Showing posts with label DIY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DIY. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Part 2 - Using Up Leftovers

One of the easiest ways to save money on food is to just use it again!  No not regurgitating it and putting it back on the plate...but instead of throwing away the stuff that doesn't get eaten, save it and make it into something else. 

The first rule to using up leftovers is making sure you save some when you are serving up the “real meal”!!  Sometimes you might just want to add an extra 100g of mince or maybe use 4 chicken breasts where you would normally use 3.  But other times it's all about the way you serve it.  I have made a special effort in recent months to not serve the kids up quite as much food as I had been, not because I am being stingy, but because it is often such a struggle to get them to finish it...maybe they didn't actually need that much food and I am being a bit too mean by forcing it down them!!  
Not all meals work as leftovers, but with the ones that will work make sure you put aside some when you are serving up.  Sometimes it will work as a repeat meal sometimes you can just take some of the meal or a specific vegetable and turn it into something else.  Add more rice, veges and/or sauce to the meals to make it go further (hey that is a good idea for next week's post!  making meals go further... yes will start that soon!) 
 
Ham and Vege Strata - This could be made with left over meat (doesnt have to be ham) and left over stir fry or roast veges - also uses the stale bread that no one wants to eat anymore!
I have a bunch of meal plans that rely on leftovers…I’m not sure where to start…with the meals that I save the leftovers from or the recipes I use the leftovers for.
….ummm..
Maybe I need to mix it as I go….

Last week I gave the recipe for Roast Chicken Casserole, from the roast chicken leftovers…obviously not so much for the night following…but it freezes well.
I always try to save as much chicken as possible from a roast chicken meal.
I save it in small containers to throw into various meals including
Pizza – meatlovers, satay chicken pizza, chicken Camembert and “brie”

Hawaiian Pizza (opened tin of pineapple and bits of ham left over from Christmas...or something else!)  and Chicken Satay Pizza (- cooked chicken and left over satay sauce)

Kowhai Chicken – My favorite yummy casserole dish
Chicken Sopa – Another great Mexican chicken dish (save some tortillas from the burrito meal too I like to buy the 15 packs from Countdown, best value for money…only problem is, that I usually shop at Pak n’ Save…so making the special trip to Countdown for one item isn’t that good of a money saving technique)
Fettuccine “Cabonara” – a handful of chicken at the last minute…or one of the minutes near to the end at least.  (Any left over meat is good for this one – sausages, other roasts…not so much mince though)

Leftover Nacho Mince:
A “handful” for a Mexican inspired pizza
Spread over the bottom of a casserole dish and make Cowboy Casserole or Cornbread Pasta something or other Bake

Whenever I make meatballs I always set aside a few to use on pizza.


So to end this…before I have to spend the whole rest of the week writing up recipes on the recipe page…I will say Pizza, Pizza Pizza…. If you are trying to save money on meals, make a quick base or a fancy base or a bread maker base and top it with left over anything!  (Oh and make sure you save a bit of tomato based pasta sauce for the base topping!!)

(by the way, I am going to try to take more photos of my leftover meals and will add them to this post in the next week or so, and the recipe links are coming soon too!)

Thursday, January 17, 2013

How to Upcycle and old Men's Shirt into a baby Sleepsack


When my first little guy was born I had a few sleep sacks, this was great, being a winter baby, the warmth was good once he got too big for the swaddling wraps. …but then summer came and I found, even though it was too hot for it, he wasn’t keen to sleep without it.

So I found an old shirt my brother was getting rid of and turned it into a summer weight sleeping bag.  It just reminded him that it was time for sleeping and not to try climbing around the cot and so on.  Even now my 2 yr old wears one even though he is in a bed, they get pretty savvy at being able walk in sleepsacks! 

I will have to make a new one, using a shirt my husband doesn’t need anymore…well I don’t think he does anyway… So that I can show you the steps in photos.

Step One: - Find shirt, I think a reasonably big sized one works best so that you have enough room to play around with and it doesn’t become a tight fitting piece


Step 2: Cut off collar and sleeves, Cut just below seam…if you wanted to be really fancy and neat and beautiful you could unpick it…but not me, I don’t think it would make enough difference…. if any… to bother with that.


Step 3: Cut down seam and through cuff of one of the sleeves.  This is to sew on to the bottom of the shirt to give it a little more length. 


Step 4:  Sew up the opening in the sleeve where the buttons are.


Step 5: Button up shirt and sew the bottom closed up about 5cm from the bottom, I did the first one up to just above the bottom button which works fine too, but maybe you would get the legs in easier with a little more room.
Sew the end of the sleeve cuff closed (right sides together)




Step 6: Turn shirt inside out and with right sides together join the sides of the sleeve to the bottom of the shirt.  You’ll end up with over lap where the sleeve was shorter than the width of the shirt.   (Or if you wanted it different, you could try cutting along the top of the sleeve (not where the seam is) then the sleeve will be longer that the shirt width, may make it easier…may not?


Step 6a - I forgot about doing this until I tried it on my little guy for the photo session.  While you do need a big shirt to get the length best, the width ends up being quite over the top, so I took the shoulders up a bit and the sides under the armholes in a bit, I am adding this step in now, because this is the best point the it should be done, but my photos are showing how I did it at the end so the seams were already finished and turned back.  Just take a chunk...about 3 cm from shoulder, and the same, 3 or 4cm from the armhole and taper off to the side seam





Step 7 – Sew up top of sleeve to meet the seam at the hem of the shirt, make it blend in as neatly as possible!  It can only come out wonky, but that is all part of the upcycling charm I say!



Step 8 Finishing off – Overlock/zigzag the top of the sleeve part that you just sewed in step 7, and neaten up the neck and the armholes, I think I will just overlock and turn mine under, but you could bind them, maybe cut a strip on a slight bias from the left over sleeve or buy a co-ordination bias binding.  Whatever tickles your fancy!

And I’ll just finish off with a couple more shots of my little one in the finished products, the original mostly though, because I have more cute ones of him in that! J



(The above 2 shots are before I took up the shoulders and took in the armhole, the one on the left is after i did that)







Check out the hand in the breast pocket!!  



I’d love to hear from you, let me know if any of this is confusing or you get lost somewhere….or even better if you had a great success with it!  Post a photo on my Facebook page of your finished product.