Household Chores in Half The Time
Household chores aren't hard, nor are they particularly boring -
nice to have time to think sometimes! BUT they are
time-consuming. These tried and tested tips will cut your
'chores time' in half...
1. Organize:
Start at the top of the house and clear it up! Then allocate
places for absolutely everything. Install shelves and cupboards
in the bedrooms, and make sure there is enough space for each
pile of clothes. Before you go on to the next room, put a label
on the front of the shelf in full view of the shorter members of
the family. Then there will be no 'But I don't know where it
goes' complaints when you ask them to put their stuff away.
Work through the house, re-organizing. You don't have to spend
loads of money. I was once obliged to use 'cupboards' made from
cardboard boxes. They lasted a short time and the kids were
quite happy to put their clothes away in the novelty cupboards.
Shelves are a must in the children's rooms - you'll always be on
at them to clear up but at least the little darlings may
actually do it if they know where everything goes!
The kitchen has to be organized, no question, or you'll waste
tons of time every day, looking for a wooden spoon, moving
dishes to fit plates on shelves etc;
2. Health Before Beauty:
Wall to wall carpet harbours germs even the most rigorous
hoovering won't destroy. Throw them all out and go for polished
wooden floors. Use rugs on cold spots and shake them outside
every day or two. Sweep wooden floors gently with a soft broom.
Avoid hoovering every day - some hoovers emit a very fine dust
into the air through their exhaust. This dust isn't particularly
good for the lungs, better the dust underfoot!
A quick shake of a rug and a sweep will take a lot less time
than getting out the hoover, doing the biz, wrapping it all up
and putting it away aging. And the broom doesn't interfere with
the radio!
3. Bye bye bleach:
Do you need shades when you look at your kitchen sink? Chances
are the bleach is taking over! Research has proved that those of
us who live in a sterile environment have a less efficient
immune system than those who slum it a bit! Cut the bleaching by
half. And if you sterilise your house for the benefit of guests
and their opinions, then be prepared to inform them gracefully
that you are building your family's immune systems - and saving
the earth a little. Be smug.
4. 90% less ironing:
Ironing or pressing cloth reduces it's lifespan considerably.
You may have an outwardly smooth appearance but inside the cloth
is a tangled mess of flattened fibres.
As soon as the washing machine has finished it's final spin,
hang the washload on an outside washing line, weather
permitting. Shake each item before pegging it out, and pull
jeans into shape.
Air the washload by folding carefully and putting in an airing
or warming cupboard, or hang over radiators.
If there's a delay in hanging out your washing, take it out of
the machine and fold it carefully, smoothing and gently pulling
each item into shape. Now the moment of truth! Only iron what
NEEDS to be ironed. Towels, sheets, jumpers, underwear and
overalls probably don't need ironing.
Smoothing and folding damp washing eliminates lots of creases,
and everything that doesn't get a fibre crushing treatment will
live a lot longer!
5. Designer Leftovers:
Try these delicious family dishes from leftovers, saving time in
the kitchen, oh, and money too. Note: Leftovers should be
consumed or discarded within 24 hours.
Bake too many jacket potatoes, cool and refrigerate leftovers
overnight. Cooking a whole tray of potatoes takes no longer than
cooking one or two. Use your leftover jacket potatoes in
different ways:
-slice and fry in hot olive oil, adding some mixed herbs or
cumin spice to the oil.
-peel, dice and add to an omelette with cheese and ham
-peel and make a rough potato salad with a little tinned sweet
corn, tuna and chopped onion.
Double the rice quantity, cool, cover and refrigerate leftovers
overnight. Using leftover rice:
- make a plain omelette and cut into pieces. Set aside. Stir fry
leftover rice and add a little soy sauce for flavour, then
gently stir in omelette. Serve hot.
-mix cold rice with fresh raw chopped vegetables. Chill for 30
minutes before serving.
-Fry in olive or nut oil a finely chopped onion, tomato, green
pepper and a few sliced mushrooms. Add rice to pan and stir fry
gently, until hot right through.
Cook a bigger chicken than you need then hide the leftovers in
the fridge. Try these ideas for the next day's meal..
-cut chicken into pieces, cover with a curry sauce and bake
thoroughly in a hot oven.
-mix cut-up chicken with a finely chopped onion and stir in a
half mayo half natural yoghurt dressing. Add a few walnuts for a
special treat. Chill before serving.
-Stir fry chicken with a few vegetables and mix into a bowl of
hot noodles. Serve with an oriental style sauce.
Always make sure re-heated food is piping hot before serving.
With a little careful planning in the kitchen, a part of
tomorrow's dinner will always be taken care of today!
Plan ahead and organize chores to fit in with your timetable
and not the other way round. If you work from home, take a break
from your computer every hour or so and spend 10-20 minutes on
the basics; peeling veg for dinner, hanging out washing, a quick
tidy up, whatever's next on your list.