May 15, 2008

Sweet Treat - Strawberry Cheesecake Squares

Creamy and sweet with a crumb topping, Strawberry Cheesecake Squares are a perfect afternoon snack. Cheesecake purists can leave out the strawberry jam. Adventurous bakers can swap out any jam or preserve that you like. Enjoy!


Image and recipe from Divine Domesticity

Strawberry Cheesecake Squares
Makes one 8" x 8" pan, 16 squares


5 tablespoons   butter, softened
1/3 cup brown sugar, packed
1 cup flour
1/2 cup sugar
1 (8 ounce) packet cream cheese, softened (Don’t use whipped cream cheese — It will never set up properly)
1 egg
2 tablespoons milk
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
Approx. 1 cup fresh strawberry jam

1. Heat oven to 350-f.

2. In a medium bowl blend thoroughly butter, brown sugar and flour with a fork until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Put 1 cup of the mixture aside for topping. Press remaining mixture into an 8×8x2 inch baking dish sprayed lightly with cooking spray; bake for 15 minutes. After cooling for a few minutes, spread the jam on top.

3. In another bowl combine sugar and cream cheese, mixing until smooth. Thoroughly beat in egg, milk, lemon juice and vanilla. Spread over the baked crust and sprinkle with remaining brown sugar mixture.

4. Bake for 25 minutes. Let cool, then chill for at least 1 hour. Cut into 16 squares; serve.

Do you have recipes to share? Join us in the Blissfully Domestic Living forums!

Frugal Links: CVS and other Drugstores Tutorials

The web is full of helpful articles, testimonials and tutorials on drugstore savings programs.  Before you decide that the programs require too much time or that the deals are not worth it, check out some of the below links.  Many writers even figure out the best weekly deals for you, so all you have to do is print their list and head to the store!  Just don't forget your savings card!

Money Saving Mom's CVS 101 and Walgreens 101 describe these programs in detail including many specific examples and scenarios. 

The News&Observer explains RiteAid's Single Check Rebate program.

BeCentsAble has a Grocery Gathering which posts all the best weekly deals for grocers and drugstores.  This is an amazing resource and a fabulous timesaver! 

Teacher Gifts

With the end of the school year fast approaching, I thought that I'd share some ideas for 'Teacher Gifts' as a way of showing our appreciation for all that they do! This here is one of my favorite ideas & is along the idea of what I am doing....a scrapbook.

Feel-Good Flip-Book

Feel-Good Flip Book

CRAFT MATERIALS:

Poster board
Scissors
Hole punch
Photos, artwork, and/or colored markers
Glue stick
1-inch bookrings (available at office supply stores)
Time needed: Weekend Project

1. Cut the poster board into cards measuring 7 by 5-1/2 inches: you'll need 1 card for each class member, plus 5 extras for the stand.

2. Use a hole punch to make 2 holes at the top of each card as shown.

3. Send a card home with each child, to be decorated with photos, artwork, or colored markers and a positive message to the teacher.

4. To create the stand, make 2 double-thick pages using extra cards affixed together with a glue stick.

5. Fold the remaining extra into thirds and glue its flaps to the double-thick pages as shown. Attach the students' pages to the stand with 1-inch book rings (available at office supply stores).

Here are a few more GREAT ideas that I think a teacher would just LOVE to get....

Forget-me-not-pot

Heartfelt Tote      

Handprint Aprons 

Pencil Cup

These are just a few of the ideas that I came across & wanted to share. Teachers do so much for our children & I just thought it might be nice to show them that we CARE! If you have any ideas that you'd like to share, head on over to Blissfully Domestic Forums!

One More Reason to Lather Up

I consider myself a fastidious handwasher.  My dry, cracked hands bear witness to the dozens of handwashings I put them through each day.  I'm the first to admit I have a germophobic streak, but even I dismissed this blurb in the April 2008 issue of Real Simple:

...wash your hands after transferring loads to the dryer.  "People assume washed clothes are germ-free," says Sandra Phillips, a cleaning consultant and the author of A Clean Break.  "But the dryer helps kill even more germs."

No way, I scoffed.  But the thought of invisible creepy crawlies breeding on my freshly washed clothes kept popping into my head whenever I switched a load from the machine to the dryer.  I begrudgingly started lathering up whenever I transferred laundry.  Fearing I may be slipping into neurotic territory, I Googled researched bacteria in washing machines.

I'm very sorry to report: you do need to wash your hands after handling clean wet clothing.

From the article Bacteria, Viruses Lurk in Washer by Arthur H. Rotstein (full article reprinted here):

More news from the guy who warned about dangerous germs lurking in your kitchen sponges and dishrags and the muck in your office coffee cup: Your washing machine may not be as safe as you think either.

Environmental microbiologist Charles Gerba spends most of his time researching water quality. But he also enjoys hanging around in other people's homes, mostly in their bathrooms and kitchens -professionally, of course- searching for environmental hazards.

His most recent study, of 50 homes in Tucson and 50 others in the Tampa Bay, Fla., area, has found that coliform bacteria, an indicator of unsanitary conditions, including the presence of diarrhea-causing E-coli, abound in many washing machines.

Bacteria such as salmonella, which causes food poisoning, and viruses including hepatitis A and those most commonly causing childhood diarrhea, rotavirus and adenovirus, also were targeted. While E-coli was killed in the permanent press drying cycle, some salmonella survived on clothes that registered 131 degrees Fahrenheit. So did hepatitis A, adenovirus and some rotavirus.

Most of the contamination, and greatest risk, occurs when a person gets bacteria on his hands in transferring the wet laundry to the dryer, he said. If laundry facilities are next to the kitchen, there's a good chance that after putting washed laundry in the dryer, the person will prepare food or bring his fingers to nose or mouth.

Scary stuff, no?  We all have to wash our underwear some time--what to do? 

  • Gerba recommends running bleach through a cycle in an empty machine after washing a load likely to contain fecal bacteria (underwear, or pretty much anything your kiddos wear.)
  • Hot water uses up more energy--and money--than cold, but it's better at killing germs.  Consider running hot water cycles for underwear and towels.
  • If you can't remember the last time you cleaned your washing machine, brush up with this tutorial from ehow.com.
  • Don't worry too much about it--you made it this far, right?

What weird germy things keep you up at night?  Join the discussion in the forum!

No-Sew Window Treatment Links

I mentioned Tuesday, that I was looking for cheap, easy ideas for decorating my windows. I'm really looking forward to trying them out. At the moment, all we have on our windows are blinds and for me nothing says "temporary living" like an apartment without draperies.

0306seweasy_03

This is an excerpt from a For Dummies book, but it happens to be the chapter on no (or low)-sew window treatments. How perfect!

The site for the draperies I mentioned on Tuesday (Better Homes and Gardens) has a plethora of cute cute cute ideas for adding flair to your windows.

Check out this fan-tabulous idea from Velcro Co. Using, of course, velcro.

Cute and simple - No-sew drapery ideas from decor8.

Lovely Ideas from PointClickHome.

If you are willing to take a bit more time to make them, try these no-sew directions.

Do you have ideas for covering your windows? Fill us in!