How to freezer paper stencil (with kid art)

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Making a silk screen from your favorite piece of your child's art is easier than you think! We've been making them for years, and chances are when you see Pete out and about he's likely wearing one of the six or so the kids have made for him for various birthdays and holidays through the years. 

I wrote a tutorial on how to make your own, demonstrating with a shirt that I made for myself back when I sold at the farmer's market. Grab a blank t-shirt, your exact-o knife, and some paint and let's get to work!

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Freezer paper stenciling is a simple way to create an imprint of any simple illustration or text. And it is easier than you many think. You probably have most of what you need on hand already. So go and gather your supplies, and let's get started. The only time consuming part is cutting your stencil (you can reuse them up to three times). If keep your design simple and you can quickly make several shirts or tote bags in an evening.

A Note on Supplies: Most supplies (with the exception of fabric paint) can be found at your local hardware or grocery store. Freezer paper is not the same thing as waxed paper. Freezer paper is a thick white paper used for wrapping meat. It is plain paper on one side and has a thin plastic coating on the other. The plastic coating is the magic part that will adhere to fabric and peel off with ease. As for your shirts, check your own closet before you go shopping. A button down shirt, a tee-shirt, a tote bag or a denim jacket are all great options for this project. You can even screen over some prints. Clothing with a small stain is a great candidate for this project – just place your silk screen to hide the spot! 

Materials and Equipment

  • Freezer Paper 
  • Craft knife (X-acto or comparable) 
  • Pencil
  • Iron 
  • Acrylic paint and textile medium (or fabric paint) – Textile medium available through craft stores 
  • Cutting mat or cardboard 
  • Shirt 

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Instructions

Create your Stencil

In the example above I began with a computer print out of my company name and part of my logo. For the shirt we made for Pete from Lupine's drawing I took her art and photocopied it, then enlarged it to size. Choose a simple image because you'll be cutting out anything that you want to print and tinly lines can be cumbersome.

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Tear off a suitably sized piece of freezer paper. Place the freezer paper coated side down over your illustration. Using a pencil, carefully trace the outlines that will become the inked areas on your shirt.

With your craft knife cut carefully along your pencil lines. Be sure to use a sharp blade and cut on top of a cutting mat or board. If your blade begins to resist the paper replace it with a new one to avoid tearing your stencil.

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Set aside any small pieces that you'll need to use during the project. (For example, the inside of a letter "O" or a central piece of your illustration.) I set aside parts of three letters, the duck's body, and the duck's beak.

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Attach your Stencil to your Shirt

After your freezer paper stencil has been cut out, trim away some of the excess around your design. This will allow for easier placement on your shirt. Attach to fabric using an iron set to cotton blend (no steam). Center carefully and iron in appropriate location on your shirt with the coated (plastic) side down. Do not slide the iron around or you may tear your stencil. Instead gently place and press with the iron until all areas are well adhered. Carefully place the smaller floating objects and iron into place using the point of your iron. You may want tweezers to place accurately. 

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Paint!

Insert a piece of cardboard or a thick pad of newspaper into your shirt. Paint your stencil using fabric paints or a blend of textile medium and acrylic paint. I prefer the textile medium and acrylic paint menthod because I can custom blend paint to match my project. Blend more paint than you think you will need.

Using a small, stiff-bristled brush paint your shirt using a stamping motion with the bristles (rather than a swiping motion which can cause paint to sneak under the edges of your stencil). Continue to stamp paint throughout all exposed areas on your stencil. Touch up areas where the paint looks too thick or too thin and strive for even coverage. The fabric should have a solid coating of paint but not a visibly thick layer. A second coat is a great idea if you want a professional looking shirt.

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Allow your shirt to dry completely and then remove stencil. If you are in a hurry you can speed up the drying process with a hair dryer. Iron for 30 seconds to set ink, and wear.

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It's that easy! This project is ideal for shirts and bags or wall hangings of sweet kid art. But they sky is the limit. What can you imagine?

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Originally published in 2011.

DIY Laundry Soap

Homemade laundry soap? You bet!

We've been using this formula since 2010 and we're crazy about it. It's affordable, safe, and so easy to make that my kids can do it.

Since I originally share this tutorial back in 2011 I've made some tweaks, so grab your cheese grater and a bar of your favorite natural soap and let's get to work.

DIY Laundry Soap Recipe : : Clean : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

DIY Laundry Soap Recipe : : Clean : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

In my business we make a lot of soap.

A lot.

One of our cornerstone body care products, we sell thousands of bars each year and ever batch we make results some trims or damaged bars. We began selling the scratch and dent soaps years ago and found that many of your customers were snatching them up for making homemade laundry soap.

We couldn't resist trying it ourselves, and set to work experimenting with our own recipe.

Why use natural soaps for homemade laundry soap? Because what goes into your soap goes onto your clothes. And therefore onto your skin.

While my soaps are made with organic oils, essential oils, minerals, and herbs, most of what is sold as bar "soap" today – as well as most laundry "soap" – is actually synthetic detergent and synthetic fragrance oils. By making your own laundry soap out of good quality bar soap you can avoid putting those chemicals into your laundry. And I think that's worth a bit of extra effort.

DIY Laundry Soap Recipe : : Clean : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

DIY Laundry Soap Recipe : : Clean : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

In addition to soap you need only four additional ingredients to create homemade laundry soap.

All can be found at your local grocery store:

  • baking soda
  • borax
  • oxygen bleach and
  • washing soda

Baking soda is a natural odor remover, and borax softens water. Oxygen bleach boosts the stain-removal power of he recipe and the washing soda is chemically similar to baking soda but is a much stronger base (high pH) and helps neutralize the natural moisturizers found in soap.

Two thoughts before we begin regarding soap selection:

  • Any of the soaps I make are laundry friendly. If you opt for another brand, select soaps that do not contain synthetic colorants or large bits of ground herbs. (The colorful bars shown above are colored mineral pigment colors that won't leach onto clothing.)
  • If you are mixing different soap varieties choose scents that harmonize with each other. (We used a lavender soap and a eucalyptus bar.)

DIY Laundry Soap Recipe : : Clean : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

DIY Laundry Soap Recipe

Materials and Equipment:

Soap, approximately 4 ounces (to make 2 C) (One large or two medium bars)
1/2 C Baking Soda
1 C Borax
2/3 C oxygen bleach
1 1/3 C Washing Soda
Essential Oils (optional)
Box grater or electric grater
Food processor (optional)
Non-plastic mixing bowl
Non-plastic mixing spoon
Jar, for storing laundry soap

DIY Laundry Soap Recipe : : Clean : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

DIY Laundry Soap Recipe : : Clean : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

DIY Laundry Soap Recipe : : Clean : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Instructions:

Gather your materials and equipment. You may consider wearing your gloves and dust mask as we'll be working with powders and alkaline materials (washing soda).
Grate soap on the fine side of a box grater or process through your food processor fitted with the fine grater blade. Go for the finest shreds possible as they will dissolve easily in your washing machine. (Note: 4 ounces of well-cured soap will make approximately 2 C of grated soap.) If desired you may process the grated soap a second time in your food processor for an even finer powder.
Measure grated soap into mixing bowl. Add additional ingredients and stir well to combine. Check scent. If desired add additional essential oils to boost the scent of your soap (a few drops is plenty). Transfer to storage jar. That's it! Shake jar occasionally to keep powder from separating from soap if your gratings (like mine) are medium size. Use two to three Tb. per load, and add a splash of vinegar to your washer in the fabric softener cup for your freshest, cleanest clothes yet.
 
Homemade laundry soap is low-sudsing and is safe for use in most HE (High Efficiency) washing machines.
 

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And just for fun, if you are buying LüSa Organics soap from my website from your laundry soap project, leave a comment of "laundry day" on your order and I'll add a sample-sized product to your order when we ship! One time use per customer, please. xo

 

 

 

How to make beeswax candle luminaries

How to make beeswax candle luminaries : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

How to make beeswax candle luminaries : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Glowing beeswax luminaries.

Magical? Heck yeah. Add to that easy, affordable, natural, and DIY and that's my kind of decorating.

It all started with Pinterest. I saw this tutorial for making luminaries with paraffin wax and balloons. And I though: how about beeswax? Beeswax would be warm and sweet and wonderful. So much more alive than paraffin and more "me". Oh, yes. That sounds exceptionally nice.

So with a goal of warm golden globes scattered around our home on New Year's Eve, glowing warmly and scenting the room with the sweetness of summer I dug in. We're having friends over this weekend. Ambiance, anyone? I'm in.

I jotted down a quick tutorial for you, too. If you have some beeswax and balloons you're pretty much set.

DIY Beeswax Luminaries

Supplies

9" balloons

Beeswax (2 lbs or so with plenty left for other projects…)

Double-boiler, slow cooker, or stainless pot devoted to beeswax melting (hit the second hand store for this)

Parchment paper

Process

Fill balloons with warm water. Fill them to the size that you want your luminary to be.

How to make beeswax candle luminaries : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Your balloons should be full enough that they are plump/taught. If you want smaller luminaries, simply knot them off as tightly as possible like the balloon above (note the long "tail"). (I say this because I had trouble with under-filled balloon's. The luminary cracked when I set them down to cool, an issue I did not have with full or tied-with-a-long-tail balloons.)

Heat your beeswax. Ideally you want it around 160-170F. I do this in a slow cooker that I picked up at a thrift store just for this job. If you don't have a slow cooker you can simply use a cooking pot on low heat or fashion a double boiler out of two pots. (Be prepared to donate the wax pot to wax forever more. Though it is possible – and a bit of a headache – to clean out.)

Melt the wax on high, then turn it to low before you set to work. I only checked the temp twice during a 40 minutes of luminary making and it held temp well. No thermometer? No worries.

Troubleshooting Temperature

If you don't have a thermometer, wing it. Here's how you know you have the right temp:

  • Is the wax sticking smoothly to your balloon? Then it's your temp is good! Dip.
  • Is the wax lumpy? Too cool! Heat it up.
  • Is the wax melting the previous layer off when you re-dip? Too hot! Allow to cool.

How to make beeswax candle luminaries : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

How to make beeswax candle luminaries : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Dip your balloon repeatedly. Do not dip beyond the water/air line on your balloon. If you wonder why and decide to try it your balloon will dramatically explode, filling your wax pot with water and causing you much grief. (Ask me how I know…)

Every six dips or so gently place the balloon on a piece of parchment paper to flatten the bottom. Let it sit for a bit to cool. Between every dip allow 5-10 seconds for the wax to cool before you immerse it in the wax another time. (I like to do two balloons at a time, alternating between them.)

Random sidebar to answer the question you are asking: that's my dry erase board in the background above. The tutorial for making one is over here.)

How to make beeswax candle luminaries : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

After approximately 20-30 dips, gently place your balloon on the parchment and allow to cool. Your goal is a luminary that is thick enough to hold up to use, yet thin enough to let the light through. Once it feels firm to the touch (though still warm) take your balloon to the sink and pop it! It will startle you every time. I promise. And you will likely get a little wet if your aim is off. Peel away and discard the balloon.

How to make beeswax candle luminaries : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Trim any ragged edges with a pair of sharp scissors while the luminary is still warm. Then place a tea light or votive in a cup inside and enjoy. (The brighter your candle the warmer the glow.)

Love,
Rachel

 

Originally published in 2011. Which begs the question: have I really been blogging since before 2011? Goodness me. Where has the time gone?

 

Foolproof thick homemade yogurt

Making thick, delicious yogurt is a simple, rewarding kitchen project.

In five simple (anyone-can-do-it) steps you can transform fresh milk into the most thick, delicious probiotic yogurt you've ever tasted.

But not all homemade yogurt is thick, right? I've made disappointing pourable yogurt before, and truly it's just not the same as a good, thick jar of homemade.

The tips below will walk you though how to make hold-that-jar-upside-down thick yogurt that you and your family will love.

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Yogurt-making is simple and rewarding. It requires no special equipment and results in a delicious product you're sure to love.

And fresher yogurt means fresher cultures, so more probiotic power for your gut. (Plus it costs far less than the stuff in the plastic tubs, and creates less waste.)

Winning.

Here's how we do it around here, including tips to make your yogurt as thick as the best store-bought variety.

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt

Ingredients (for 1 quart of yogurt)

1 quart milk (whole organic milk is best, but feel free to use what you have. Also cow or goat, raw of pasteurized – all will work.)

1 Tb yogurt starter (details on lively yogurt cultures are below)

Supplies

Choose one: cooler, oven, heating pad or yogurt maker (I will explain how to use each option)

Kitchen thermometer (optional)

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Step 1: Heat milk

Warm 1 Qt of milk over medium-low heat until it is below a simmer but piping hot (180 F/82 C if you are using a thermometer). A skin will form on the surface of the milk. Lift it off with as spoon and discard.

Thick Yogurt Tip: (Optional) Turn your burner to the lowest possible setting (keep it just below a simmer if you can) and keep your milk warming for 1 – 2 hours. This will evaporate some of the water and result in thicker yogurt! Remove skin periodically as it forms on the surface of the milk so that the water can evaporate. I don't always do this, but on occasion I do and it makes for crazy-thick yogurt.

Edited to add: if you are going to do the longer heating time, add an extra 1/2 pint of milk at the start as you will lose some volume due to evaporation.

Step 2: Allow to cool

Carefully transfer your still hot (but not jar-breakingly hot) milk to a clean glass jar. (I do this little by little to ensure I don't crack my jar, allowing the glass to warm slowly.) Alternatively, allow the milk to cool in the pan and pour into sterilized jars. Cool milk until it reaches 108 F/42 C. If you don't have a thermometer, simply cool until the jar is warm to the touch but not hot.

Adding your culture to hot yogurt will kill your culture, so don't hurry this step. Remove any skins that have formed on the milk using a clean spoon.

(My kids love the idea of the single serving yogurts they see at the coop, so sometimes I divide the batch up between a few pint and half pint jars for them. Any size jar will work.)

Thick Yogurt Tip:(Important!) Sterilized jars are key! Stray bacteria in your jars can upset the balance of your yogurt culture and result in thinner yogurt. Clean jars are a must.

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean

Step 3: Culture

Add 1 Tb of unsweetened live yogurt to your quart. (If you divided into smaller jars, then divide your culture between those jars proportionally.)

Thick yogurt tip: (Important!) More is not better. Indeed, adding extra culture will result in thinner yogurt. I know. It's counter-intuitive. But it's true! Add just 1 Tb per quart and your yogurt will be as thick as can be.

A lively culture is a must! If you following all of my instructions and tips to the letter and manage to have your yogurt "flop" a sad culture is the likely cause.

 
Where should you source your culture? A good, fresh store-bought yogurt is a great option. (Check the shelves at your local food coop to see if there is something made nearby. If not, experiment. Mainstream brands we've had good luck with are Seven Stars, and Brown Cow. Be sure to choose an unsweetened variety as the sugar weakens the culture.
 
If you're ready to take your yogurt making to the next level, purchase a yogurt starter. This variety results in the thickest yogurt I have ever made. We love it.
Thick yogurt tip: (Important!) Be gentle about it! Don't vigorously stir in your culture. You want to baby it. If there are little blobs of yogurt floating on the surface after you stir that's a-ok. I usually press my culture against the jar with the back of my spoon, then give a very slow, gentle stir or two and call it done.

Step 4: Insulate

For the culture to work its magic, you need to keep it warm! This is the second likely culprit if your yogurt doesn't turn out.

Your goal is to keep your yogurt as warm as you would keep rising bread dough. Too cold and the starter won't take. Too hot and you'll kill it. The sweet spot is around 105 F/40 C. A little lower is okay, but don't go higher than that.

Choose one of these places to cozy up your jars:

A. A cooler filled part-way with very warm water.

A simple low-tech option. Place your jars in a small cooler, then fill with very warm/almost hot water to the neck of the jars. Cover and drape with a towel to add insulation. Check the water temp a couple of times. If cooling down, carefully scoop some out and replace with hot.

B. A warm oven.

If you have a pilot light or a "proof" setting on your oven, this can work to keep your yogurt warm, too. (If your oven gets a bit too hot you may have to crack the door.)

C. A yogurt maker.

A yogurt maker adds heat and insulates to keep your yogurt warm while it cultures. I have one. I like it. But often I still use the cooler or oven when I'm doing a larger batch.

Edited to add: since I wrote this post we moved to a house with an oven that is "meh" for making yogurt. Now I make it one jar at a time in a yogurt maker similar to this one. (afflink) I like that my yogurt is still in glass (versus plastic) and I just make a habit of making it more often. If you like having smaller jars on hand, we had one similar to this (afflink) and it worked well, too.

D. Heating pad on low heat.

This can be tricky if your heating pad gets too hot, but can work beautifully. Place heating pat in the bottom of a cooler and cover with a thick towel. Set heat to low and place yogurt on top. Cover.

Let your yogurt culture undisturbed for 4 – 12 hours. Four makes for mild, thick yogurt and the full 12 hours creates a more sour yogurt with no residual milk sugars – great for people sensitive to such things. (And legal for those on the Specific Carbohydrate Diet and GAPS.)

To determine if your yogurt is ready, gently tip the jar a bit to one side. If it is still watery keep it insulated for the longer time. If it looks thick you're set.

Thick yogurt tip: (Important!) Do not disturb. Move those jars carefully. Be sure you don't jostle or stir your yogurt while it cultures or the result will be thin and disappointing yogurt with the whey separating out. Boo.

Foolproof (thick!) Homemade Yogurt : : www.lusaorganics.typepad.com : : Clean
Step 5: Chill

Carefully remove your jars, lid, and transfer to the fridge to cool. While it's hard to wait, if you scoop your yogurt out now it won't be thick! Cool completely before digging in. This is an important final step to thick yogurt!

(Step 6: Enjoy!)

Be sure to save a tablespoon of fresh homemade yogurt for your next batch. You can re-culture from your own yogurt for several weeks (or even months) before needing a new starter. When your yogurt become thin, excessively sour, or persnickety it's time for a fresh culture.

Also, did you notice that I didn't sweeten my yogurt? You can do that if you choose when it's time to eat. But the less time your yogurt is mingling with the sweetener the better. Sugar jacks up those probiotic cultures and weakens them a bit. So sweeten later. If you're traveling with yogurt you can pour a little maple right on top, then stir it in when it's time to eat. 

Happy yogurt-making, friends. Do report back with how it goes, won't you?

Love,
Rachel

 

 

 

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Hot Toddy: reinvented {recipes for cold season}

Hot Toddy: reinvented {for cold season}

When I was a child and had a cold my mom always made me a simple, soothing Hot Toddy.

Her version was just hot water with a big squeeze of lemon and a dollop of honey. So warm, comforting, and helpful to clear mucous and congestion.

And today I still reach for this simple remedy at the first hint (or deepest part) of a cold. But today my Hot Toddy comes with a twist (or two) depending on what sort of sick we are and what remedies I have on hand.

Because Mom's Hot Toddy was good. But the Hot Toddy, reinvented? It's even better.

Below you will find my basic Hot Toddy recipe, plus simple variations to help you get on the mend fast.

(An aside: That's a jar of bone broth on the right. Because when you're sick, Hot Toddys are wonderful, but bone broth is too. Be sure to drink lots of chicken stock when you're down with a cold! It's so good, so healing, and so simple to make!)

Hot Toddy: reinvented {recipes for cold season}

The Basic Toddy: Lemon, Ginger, and Honey

Fill a pint jar with boiling water. Add four to six thin slices of ginger and the juice of 1/2 lemon, plus the squeezed out lemon half. (The ginger will boost the cold-fighting powers of the lemon and honey and adds a wonderful warming effect for anyone who is chilled.) Cover and steep for 10 minutes. Cool until quite warm but not hot, then add raw honey to taste.

Drink warm throughout the day.

Hot Toddy: reinvented {recipes for cold season}

The Herbal Toddy: Thyme & Sage

If you have a sore throat or a cough, relief may be as close as your spice cabinet!

Because as it turns out, sage and thyme are not only delicious culinary herbs, but celebrated medicinal herbs as well.

Add a sprig each of fresh or dried thyme and sage to your jar before steeping with the ginger and lemon. Don't have sprigs? Add 1/2 tsp dried thyme and 1 tsp rubbed sage instead. Steep, then strain through a fine mesh strainer. Cool until just warm but not hot, then sweeten to taste with raw honey.

Hot Toddy: reinvented {recipes for cold season}

The Super Toddy: with medicinal herbs

Now we're getting to the good stuff. Because the Herbal Toddy is no more difficult to make than the basic toddy if you have ingredients on hand to put it together. Stock up on these herbs now so you're ready for whatever winter brings! (I buy many at my local food coop, but if you can't buy them locally Mountain Rose Herbs is a great, trusted source to buy online.)

Astragalus Root

Astragalus root is a favorite immune boosting remedy for my family and countless others around the world. Add a slice of astragalus root to your toddy when you begin to steep.

Bring 2 slices of astragalus root and 1 C of water to a simmer in a small sauce pan. Cover and simmer for 15 minutes. The volume of water will have reduced by about 1/3. Add 1 Tb of this decoction to your quart of toddy.

(I also always add astragalus root to my bone broth, too, to boost it's healing power!)

Wild Cherry Bark

Cherry Bark is a wonderful expectorant for deep, chesty coughs. Bring 1 Tb of cherry bark and 1 C of water to a simmer in a small sauce pan. Cover and simmer for 15 minutes. The volume of water will have reduced by about 1/3. Add 1 Tb of this decoction to your quart of toddy.

Monarda Flower and Leaf

Monarda (bee balm) tastes like a it like oregano, but with a bit of a zing. It's an incredible remedy for sore throats and a brilliant immune booster. I keep a jar of monarda tonic on hand (fresh monarda infused honey and brandy) and stir a spoonful in when I add my honey. (I promise you a proper recipe next year during monarda season, but in for now dried monarda will do!)

Add 1 to 2 Tb dried monarda leaves and flowers to your toddy at the beginning of steeping time. Strain out with a mesh strainer before serving.

White Pine Needle

Pine is packed with vitamin c and is a great addition if a cough is involved. Make a white pine needle decoction as follows: Bring 2 Tb of white pine needles and bark and 1 C of water to a simmer in a small sauce pan. Cover and simmer for 15 minutes. The volume of water will have reduced by about 1/3. Add 3-4 Tb of this decoction to your quart of toddy.

Hot Toddy: reinvented {recipes for cold season}

The Toddy with Tincture Shots

Elderberry and Echinacea are my health boosting dynamic duo. I make a batch of tincture of both each fall, then take them often during cold and flu season. Truly, I credit these two herbs from my backyard for how rarely we get sick in our family.

Take up to 2 tsp per hour for adults and 1/2 to 1 tsp per hour for children at the onset of a cold.

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Want more recipes?

I shared several hard-hitting of cough remedies in this post about pertussis. Those recipes are helpful for all manner of coughs and colds – not just whooping cough!

Also, my Winter Apothecary booklet is the perfect simple introduction to making plant medicines at home. It includes six nourishing, healing recipes written by myself and another local herbalist.

I am currently donating 100% of proceeds from the sale of this item to aid the Syrian refugee crisis.

This means that your purchase not only helps your family, but helps other families as well.

Win-win!

Be well, friends.

Love,
Rachel

 

 

How to: DIY perfume-making kit

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

I gave you a peek into Lupine's perfume making kit yesterday but thought I'd share a bit more with you about it today. Because she was wild for this gift and has hardly stopped blending oils since she opened the box.

Honestly, the whole thing was a bit of an after-though when I didn't cast off her cowl in time. I put it together in an evening, including painting and decoupaging the box.

And because it was a cinch to put together and such a runaway hit for Lupine, I thought it might make a wonderful gift for your teen or preteen who is interested in essential oils, perfumes, or scent blending!

(Yes, I have access to a mind boggling array of essential oils at LüSa Organics (and even relabeled a few I had kicking around at home leftover from Lupine's play dough business days). You don't. But this kit could be simplified and made with affordable and safe oils for your budding perfumer to play with, even using some you already have on hand. And by diluting the essential oils with a base oil in the dropper bottles you could control the intensity of the oils as well.)

And I think useful, thoughtful, fun gift ideas for teens or pre-teens are always welcome. Don't you? 

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DIY Perfume Kit

Essential Oils

Less is more. I went a little overboard because we're LüSa (how could I not?) but I suggest providing just four to six varied oils to allow for a good deal of exploration. 

Below are some essential oils that are kid-pleasing and affordable. (If you choose an oil that is not on this list, please research it for safety before offering to your child.)

  • Sweet Orange
  • Lavender
  • Peppermint
  • Tangerine
  • Lemon
  • Lime
  • Pine
  • Lemongrass

* BUDGET TIP: To be extra kind to your budget, fill empty glass dropper bottles almost full with jojoba or another neutral oil. Then top off with a few drops of the essential oils you already have at home. (Olive oil would work as well, but unlike jojoba oil will go rancid with time.)

Empty glass roll-on bottles

Six to twelve perfume bottles should be plenty to get you started.

Base Oil

Since essential oils should never be used undiluted on the skin, (see below for proper dilution information) include a base oil for blending with. I love jojoba oil. It can never become rancid and therefore is a wonderful choice for scent blends.

* BUDGET TIP: To be more mindful of your budget, use any mildly scented, liquid oil you have at home (sunflower, olive, etc.).

Storage box or bin

Find a sturdy, non-cardboard box or bin to store your supplies.

* BUDGET TIP: Scrounge your basement or hit the thrift store before you buy new! Twelve hours before Lupine's birthday this had "WISCONSIN cheese" emblazoned across the top. Two coats of paint and a little mod podge and it was a custom EO kit.

How to: DIY perfume-making kit for teens

Optional but nice to have:

Safety Goggles

Mixing pitcher

A small, thrift-store measuring cup works perfectly. (And keeps your kitchen tools from becoming fragrant!)

Work tray

Lupine is using the lid from a broken gallon-sized mason jar. Find something that will catch drips to simplify clean-up.

Paper towels or a few clean, absorbent rags

A small funnel or some plastic pipettes

For filling perfume bottles or blending scents.

Homemade "scent strips"

Basically a small zip bag full of narrow strips of cardstock or heavy paper. To use, your child will add one drop of a single scent to a strip for any oils he or she is working with. Then they can hold several together to see how the scents combine. A great tool for learning about blending oils!

Blank Labels or Washi Tape

for labeling new scent blends and the dropper bottles of essential oils.

Small Notebook and pencil

Give your child a place to jot down recipes and keep track of blends they love and blends they don't!

Fine Glitter

Because. Well, glitter. The fun-factor of the gift goes up tenfold with this simple addition.

Beeswax pastilles or coconut oil and small metal tins

For making solid scents.

Essential oils book

What a wonderful way to learn the basics of not only scent blending but also essential oil safety and use! I love this book (but I'm not sure how appealing it would be to a pre-teen), but this might also be promising.

 

Please remember: essential oils are powerful medicine! This gift is appropriate for a younger child only with focused adult supervision or by an older child. (While my Lu is only 9, she has been learning about EOs and helping me scent blend since she was small. In general I suggest this gift for a slightly older child, say ages 12 and up.)

For proper EO dilution aim for 10 to 20 drops of essential oils per ounce of carrier oil in the final perfume.

 

P.S. If a kit of the basics supplies would be appealing to you leave a comment below letting me know! I might be able to put something together to offer up.

 

How to make and can bone broth

How to make and can bone broth

If you asked me what our family's most important, most healing, most nourishing food is I would answer without hesitation. Bone broth.

Rich, long-simmered, nutrient-rich bone broth.

I make a batch weekly and we drink it by the mug-full, cook vegetables or meat in it, and transform it into soups and stews once or twice a week.

Made with kitchen scraps and bones of any sort, we strive to eat a serious amount of this every week. When we're sick or wrestling with tooth decay or food sensitivities we up the quantity to 1 quart per day for adults and 1 pint per day for kids. That's a lot of broth!

How to make and can bone broth

And sometimes it's nice to make a huge batch and tuck it away for late use. Normally I freeze stock in quarts but taking most of a day to thaw a jar of stock requires forethought that I don't always have.

Plus I'm a master at breaking jars with this method, so. You know. Running low on jars after a while.

Enter the pressure canner.

Pressure canning stock is the easiest way to get started with your pressure canner. It's a no-brainer of a formula, and if you're nervous about using your pressure canner it's the idea first batch. 

It took me a while to build my courage for this kitchen experiment, but after I got a friend hooked on broth she returned the favor by getting me hooked on pressure canning it. It was easier than I thought, and the luxury of not having to thaw broth every two days? It's genius.

How to make and can bone broth

Ready to give it a go? Here's how.

First, let's make some stock.

What kind? That's entirely up to you. Fish, chicken, lamb, beef, venison – anything goes!

While the jars in the photos below are lamb stock, chicken is even more common around here.

How to make and can bone broth

Basic Bone Broth Recipe

It's so. Darn. Easy. And delicious. (Really!) Here's how to make 1/2 gallon or more in four easy steps.

1. Save any bones from your weekly meals in a bag in the freezer. Fish, chicken, turkey, duck, beef, venison, lamb, beef… you get the idea. You can also purchase bones inexpensively at your local grocery or coop. Throughout the week add any carrot and celery trims, onion ends and peels, and garlic trims to the bag.

2. On stock making day transfer your bag of bones and vegetable scraps to a slowcooker or large soup pot. Add an extra head of garlic cut in half across the cloves (don't bother peeling or separating cloves) and a small onion or carrot if your veggie scraps aren't abundant. No need to chop or peel anything. Just toss them in whole.

How many bones and how much vegetables should you add? It's adaptable. For chicken stock aim for one chicken carcass, one medium onion, one celery stalk and one medium carrot as a good place to start for an average (8-12 quart) stock pot.

Add twelve peppercorns, one bay leaf and (optional) one 2" knob of ginger root, cut in half and smashed with the blunt end of a knife.

3. Cover everything with water and add 2 Tb apple cider vinegar. The vinegar is important. It helps extract the minerals for the bones into the broth, which it what we're after. Set aside for one hour while the vinegar starts to work it's way into the bones.

4. Bring to a gentle boil, reduce to a simmer, and cook covered on very low heat. Leave on low heat for 24 hours for small bones (chicken and fish) and 48 hours or more for large (cut beef, lamb, or venison bones). Add water as needed. You can begin drawing off your stock and replacing what you take with water after just six hours. But the longer you simmer the more mineral rich your broth will be.

How to make and can bone broth

Now it's time to can!

Fill your quart or pint jars to within 1" of the rim. Dip a cotton cloth or paper towel in white vinegar and wipe the rim of your jars. This will ensure a clean rim and a good seal. You can also use water but I'm partial to the vinegar trick.

Put your lids in a pot of just boiled water to soften the rings. (If you are buying new lids this season check the box label. The newest BPA-free lids on the market you skip this step for.)

Top your jars with lids and screw on rings "finger tight". (If you are unsure how tight that is simply tighten the rings fully, the loosen approximately 1/2".

How to make and can bone broth

Meanwhile, heat approximately 3" – 4" of water in your pressure canner. (Unlike a water bath canner you don't submerge your jars fully in a pressure canner. The steam pressure does the work this time, not the simmering water.) Add a splash of vinegar if you have hard water to prevent minerals from coating the outside of your jars.

When your jars are full and lidded and the canner is simmering, it's time to load up! Affix the lid on your canner but don't engage your weight yet.

Watch your canner. When a plume of steam escapes from the valve set a timer for 10 minutes. Keep the heat on under your canner. (Waiting for the steam plume to start in earnest can take an additional 5 – 15 minutes.)

How to make and can bone broth

When your timer goes off it's time to apply the pressure! Set your weight to 10 lbs of pressure. Keep the heat on and when the weight begins to rattle set your timer. How long you maintain pressure depends on your jar sizes:

Quarts: 25 minutes

Pints: 20 minutes

I always adjust the heat so that my weight is rattling on and off every few seconds rather than a constant rattle that makes me think my pressure canner might explode at any moment. You don't want long gaps between rattles, but two to three seconds is great.)

When your timer goes off turn off the burner. Don't you open the canner! Don't even try. And don't quick-cool the lid by draping a damp towel over it. Just leave it be. Seriously. Otherwise you're fixing for an exploding broth disaster. For. Real.

Allow your canner to cool for 45 minutes or more, then remove the weight and carefully remove the lid.

How to make and can bone broth

Use a jar lifted to carefully remove your jars and place them on a towel to cool. Oh, and they will likely still be boiling away inside the jars, a bizarre sight to behold on the counter top.

If you are using Tattler BPA-free lids, then using a hot pad for each hand, tighten your rings and allow the jars to cool for four hours. If you are using regular lids, simply remove and leave the lids be.

After four hours check that your lids have sealed by pushing down on the center of the lid. If the lid is sucked down it is sealed. If not transfer to the fridge and use within a week or transfer to wide-mouth pints filled 3/4 full and freeze.

Allow the sealed jars to sit undisturbed for 12 hours.

After 12 hours remove rings, double-check that the lids are tightly sealed, label and transfer to your pantry.

You did it! Take a bow.

Sugar Bush: the fifth season

Sugar bush: the fifth season

Sugar bush: the fifth season

Sugar bush: the fifth season

Sugar bush: the fifth season

Sugar bush: the fifth season

How to tap a maple tree

How to tap a maple tree

A friend was over with her little ones last month and we pulled our some puzzles for the children to play with. A wooden puzzle depicting the four seasons was first out of the box.

Her son looked the puzzle over and then looked then up at his mom, a quizzical look on his face.

"Mama, this 'seasons' puzzle has only four seasons. Not five (like we have)."

My friend looked at me and said simply, "Sugar bush. It's our fifth season."

Oh my, yes.

Sugar bush. Maple season. Tapping time. The brief, elusive season that hovers between winter and spring. It's really not winter anymore, nor it it yet spring. It's very much it's own.

Sugar bush is fleeting – and oh, so sweet.

This weekend the four of us felt the weather shifting and grabbed our mapling supplies. Still unpacking from our trip, maple time wouldn't wait.

It's is the shortest of all. And we didn't want to miss a single drop.

Care to join us in this sweetness? It's easier than you might think.

Here's how.

How to tap a Maple Tree

How to tap a maple tree

How to tap a maple tree

1. Gather supplies

All you need is a tap (or 'spile'), a hammer, a drill with the proper sized bit, a bucket and lid. (And a tree, of course.)

In years past we modified random buckets by cutting a hole in the side and adding a loop of wire to suspend it from the spile. A few years back we bought proper maple pails, found locally and made by these folks in Canada.

Either option works. Ideally you will have a lid to keep out bits of bark and leaves, but this, too, can be improvised.

How to tap a maple tree

2. Find your tree

Sugar maples are best but in a pinch we've even tapped our birch trees, a Norway maple, some silver maples and box elders. Sugar maple have the most sugar of all, but the others still make great syrup. (Surprising but true!)

You will, of course, need some basic skills in tree identification. If this isn't your forte ask a competent friend to help, visit a local nature center for assistance (bring in a branch from your tree if you wish), or get a simple tree ID book like this winter tree field guide from your library. Or use this fabulously simple on-line key in the summer and mark your tree for next year.

Maples are – in my opinion – one of the easiest deciduous trees to identify in any season because of their opposite branching, but if you're unsure get help!

3. Timing

To tap your trees, first pick the right time of year. Tap in late winter/early spring when the daytime temperatures are above freezing but the nights are still cold. This is when the sap begins to rise and is the only time to capture a bit for yourself. (Here in Western Wisconsin that's usually late February or early March.)

How to tap a maple tree

How to tap a maple tree

4. Tap

Tap by choosing a drill bit the same diameter or a smidge narrower than your spile near the widest part before the hook. (Usually 5/16" or 7/16".) Drill a hole at chest height on the south (sunny) side of the tree at a slight angle downward from the trunk. (Your bit will be angled upward just a touch.)

Drill to the depth required for your spile. You can mark that spot on your drill with a piece of masking tape if you wish.

Insert the spile into the hole and tap firmly into place with your hammer. On a good warm day the sap will begin to flow immediately with a few satisfying drips into your pail (or mouth).

Hang your bucked and place your lid.

Large trees can handle two (possibly three) taps, depending on size. More information on tree diameter for multiple taps can be found here.

How to tap a maple tree

4. Check your pails

Each day check your pails and empty any collected sap. I pour mine through a fine mesh towel to remove any bits that have found their way into the sap. If there is a puck of ice on the top of your pail you can remove and discard it. It is almost all water and you can reduce your cooking time by pulling it out.

How to tap a maple tree

How to tap a maple tree

How to tap a maple tree

5. Cook your sap

If you are cooking outside or if you aren't collecting much sap, gather it in a large pail or pan until you have enough to cook down, being sure to keep your collected sap cold while you gather more. Cook your sap withing seven days to be sure it is still fresh.

Cook down your syrup on a fire outside or -  for small amounts – on your kitchen stove.

It takes 50-plus quarts of sap to make a quart of syrup so that's a lot of boiling and evaporation!

Pour your sap into a large, preferably wide cooking pot. As the sap cooks down it begins to darken and become sweet. As this concentration occurs transfer your syrup to a smaller pan to prevent scorching.

How to tap a maple tree

6. Enjoy!

Pour your homemade maple syrup over yogurt, porridge, ice cream – anything that needs a bit of sweetness. There might be nothing finer in your pantry than this. What a perfect way to welcome the sweeter, warmer days of spring as they rush in.

Happy tapping, friends!

 

 

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

In October I shared the first post in my series on natural tooth care, inspired by my family's own struggles with tooth decay. Today I'm sharing the second post, on the importance of eating a tooth-healthy diet.

Prepare yourself. It's a bit of a doozy.

The Holistic Tooth Care series will contain three posts:

Part One: Hygiene

Part Two: Diet

Part Three: Supplements

If you're just joining us now, I suggest you go back and read Part One before digging in here with step two.

Let's get started, shall we?

Holistic Tooth Care, Part Two: Diet

As I mentioned in Part One, our family made several swift changes in how we cared for our teeth at a time when we were dealing with rapid, significant decay. The biggest of which was diet.

Changing how you brush is a quick and easy fix. Changing how you eat? Well that's a much bigger undertaking.

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Before you read through this post have the following in mind:

  • You don't have to do this all at once. In fact, if your family is not dealing with tooth decay and you'll reading this as a preventative, you can go as slowly as you'd like. Maybe you'll pick and choose which diet changes you take on.
  • You will cheat. It's normal. No one is perfect and beating yourself up ain't going to make that white-flour-and-refined-sugar-bender any less real. Let it go and get on with what to eat tomorrow.
  • Make changes to your family's diet because you want to eat the most nourishing foods you can so you can grow strong and feel healthy. (Not, for example, because your child has "crubling teeth and if you don't eat this food you'll have a mouth full of fillings!") See the difference? Present the changes you make for your family in the most loving, positive light you can. It can make a huge difference in how you and your family feel about this new path.
  • If you are dealing with significant decay, view these steps as empowerment in your child's care. Give yourself time and slowly the fear will ease. (This I know.)
  • If you or your child is experiening profound decay I can't encourage you enough to jump right in with as many of these changes as you can while working with your dentist. My daughters early childhood tooth decay stopped progressing after we made the shift outlined below. It worked for us. I hope it also works for you!

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Interestingly, many of the changes outlined below are the very same changes that I recommend for healing eczema.

I believe that both eczema and tooth decay are not the problem in their own right, but a sign of a greater systemic imbalance. The tip of the proverbial iceberg if you will.

Which makes addressing these conditions at their root and in their entirety that much more important, don't you think?

So let's dig in. Now is the time for change.

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Here is an overview of the dietary changes I suggest for healthy teeth.

We will be adding some nutrient- and mineral-rich foods and taking away foods that deplete our body's minerals.

Add:

  • (Bone broth (daily)
  • Probiotic foods (daily)
  • Mineral-rich fish (twice per week)
  • Raw or fermented dairy (daily)

Reduce (or remove):

  • Processed foods
  • Sweets (sugar, dried fruit, sweet fresh fruits, juice)
  • Unsoaked grains
  • Unsoaked nuts and seeds

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

What did your ancestors eat?

It wasn't too many generations ago when people on all points of the globe ate whole, real, yes, even organic food with the seasons. Meats, eggs, veggies. Because that's what food was. Little was wasted and even bones and more unsavory (yet nutrient dense) parts were utilized.

The modern, Western diet, however is built largely on less nutrient-dense (and more processed) foods.

And this difference, my friends, is at the heart of many of our health problems.

What would change if we tipped the scales of nutrition back a bit toward the way our great- great-grandparents ate?

So much.

We're going to add some of the mineral and nutrient rich foods that were once commonplace back in our diets – for our teeth, our bones, our brains, our immune systems, and the rest of our bodies.

We need these foods. Let's bring them back into our kitchens.

We'll also reduce or eliminate some of the foods that are a drain on our systems. Because that's just good sense, whether you have decay or not.

These changes aren't just good for your teeth – it's good for the whole of you.

I create a four week schedule of diet changes for foods to add and a four week schedule of foods to reduce or eliminate. You can do these two sets of changes separately or at the same time. It's up to you. 

If you're in a crisis you can do them all beginning today.

Print out the list below, tape it to your fridge, and keep at it. We started seeing changes within just a couple of weeks in our child's teeth. If that's not encouraging I don't know what is!

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Eat This!

Let's add some nourishing, affordable, real food to our diets that will recharge the minerals in our bodies. Here's how:

Week 1. Drink bone broth (daily)

I'm not talking about purchased soup stock or bullion, my friend. I mean the real deal. Slow simmered bone broth.

If you make one diet change, adding homemade bone broth to your weekly rhythm is a great place to start.

Bone broth is a nutrition super-food and you can turn it into nourishing soups, cook grains and beans in it, and drink it by the steaming mug-full.

Aim for 1 pint per day for children and 1 quart per day for adults. Start with less and work your way up (even 1/4 that amount is a good start).

Don't skip this. I regard it as the single most important diet change we made to heal our teeth.

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Making your own bone broth takes only ten minutes of work time, plus 24 to 48 hours of simmering. Once you get the hang of it you'll find it's faster than clearing the dinner dishes off the table.

How to Make Bone Broth

It's so. Darn. Easy. And delicious. (Really!) Here's how to make 1/2 gallon or more in five easy steps.

1. Save any bones from your weekly meals in a bag in the freezer. Fish, chicken, turkey, duck, beef, venison, lamb, beef… you get the idea. You can also purchase bones inexpensively at your local grocery or coop. Throughout the week add any carrot and celery trims, onion ends and peels, and garlic trims to the bag.

2. On stock making day transfer your bag of bones and vegetable scraps to a slowcooker or large soup pot. Add an extra head of garlic cut in half across the cloves (don't bother peeling or separating cloves) and a small onion or carrot if your veggie scraps aren't abundant. No need to chop or peel anything. Just toss them in whole.

How many bones and how much vegetables should you add? It's adaptable. For chicken stock aim for one chicken carcass, one medium onion, one celery stalk and one medium carrot as a good place to start for an average (8-12 quart) stock pot.

Add twelve peppercorns, one bay leaf and (optional) one 2" knob of ginger root, cut in half and smashed with the blunt end of a knife.

3. Cover everything with water and add 2 Tb apple cider vinegar. The vinegar is important. It helps extract the minerals for the bones into the broth, which it what we're after. Set aside for one hour while the vinegar starts to work it's way into the bones.

4. Bring to a gentle boil, reduce to a simmer, and cook covered on very low heat. Leave on low heat for 24 hours for small bones (chicken and fish) and 48 hours or more for large (cut beef, lamb, or venison bones). Add water as needed. You can begin drawing off your stock and replacing what you take with water after just six hours. But the longer you simmer the more mineral rich your broth will be.

5. Turn off heat, cool, and strain. Salt to taste before serving.

Drink immediately or store in your freezer or fridge. Use as a base for soups and stews and use to cook any beans or grains you eat.

If storing in the fridge use within three to five days. 

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Week 2. Add probiotic foods to your diet (daily)

Once you are in the habit of eating bone broth every day let's get in the habit of eating live fermented, probiotic foods every day.

Why? Because the probiotics in your food will help recharge your gut flora. And your gut flora is your body's key to proper digestion and the absorption of nutrients from the foods you eat.

We serve live fermented sauerkraut at almost every meal. For the sake or our budget we make our own every two weeks or so. It takes a bit longer than broth, but not by much. Here is a great recipe to get you started if you are new to fermenting at home.

Probiotics are found in more foods than just kraut! I give a nice list here, so for the sake of brevity I'll ask you to pop over there to pick your favorites.

Week 3. Add high mineral fish (twice per week)

Wild caught salmon, sardines, and herring are all great sources of minerals. When our tooth decay began we made a habit of eating all three, thought the herring we can find locally is quite sweet so we stopped eating it regularly. Twice a week is a good goal.

We added salmon burgers (a basic version is canned salmon, an egg, 1/2 small onion, minced, and salt and pepper, fried in oil on a hot griddle) as a weekly lunch and sardines as a snack or lunch as well. Easy, quick, done.

(Note: If you are concerned about mercury in fish sardines are a great option. This post is a great read on the subject.)

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Week 4. Add raw or fermented dairy (daily)

Raw or fermented dairy is a great mineral source as well. When my daughter's decay was in full swing our dentist advised me to night wean. After reading the book Heal Tooth Decay I decided to keep nursing on demand – including at night – though I wiped her teeth down after she latched off.

For non-nurslings a great source of easy to digest, mineral rich dairy is homemade whole milk yogurt.

You can find my how-to right here.

Avoid store-bought sweetened yogurts as they are very sweet and the probiotics are less lively than their plain counterparts.

We also provide our family with local, whole, raw milk and cream and an unlimited stream of grass-fed butter. Growing bodies are so hungry for the vitamins these foods provide.

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Cut it out! (Foods to reduce or remove)

I'll be the first to admit that adding new foods is easier than taking away old favorites.

But your teeth (and the rest of yoru body) will thank you for every small change you make.

Remember that you can do this at your own pace. And if you backslide during a rough season – eh, so it goes. Allow yourself this stumble and then choose what steps you are ready to take once more.

We are all imperfect, even in a journey like this one.

Why are we removing these foods?

Some foods we eat either do not provide the nutrition our bodies need and are empty filler, or are a drain on our bodies – anti-nutrients so to speak. Others upset our blood sugar in a way that promotes tooth decay as our bodies draw minerals into our blood to restabilize.

Because we're trying to heal we are going to reduce or better yet remove foods that have a negative effect on our health.

How to remove (favorite) foods

This might hurt a little.

Here are some tips for cutting out foods you love that don't love you back.

  • Get them out of the house! Having a bag of contraband hidden in the back of the pantry is a disaster waiting to happen. Either give it away or eat what you have and don't replace it. Because what you don't have in the house often simply isn't an option.
  • Pack snacks! Finding yourself hungry, cranky, and not at home can be a train wreck. Stock the glove box or your bag with healthy (new) favorites.
  • Find delicious alternatives. Love chips? Try kale chips. Love ice cream? Make some at home so you can control the ingredients. You get the idea.
  • Enjoy a treat now and then. We love treats. Make space for treats that are a little less naughty and you might not miss the sassy stuff at all.

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Week 1. Processed foods

Many processed foods act like a sugar once ingested. Refined, processed foods in particular. And sugar effects teeth differently than we used to think. It jacks your blood sugar, then your body pulls minerals from your bones and teeth to stabilize. Bummer.

What is a processed food? Anything that doesn't resemble something that you might have picked from a garden or brought home from a farm.

Could you make white flour in your own kitchen? Probably not. Then it's processed. Same for white sugar, white rice, weird store bought drinks and Snickers bars.

Cut processed foods completely or replace them with healthier unprocessed substitutes.

The only sweeteners you'll find in our kitchen are simple, unrefined sweets: honey, maple, and coconut sugar. (And we use them sparingly.) As for pasta, your spaghetti noodles can be replaced with a baked spaghetti squash or some spiral cut zucchini. (No, it's not the same but we love it anyway.) Lettuce wraps can sub in for a sandwich. You get the idea.

And if you feel you're unlikely to succeed at making this change, take it slow. Purchased white bread can be replaced with a sprouted, whole grain bread or a homemade sourdough.

And once new habits are made you'll hardly miss your old favorites.

I mean that.

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Week 2. Sweets of all sorts (refined and unrefined sweeteners, dried fruit, sweet fresh fruits, juice, etc.)

Just as the processed foods above act like sugar in our bodies and upset our blood sugar, sugar (obviously) does the same.

And sugar goes beyond the white sort.

Anything sweet will affect your blood sugar (Yup, even stevia.), so slowly adjust your palate to less sweets. 

I don't suggest that you cut all sugar (your body needs some!), but really be aware of how much you are consuming.

And while unprocessed sweets (fruit, honey, maple) are easier to digest and more nutrient-rich than their processed counterparts (corn syrup, white sugar), they still effect blood sugar. Go easy.

Low-sugar fruits like berries, sour apples, and grapefruit make great treats, too. We also found using a bit of an unrefined sweetener with a couple of drops of natural stevia was a great way to wean ourselves off of excesive sweets.

The beautiful thing is that our bodies adjust. Reduce the sugar and your palate will magically adjust. My kids recently tasted a one-time favorite purchased ice cream and complained that it was "way too sweet".

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Week 3. Unsoaked grains

The outer layer of grains (the germ) is high in phytic acid, an anti-nutrient that bears a high cost for our bodies – especially our teeth.

If you consume higher quantities of phytic acid you are more likely to have tooth decay. It's that simple. (More here.)

Soaking and sprouting grains helps remove phytic acid and allows our bodies to gain – rather than lose – nutrients when we eat.

Soaking grains is a new habit, so give yourself time to get into a groove.

You'll want to give yourself 12 to 24 hours of soaking time before eating your grains.

I'll use steel cut oats for my example since oats are very high in phytic acid.

Fill your cooking pot with water, then add 1 C steel cut oats plus 1 Tb whey (You can get whey by pouring a bit of yogurt through a fine mesh strainer. Sometime when I'm feeling lazy I just add 2 Tb yogurt. Don't tell anyone.) You can also add 1 Tb of Apple Cider Vinegar.

Set the pot on the counter for 12 to 24 hours.

When it's time to cook drain and rinse your grain, then cover with boiling water and cook as usual, though for a shorter cooking time.

Easy.

Think of this for oatmeal, millet, rice – any whole, rolled, or cracked grains you eat.

Sprouted grains are also very digestible compared to their unsprouted counterparts. Here is how to sprout grains for flour.

That being said, don't lean too hard on grains. Let them be minor players in your diet, not the star of the show.

Week 4. Unsoaked seeds and nuts

Everything I said about grains applies to seeds and nuts, too. Plus they have loads of enzyme inhibitors that make them extra hard to digest. Soak 'em.

As I type I have a mason jar of walnuts and another of almonds soaking on the counter.

Here's how to make your seeds and nuts digestible.

It doesn't take much effort and makes your food so much more nourishing.

Worth noting: the only time we saw new tooth decay in our daughter was years after her early decay during a time when we were eating lots of nuts and seeds, mostly unsoaked. Lesson learned.

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

And there you have it. No, it won't be painless. But yes, it might just be a deal-changer for you or your child's decay.

A few weeks of effort to create some new habits and you might just reboot your whole family's health. 

Will it hard? Yeah, probably.

Will it be worth it? Goodness, yes.

Next Step

In the coming weeks I will bring you part three in the series: supplements. (It's easier than this step, I promise.)

If you are dealing with a tooth crisis in your home I suggest you do a little homework now by reading this thread on Mothering.com. It will take you several days to work your way thorough (take your time) but it's absolutely rich with information that can help get your family moving in a healthy direction.

That's it for today. Happy eating, friends!

Eat like your ancestors (and other tips for healthy teeth): Holistic Tooth Care Part 2: Diet

Please note: I am neither a dentist nor an expert. The information above is based on our unique experiences as a family, and is not intended as medical advice. Work together with a holistic dentist and find a course of action that works best for your family.

If this post left you with questions or a hunger for more information I suggest the book Cure Tooth Decay and this thread on Mothering.com.

I also strongly recommend Nourishing Traditions. While we don't follow a strictly Weston Price style diet any more, during our crisis it was immensely helpful. During our time of acute decay this book was an indispensable resource that helped us re-learn how to eat.

Another wonderful book to pick up to help you find a new relationship with food is Practical Paleo. So much wonderful information there on how our food choices effect our health. 

 

Apple crisp recipe & honey vanilla ice cream recipe (egg-free, gluten-free, grain-free, refined sugar-free)

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Gluten-free apple crisp recipe & honey-sweetened raw milk ice cream recipe | www.lusaorganics.typepad.com

Yesterday began with a red sky and ended with red apples.

My VW Beetle loaded to the roof with apples, to be precise.

It had been a while since the kids and I took off on a "mystery day" adventure so yesterday we loaded into the car on a secret field trip. We landed just a few miles from home at our local organic apple orchard.

(And yes, Lupine wore an apple dress to the orchard not knowing we were going to the orchard. Life is funny sometimes.)

We met another homeschooling family there and spent the afternoon picking, visiting, nibbling, climbing, and playing among the trees.

As the morning sky hinted there was rain. But not a lot. Just enough to keep us picking fast.

We brought home 3 1/2 bushels that we'll can as sauce (and maybe a bit of pie filling this year, too) and lots to store for fresh eating until well into winter.

And like we've done every year for as long as I can remember, we had apple crisp and homemade ice cream for dinner.

Because some traditions are too delicious (and sassy) to quit.

The crisp I made was based on this gluten-free, vegan gem with a few mods (my version follows). We topped it with a dreamy raw milk honey ice cream that I need to make again tomorrow.

We gobbled it all up too fast for photos. I guess that means I'll have to make them both again. Very soon.

 Egg-free, Gluten-free Apple Crisp Recipe

Ingredients
  • 10-12 smallish medium apples, peeled, cored and chopped
  • dash apple cider vinegar
  • 1/4 cup coconut sugar
  • 1 Tbsp tapioca flour
  •  1 tsp cinnamon
  • 1/4 tsp cardamon
  • 1/4 tsp ground ginger

Crisp Topping

  • 1/2 C coconut sugar
  • 1/3 cup tapioca flour
  • 1 1/4 cup gluten free oats or chopped nuts
  • 1/2 cup almond flour or any ground nut or seed
  • 1/2 teaspoon cardamon
  • pinch salt
  • 1/2 cup melted butter

Process

Preheat oven to 350 F.

Generously butter a 9×13 baking pan.

Chop apples and toss with apple cider vinegar. (Lemon juice is just as good.)

Add coconut sugar, tapioca flour, and cinnamon and stir to combine.

Transfer apples to buttered pan, then (without washing mixing bowl) combine all crisp toppings in bowl.

Top apples with oaty buttery goodness. (Crisp topping.)

Bake for 55 minutes or until apples are tender and topping has become lovely and toasty brown.

 

Honey-Vanilla ice cream

We used raw milk, raw cream and raw honey, but use whatever milk and honey you have. As long as you use good quality ingredients you'll have a devastatingly good ice cream. Smashingly good. Wicked good. You get the idea.

And the recipe couldn't be easier.

Ingredients

  • 1 C milk
  • 1/4 C honey
  • 2 C heavy cream
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract

Process

Heat milk in a small saucepan until quite warm, but not hot.

Stir in honey until dissolved.

Add cream and vanilla, taste for sweetness. If you prefer a sweeter ice cream heat 1/2 cup of your cream/milk/honey mix and add additional honey. In the unlikely even that it's too sweet add a bit more cream.

Chill your ice cream mixture until cold, then churn in your ice cream maker.

Enjoy!