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Wednesday, October 06, 2004
To freshen your sponges and make them last longer, send them through the dishwasher once week. After you take them out, microwave them (sodden) for about a minute. They should be steaming and hot to the touch when they come out. You can do the same to sterilize wooden spoons and cutting boards. Flip over your cutting boards to get both sides. In all cases, watch carefully to make sure they don't burn, at least until you figure out the right times for your microwave and items.
Monday, November 22, 2004
Important numbers to keep in your cell phone's memory:
Tuesday, March 22, 2005
When you buy some fancy gizmo, file its manual. Put all your manuals in the same place. Attach to the manuals the warranty papers (if separate) and your purchase receipt. If it has a manual, it's worth keeping track of the warranty, because if it has a manual, it can break a half dozen different ways.
Friday, December 02, 2005
If you anticipate that you may have a baby in your next house, I suggest you look for a few things:
¶ 1187 Posted at 02.15 PM ⇒ No Comments ( house | tips | babies ) Sunday, February 26, 2006
I rarely avoid punching through the bottom of the cork when opening wine, so I get these little bits floating in it. Sometimes, you can pour them out of the bottle, but it's hard. Try this: get a straw, and do that thing where you dip one end and cover the other with a finger. Do it so the cork bits are trapped at the bottom in a drop of wine and then release it in the sink. Rinse and repeat until all cork bits are gone.
Thursday, August 23, 2007
If you'd like to get on this whole weblog thing, go right ahead. Just don't tell anyone about it until you know you're going to stick with it. A weblog with just one post is worse than no weblog at all. A common pitfall is that you have a lot to say, but don't realize that's years worth of expression that's all been bottled up. Once you've gotten all that out, what are you going to do? There are no doubt millions of weblogs that lasted a week or even a few months, ending once their creators ran out of things to say 1 . Make sure you give it a couple of months and a few dozen posts before you even think about telling people about it. And above all, do not make your first post about starting a weblog.
1 Obviously not a problem here.
¶ 1550 Posted at 11.20 AM ⇒ No Comments ( tips | web ) Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Use a wire whisk instead of a fork for mashing avocadoes.
¶ 1621 Posted at 10.17 PM ⇒ No Comments ( tips | food ) Thursday, January 03, 2008
I've gotten a lot of mileage out of Craig's List. Here's what I've learned:
Sunday, January 27, 2008
I have found that dabbing a little bit of petroleum jelly into paper cuts and similar injuries makes them sting a lot less. I use a cotton swab to make sure I don't spread it too widely, and then I put a bandage over it to make sure the jelly doesn't rub off. It especially helps on hands because they can get dried out and the skin flexes a lot. I got some fierce slices in my palm from ripping off laminate countertops (sharp edges), and this made it feel a lot better.
Wednesday, February 06, 2008
I am increasingly cynical about the way medicine is practiced in this country. The economics and politics are all messed up, and create incentives for the wrong things. You need to protect yourself, both in body and in wallet. I've devised a simple script to follow in case your doctor recommends a prescription drug1, surgery, or other significant medical intervention:
I don't expect this to blow your mind. Instead, I wanted to compile a complete list so that you don't have to think about the questions to ask when you're on the spot. More importantly, I want you to understand that you are in charge of your health, and that you cannot trust our medical system to do what's best for you. The individuals involved may have the best of intentions, but the system is broken. Even in the best of situations, there is rarely a single best course of treatment. There are always tradeoffs, and some of them can be pretty tricky 3. You have to make up your own mind about what's best. Only you can know what's best for you.
1 Especially if it's a long-term thing, like an anti-depressant, a cholesterol drug, or prophylactic antibiotics.
2 You'd be surprised how often there aren't. Bleeding edge medicine can be disturbingly unempirical. Update: John says I need a citation here. Some of this comes from various articles that have come out recently about pharmaceutical companies cherry-picking data. Some of it comes from the book "Overtreated," which I recently read but have not posted about.
3 Meaning highly personal. Sometimes you have to choose between a single major surgery or a prescription drug for the rest of your life. Or maybe a treatment will extend your life, but reduce its quality. Different people are going to have different answers to such questions.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
There appears to be a world of difference between cheap drill bits and the expensive ones. Maybe I'm just abusive.
¶ 1694 Posted at 10.25 PM ⇒ No Comments ( fyi | tips ) Monday, March 24, 2008
There's not much difference between clothes dryers. You've got energy source, size, noise, and whether there's a moisture sensor. They all use the same methods and the same amount of energy; Consumer Reports doesn't even bother rating them on energy usage. Broadly speaking, if you have a working dryer, a new dryer is a waste of money. Where they get you is this idea that washers and dryers come in matched sets. There are all these pretty, sleek, colorful sets out there. You buy a new washer, and they try to take you for a ride on a completely unnecessary dryer. The internals of washers vary. There are lots of reasons to get one washer or another, or to replace the one you have. Dryers are basically all the same. Matching is nice, but is it really worth $500 or $1000 just to get a shiny new box around a machine nearly identical to the one you already have?
Friday, March 28, 2008
As you might have guessed, we got a new washing machine. Two kids in cloth diapers means doing a lot of laundry. It cost $700 regular price (same price at Lowe's and Best Buy). All told, it cost us less:
Overall, our net hit will be something like $380, after figuring in taxes and such. We're currently on a rate of 2-3 loads of laundry per day. High-efficiency front-loaders save you money by using less water, but they also save money because your clothes are less sodden when you put them in the dryer. In the current economy, getting a 5% yield on a safe investment is pretty good; 10% is great. I estimate we'll save between $60 (very conservatively) and $120 (more likely) each year, which is a yield of 15%-30%. We're also saving money by getting our detergent 1 through Amazon's "Subscribe & Save" thingie; that gets us down to $0.15/load2 (which still costs more than we were paying before, but that's because we were using the super-cheap (and quite good) Purex).
1 Generally considered the best widely-available high-efficiency fragrance-and-dye-free detergent for cloth diapers
2 Incidentally, chances are, you're using too much detergent. Their cups have 3 markers on them; intuition suggests that you want to fill to the middle or top one, but filling to the lowest line is usually enough, unless you've had some kind of rotavirus shitstorm in your house (makes it come out both ends; for some reason, I have a vision of one of those double-sided S-shaped lawn sprinklers).
Thursday, April 03, 2008
Use a vegetable peeler to get very thin slices of hard cheeses. They'll have to be narrow to fit the peeler, but hopefully that won't be a problem.
¶ 1709 Posted at 01.40 PM ⇒ No Comments ( tips | food ) Thursday, April 24, 2008
Don't drink water when you're coughing unless you're coughing because your throat is dry. If you've aspirated food or water, the last thing you need is to try to sneak something else past your airway. I always see people urging coughers to drink water when they've inhaled something, and it drives me nuts.
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