, as they used to say, narrow and deep: Rag rugs and biscuit topped casseroles.
If this is an earnest question, you might offer them to an elementary school teacher. They're great for kids' arts and crafts projects.