bought little containers with icepacks that go into the lids (fit and fresh?)
They have gel capsules that I had to pop in order to get Jasmine to take them, but recently
I bought a little container of cherryflex concentrate, and that makes things a lot easier.
Not exact matches
A small bag of organic nuts can easily set you back $ 5 - 7, whereas you can
buy a bag of them in bulk for just a
little bit more, AND for double, if not triple, the amount — all whilst saving on plastic packaging too, if you bring your own
container.
But unlike the creamy store -
bought containers we usually opt for, pack full of calorific mayonnaise and god only knows what else, why not add a
little something special to your coleslaw this summer?
I've been doing
little cooking and baking lately, so to avoid
buying ingredients that will eventually take up precious space in Tupperware
containers full of my pantry items.
I saw this protein powder at the store the other day and didn't want to necessarily
buy the whole
container without trying a
little first.
A
little tip — I always
buy heavy cream in small, pint - sized
containers.
I already do many of these most of the time, but plan to try switching to cloth napkins, ditching paper towels, bringing my own take - out
containers, remembering to bring my coffee cup, and trying the DivaCup I've
bought but am still a
little timid to try.
I
bought some washi tape that went with my kitchen decor colors and used it to add a
little fun to my
container.
So even though I wanted to make it myself, I
bought organic baby food in the jar (and sometimes in those horrid
little plastic
containers) with both of my babies.
Making your own yogurt ensures that you know where your milk came from, and also reduces your reliance on continually
buying hundreds of
little yogurt
containers.
I
bought a
little «Huggies» wipe
container, took out the disposable wipes, and just throw some cloth wipes in it to store them.
If you want to
buy a ton of avocados, just quarter them, put them in some tiny
little containers, throw it in the freezer, put a nice
little label on it like from Sage Spoonfuls.
When I learned that my plastic bowls, dishes, and
containers could leach harmful chemicals — especially the ones with that sneaky, practically invisible
little recycling triangle embossed with the number 7 — I
bought Pyrex.
And then poor on some store -
bought salsa and maybe some defrosted (pre-chopped) broccoli, you will have a great whole food meal that came together with nothing more than opening
containers and a
little zapping in the microwave.
You can grow your own
little plot of wheatgrass if you're feeling ambitious (and obnoxiously trendy), but I usually just
buy a
container of it at Whole Foods.
I made serious inroads on the paper when I
bought two used file cabinets and quit trying to organize in lots of
little file
containers.