Manage Your Life

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Unexpected new uses for kitchen items

Mark Lund

Mark Lund

These items step up to the plate in less time than it takes to heat up leftovers.

Colanders

  • Shoo flies: Invert the colander and use it as a bug tent over burgers and buns during a cookout.
  • Create a casual luminaria: Place tea lights or votives inside a metal version.
  • Wash your delicates: Don't throw lingerie into the sink for hand washing. Peroxide from some toothpastes and caustic agents from other cleansers can bleach, stain, degrade, and even disintegrate delicate fabrics. Instead, put the colander in the sink and wash the garments inside it.
  • Make a kid's Halloween costume: A stainless-steel colander is a perfect Martian helmet. Attach ribbons to the handles and tie them under the chin.
  • Sift flour in a pinch: Pour flour into a colander and shake it back and forth over a larger bowl. (Use a wooden spoon to break up lumps, if necessary.)

From Real Simple: New Uses for Mismatched Dishware





Mark Lund

Mark Lund

Wine Bottles or Corks

  • Use as bookends: A pair of bottles, with or without the contents, can hold a small library together.
  • Organize jewelry: Poke stud earrings into a cork and toss it in your travel bag.
  • Replace a rolling pin: Roll piecrust or pizza dough flat with a wine bottle.
  • Keep your boots up: Slide bottles into boots when storing them so they keep their shape and stand up straight.
  • Pack party favors: Send dinner guests home with some of your special sauce or cocktail mix in rinsed-out bottles; replace the labels with decals if you like.
  • Secure your supplies: Cap an X-Acto knife with a wine cork.
  • Stop scratches: Slice corks into disks and glue them to the bottoms of furniture or heavy pottery to protect delicate floors.

See 10 Smart Uses for Old Plastic Bags at Real Simple.





Mark Lund

Mark Lund

Ice Cube Trays

  • Display dessert toppings: Use an ice-cube tray to offer up ice cream embellishments, such as sprinkles, cherries, and chopped nuts.
  • Cut cookie dough: Roll the dough flat, then press an upside-down ice-cube tray into it for a dozen or more identical treats. Use trays with different shapes (stars, hearts) for miniature holiday cookies.
  • Organize desk supplies: .Contain small items like thumbtacks and paper clips, or sewing notions, like buttons, beads, hooks, and eyes.
  • Inspire creativity: Mix paints for the kids' art projects in a tray's compartments.
  • Freeze extra pesto: And leftover cooking wine, broth, and sauces for cooking. Then store the cubes in plastic freezer bags until you're ready to use them.






Mark Lund

Mark Lund

Uncooked Spaghetti
  • Keep cakes intact: Push a piece of spaghetti into the top of a cake to keep plastic wrap or a soft box lid from smudging the frosting.
  • Mark your page in a cookbook: Use a single slender stick to hold your place.
  • Spear hors d'oeuvres on party platters: Hot foods might soften the noodles, so this works best for cold fare, like cherry tomatoes and chunks of mozzarella and basil.
  • Light candles: When you don't have long matches but you do have plenty of candles, use a piece of spaghetti to fire them all up in one go. Also handy for lighting a candle in a deep holder.
  • Test baked goods to see if they're done:

More from Real Simple:
New Uses for Aluminum Foil
Get Organized With Baskets
Unexpected Side Tables

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From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 10
  • Jennifer S's Avatar
    Posted by Jennifer S Thu Mar 19, 2009 8:31am PDT

    I love the idea of the ice cube storage for sauces. I always have extra sauce that I usually just pitch. Now I can freeze it for later use.

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  • tina's Avatar
    Posted by tina Thu Mar 19, 2009 8:36am PDT

    That was really interesting, I would have never thought of that on my own. I love the idea of using the spaghetti to spear appetizers!

    Report Abuse
  • Dimitra's Avatar
    Posted by Dimitra Sat May 2, 2009 9:09am PDT

    cool

    Report Abuse
  • Gene R's Avatar
    Posted by Gene R Sat May 2, 2009 9:13am PDT

    Here's a good idea for an old TV set. Take out the insides, seal the unti to make it watertight, fill it with water to make an aquarium.For old shoes:fill them with cement and use them for doorstops.For old coffee table: saw it into small pieces and use it for firewood. For old truck tires: fill with plaster of paris and hang up as pop art. For old dressers: fill with dirt and plant flowers in bedroom.

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  • Gene R's Avatar
    Posted by Gene R Sat May 2, 2009 9:23am PDT

    More great ideas...for old garden hose: fill with lead, saw to right length and use as a cane. for old eye glasses:spray paint them brown and use as sun glasses.For old flower pots:invert them and use them as legs for a coffee table. For old doors: sand them smooth, shape the end into a point and use as a cheap surfboard.For old car seat: fasten two together, paint and use as an inexpensive couch.

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  • Rose H's Avatar
    Posted by Rose H Sat May 2, 2009 9:33am PDT

    Do NOT saw an old coffee table (or any furniture) and use for firewood -they are probably coated with toxic stain, sealers etc that would then be burned into your breathing air!

    Report Abuse
  • Barbara's Avatar
    Posted by Barbara Sun May 3, 2009 8:46am PDT

    AS a MOntessori teacher for many years, we have been using ketsup in the polishing lesson. The teachers love it because it is eco friendly (before going green), the parents love it because their child is not using "copper" polish, and the children love it because as one of my 4 year old student used to say "everything is good with ketsup on it". The children love seeing the copper and brass objects shine and take alot of pleasure in the completion of the lesson.

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  • Donald's Avatar
    Posted by Donald Sun May 3, 2009 9:43am PDT

    Use corks to make fish hooks sfe for storage in your tackie box

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