Growing Tomatoes on the Cheap!

Filed under :Food - Smart Savings!, Farmers Market, Gardening, Uncategorized

Haven’t we all seen the Topsy Turvy, upside down tomatoes and wondered how those would do in our garden! Yesterday, we picked up some gorgeous heirloom tomatoes and can’t wait to plant them.

I want to try those hanging tomatoes, but consistently balk at paying the price they demand for what looks like an old tablecloth. Well, imagine my excitement when a little online research turned up some fantastic upside down resources that will help do-it-yourselfers grow a garden upside down!

I got all excited and was ready to try several of this, until I realized we have nothing to hang them from in this home, so it may have to wait until next year.

Here are the resources:

Enjoy - and let’s all grow some tomatoes this summer! We keep hearing after last years horrid tomato year, and the blight and tomato woes from coast to coast, that we should have a fantastic tomato season THIS year! To salsa!


Feta Portabello Pizzas with Cayenne (Low Carb)

Filed under :Recipes, Uncategorized
  • 4 Portabello mushrooms
  • 1 cup spinach (give or take - a nice handful!
  • 1 Tbsp EVOO
  • 1 Teaspoon crushed garlic
  • 1 Teaspoon Oregano
  • 1 dried cayenne pepper, chopped (optional) or 1/2 teaspoon of dried red pepper
  • Garlic powder or granulated garlic
  • Salt and pepper to taste.
  • Small container Feta Cheese (we tried Sun Dried Tomato and Basil Feta Cheese)

Preheat oven to 450.

Rinse the portabello  mushrooms if desired. Some do, some don’t. Place mushrooms cap tops DOWN on a baking stone or sheet. You can spray Pam on the sheet first, or rub with EVOO to prevent sticking. I like to sprinkle the mushrooms with garlic powder/granulated garlic. Use what you have!

This super simple Portabello Pizza has a simple filling. Begin by chopping spinach up, trying not to bruise it! Add oregano, garlic, and a drizzle of EVOO to hold things together. Cut cayenne into slices with scissors, or add red pepper flakes if desired. Salt and pepper to taste. Sample it, do you like it? This should taste fresh and full of garlicky, basily flavor. If not, adjust seasonings, throw a little oil in. Only don’t go too salty, the feta cheese will add more salt flavor!

Spoon spinach mixture into portabello mushrooms evenly.

Top with feta cheese and a drizzle of EVOO if you would like! Pop into a 450 oven for 10 minutes!

Enjoy this healthy, vitamin packed, anti-inflammatory Pizza idea for lunch, alongside a hearty soup for dinner, or using smaller portabellos, as a snack!


How to Navigate Black Friday

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We live in a technologically driven society…and I am married to the IT guy. It is time to replace the computer, and that replacement demands a major upgrade from the model Dave originally built in 2000 for the girls. To complete The Prudent Wife website, create videos and then upload them, we simply need more power!

So we were considering actually waking up on Black Friday, for the infamous  day after Thanksgiving door buster sales. I would personally rather have root canal without and anesthetic. We sleep in on Friday and enjoy a quiet day at home, which has worked for our whole marriage and child rearing years! But for a deal….to get our website totally up and running - would that not be worth it?

Well here is an article on The Dirty Secretes of Black Friday that really makes me want to bargain shop at home, online!


The Grocery Game: Play or Get Played

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Time Magazine has a good article on grocery stores actually work! Enjoy it.


The Trends Research Institute

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Had a friend interview Gerald Celente at The Trends Research Institute.

Fascinating guy…and I hear he is very PRO-homeschooling!


How to Get Rid of Wasps.

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Oh dreadful reality. We realized Saturday, after coming home from a day out chasing history, attending a great Civil War reenactment, that we had TWO yellow jacket wasp nests on our front porch. Walking outside the garage today, there were two new ones, hanging from the roof. They have been building nests on the back porch too.

Ugh. Apparently wasps like this little house out in the country!

Found a great website about removing wasps. I have always just bought the can of spray at Lowe’s or Home Depot and zapped the wasp nest with it. Since they have a projectile spray, it is great if you have a two story home or higher overhangs on your house.

This website also said that spraying with citrus oil will kill them. Liking that solution, and owning Grapefruit Seed Extract, I put some in a bottle and shot away at a nest. One wasp fell, another acted stunned and like it was dying. It finally fell to the porch and I stomped it dead.  Not sure I used enough GSE in the bottle, or how long it takes for them to die.

With one flying around my office currently, I am just ready for them to be GONE! So I am going to just send hubby to Lowe’s to get the normal can of wasp killer….and Miss Organic will just live through a blast of poison for the pesty pesky yellow jackets!


Town Hall for Hope - Dave Ramsey is doing this FREE on April 23rd

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Five In A Row’s Steve Lambert in Hospital – Please Read (and Help)

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Sassy Water

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My Dr. wanted me to try the Sassy Water from the Flat Belly Diet, to help fight inflammation. I have a blood clotting disorder/disease….what IS it? Anyway, he suggested I try this!

Sassy Water

2 liters water
1 tsp freshly grated ginger
1 medium cucumber, peeled and thinly sliced
1 medium lemon, thinly sliced
12 small spearmint leaves


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Thank you and good bye President and Mrs. Bush

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This photo breaks my heart….

TAKE ME TO TEXAS…

History Will Remember Bush Well

Iraq looks good compared to the Korea that Harry Truman left behind.

By MARC A. THIESSEN

In August 1951, with a little more than a year left to Harry S. Truman’s presidency, historian Henry Steele Commager published an essay in Look magazine with this prediction: “By all normal standards, [Truman’s] Administration has been one of almost . . . unparalleled success . . . the verdict of history will not be the same as the verdict of contemporary critics.”

 

At the time, Truman’s popularity hovered in the low 20s and most Americans considered his presidency a failure. Look’s editors even published a note declaring “doubts” about “whether history will accord Harry S. Truman as generous a place as Professor Commager assigns him.” History eventually sided with Commager.

 

Today, President George W. Bush leaves office with approval ratings only slightly higher than Truman’s. And I will make this prediction: The verdict of history on the Bush presidency will not be the same as the verdict of contemporary critics.

 

While Mr. Bush made mistakes during his time in office, like Truman he racked up a record of unparalleled success that will be increasingly appreciated in the years to come.

 

Like Truman at the start of the Cold War, Mr. Bush set our nation’s course at the start of a new and unprecedented war. And like Truman, he responded by laying out a clear doctrine to guide America through the conflict. Mr. Bush created the institutions necessary to prevail in this struggle. He created the Department of Homeland Security and a new director of national intelligence. He transformed the FBI and the Justice Department to fight terror. He established new military commands. And he transformed NATO from a defensive alliance into an expeditionary alliance that is now leading the fight in Afghanistan.

 

Mr. Bush signed the Patriot Act, breaking down the walls between intelligence and law enforcement. He created a terrorist surveillance program. He directed the CIA to detain and question captured terrorist leaders. He drove al Qaeda from its Afghan sanctuary and put America on the offensive. As a result, more than seven years have passed since 9/11 without another attack on our soil. That’s an achievement few thought possible when the rubble of the World Trade Center was still burning.

 

Like Truman in Korea, Mr. Bush imperfectly fought an unpopular war in Iraq. Yet just as most Americans now see our success in Korea as essential to our victory in the Cold War, it will one day be clear that our success in Iraq was essential to our victory in the war on terror. And the success Mr. Bush delivered in Iraq is far more complete than the stalemate that endures on the Korean Peninsula.

 

As Mr. Bush leaves office, Iraq is a unified and free country, and our enemies there have suffered a devastating defeat. If his successor does not squander that victory, a free Iraq will one day be to the Middle East what a free South Korea has been to Asia.

 

Like Truman, Mr. Bush made a first, failed attempt to solve difficult domestic challenges. Truman failed to get Congress to approve national health insurance for the elderly. But two decades later, President Lyndon Johnson invited Truman to join him as he signed legislation creating Medicare.

 

Similarly, Mr. Bush failed to get Congress to pass immigration and Social Security reforms. But years from now, Congress will have to act on these issues. When it does, I predict a future president will invite Mr. Bush to watch as the reforms are signed into law.

 

When President Truman left office, his fellow liberals blamed him for handing the White House to the Republicans. Today, Truman is a liberal icon.

 

Similarly, many conservatives who are angry with Mr. Bush today will take a better view of his presidency with the passage of time. While he took actions that dispirited some conservatives — from bailing out the auto industry to taking North Korea off of the list of state sponsors of terror — Mr. Bush did more to advance conservative priorities than any other president.

 

Mr. Bush enacted sweeping tax cuts. And he has the best record on judges of any Republican president — his appointments of Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito will be judged favorably over time compared to Justices Anthony Kennedy, Sandra Day O’Connor, David Souter and John Paul Stevens (all put on the high court by Republican presidents). Mr. Bush enacted free-trade agreements with 17 nations, more than any president in history. He created Health Savings Accounts — the most important free-market health-care reform in a generation. And he defeated Democratic efforts to use the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (Schip) to nationalize health care.

 

 Mr. Bush won a Supreme Court ruling declaring school vouchers constitutional and enacted the nation’s first school-choice program in the District of Columbia. He has been the most pro-life president in history, securing passage of the Born-Alive Infants Protection Act, the Unborn Victims of Violence Act, and the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act. He refused to fund the destruction of human embryos for research — and was vindicated by the scientific breakthroughs that followed.

 

Mr. Bush increased defense spending by nearly 73%, the largest increase since the Truman administration. He unsigned the International Criminal Court treaty, withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, and fulfilled Ronald Reagan’s promise to deploy defenses against ballistic missiles. This is a conservative record without parallel.

 

In his final months, Mr. Bush confronted a challenge Truman never faced — a massive financial crisis. It is hard for many Americans to appreciate the magnitude of the economic collapse the president averted. But history will show that Mr. Bush’s actions in the fall of 2008 rescued our economy and saved our financial system.

 

Mr. Bush often told his staff that a president’s job is not to chase popularity, but to do what is right. His insistence in following this philosophy is why he has low approval ratings, and why he has been a great president. Mr. Bush has led a history-making presidency and, like Truman, history will be kinder to our 43rd president than the polls indicate as he leaves office.

 

Mr. Thiessen was chief speechwriter for President George W. Bush.