Sentences with phrase «from bread bags»

Small baby food containers, empty toilet rolls, twist ties from bread bags, small cardboard boxes, and old birthday cards are great raw materials for crafting.

Not exact matches

Maybe it's making for «no straw» in your drink when you go out, bringing your own bags to the grocery store, getting coffee or a smoothie in your own cup / jar, bringing your own silverware when you're out and about, switching from paper to cloth napkins, buying bread from a local bakery or making it yourself instead of buying in plastic, switching to a menstrual cup or washable cloth pads instead of disposable, there's so many different ways to produce less waste.
We found frozen broccoli for $ 1.00 per 1 pound bag as well as.99 french bread still warm from the grocery store bakery.
My wholemeal breadcrumbs come from a bag of frozen leftover bits of bread that I keep in the freezer.
Panic will set in and every single twist - tied plastic bag holding that loaf of bread and plastic gallon jug of milk will be stripped bare from it's spot on the market shelf, leaving yellow price tags...
From perfectly - flavored gravy to wonderfully soft bread you can make in a bag, these homemade sides are just what your diner meal needs.
Classic bread texture (i.e. moist and spongy), great fresh from the bag or toasted, and good for anyone who misses whole wheat.
Oh — they also sell a bag of bread ends from that day's sandwich making for $ 1.50... from six loaves of bread, this will go far for sandwiches, making croutons, or just eating straight up (had some with homemade apple butter this morning for breakfast, yum).
Storing bread: I have a few recommendations in the book (including a recommended bag for freezing), but it's mostly about eliminating air from the bag in which you are freezing bread, since that is what causes freezer burn.
It's cranberry - nut bread, the recipe clipped from the back of a long - ago Ocean Spray bag.
Bread from a bake shop is usually (not always) healthier than bagged bread, so try things like sprouted grain breads and artisnal breads, especially those made with unusual grains or nuts.
I had some leftover peasant bread from Alexandra Cooks, so I cracked open a bag of my special corona beans and put them to good use.
Time to pull out that bag of flour I bought from Bluebird Grain Farms and put them to «work» baking bread.
This bread mix is a staple in my house for 3 reasons: 1) it is the easiest bread mix to make (it literally takes me a total of 7 minutes from opening of package to putting in pan), 2) there is an egg - free version recipe on the bag (turns out great!)
Remove odors from a lunch bag by placing inside, a plate w / a slice of bread that has been soaked in white distilled vinegar.
I keep the plastic bags or wrapping from the jumbo diaper packs, bread or hamburger buns (just shake out the crumbs), grocery store fresh produce bags, newspaper bags, toilet paper and paper towel plastic packaging, wipes plastic wrapping if there are three or more wipes packages bound together, etc..
I actually end up with more bags from bread and newspapers etc. than I can use, so I use them for produce or even save them for my favorite farmer to use as soon as our CSA starts up again.
You can easily reduce your carbohydrate intake by cutting out processed foods from a bag or a box, and then by reducing your intakes of grain products (like pasta, bread, and breakfast cereals).
By the time I returned from Trader Joe's, I had two giant bags of potatoes, a bushel of asparagus, a few cartons of berries, bananas, a loaf of bread, a pile of avocados, and a few bars of vegan chocolate.
For bread crumbs I always put the uneaten crusts from loaves in a unsealed plastic bag, then when I need some just bash up the stale pieces with a rolling pin and... Voila!
12:00 p.m. — I eat lunch at my desk: I mix a Peach DeTox tea with one bag of green tea for a little caffeine boost, and have zoodles, red sauce, and some leftover bread from last night.
Her bag might include a receipt from Barnes and Noble (she loves to read), a wrapper from a chocolate bar (she is a self - confessed chocoholic), an empty yeast jar (she enjoys baking bread), and a few crumpled pieces of paper (she likes to write).
We watched as people made deliveries... someone would drop a bag tied to a rope from their third story balcony, and someone on the ground would fill it with bread or other deliveries.
But this one nails it, in no small part because the scattered objects are bagged up in plastic like evidence from a crime scene, perhaps a heist of some sort (the security grille, the Maglite, the bricks) or a photo shoot for a food magazine that has somehow gone awry (the fake limes and bread, the candied fennel).
Look out for the following labels which appear on all sorts of packaging - from soft drink cans, to bread bags and plastic toiletry bottles.
I have not yet solved the problem of plastic wrap around cheese or tofu, the plastic bags from bread, tortillas and English muffins (I bring them to the community garden for folks to carry their harvests home, but that only postpones their trip to the waste stream) or what to do with milk bottle caps and tortilla chip bags.
One great example here are plastic bags from groceries or bread.
Cooked bacon sandwiches for Sprogs» breakfast (to remove temptation from fridge for The Great Famine of 2012); did grocery shopping; bought Husband six - pack of beer for New Year's Eve party; bought chooks 25 kg bag of scratch mix; staggered to car with 25 kg bag of scratch mix; washed and hung out two loads of washing; filled recycling bin with empty bottles and cartons; baked eggshells to make grit for chooks; assembled wraps for Husband and Sprogs for lunch; baked banana bread to use up manky banana supplies; baked biscuits with Sprog 2, who doesn't like banana bread; shut back door 50 times to stop plague of mozzies getting in; shut front door 20 times to stop plague of mozzies getting in; killed lots of mozzies; threw out old magazines and newspapers; put crap away from recent car trip; cleaned chook shit out of chook house; sorted three baskets of clean laundry; unpacked and repacked diswasher; returned to supermarket for forgotten essentials: toilet paper, broccoli, sparklers and last shot of caffeine before The Great Famine of 2012; cooked dinner; washed Sprogs» hair and painted Sprog 2's toenails rainbow colours for New Year's Eve party; copped grief from Husband for painting Sprog 2's toenails (some sexualisation nonsense); went to New Year's Eve Party; reluctantly abandoned third glass of French champagne after being reminded of designated driver status; drove Husband and Sprogs home from New Year's Eve party; took Unisom; collapsed in bed at 11.50 pm.
You wake up and the kids» school uniforms aren't washed, there's no bread to make sandwiches for their lunch, the sheets and towels from the trip have been tossed in the laundry along with an inexplicably enormous bag of dirty underwear, you've run out of toilet paper and are reduced to scrounging for Kleenex, the front hall is piled halfway to the ceiling with suitcases plus six recycling bags filled with detritus from the trip... and you have to walk the Sprogs to school because Husband has dropped the car in for a service.
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