Backwoods sprouting

I’m sprouting at my cabin.  You can sprout even if you don’t have much water–just rinse all your sprouts with the same water and then drink the rinse water.

All you need to sprout is some jars, some seeds, and some thin material to pull over the jars so you can drain them.   Nylon knee highs work great but any thin sock will work.

You don’t need special sprouting seeds.   These are the things I have been sprouting: lentils, raw shelled sunflower seeds, black sesame seeds, fenugreek, broccoli seeds, clover, alfalfa, mung, wheat berries.

  • Start with clean socks and jars.  I boil the socks and then pour boiling water into the jars and let them soak for a few minutes.   I reuse the hot water for drinking.
  • Put some seeds in your jar–it’s okay to mix them.
  • Add water, I add a green tea bag to the water, and let soak overnight
  • In the morning, take out your tea bag, put your sock over the jar lid, and drain water into container.
  • Lay jar on side and prop up the end so any excess  water can drain.
  • Drink the soaking liquid
  • Rinse them again before you go to bed and drink rinse water.
  • Keep rinsing twice a day until the sprouts are the way you like them—about 4days—takes longer if your cabin gets really cold over night.
  • You don’t have to keep them in the dark.  Just keep them out of direct sunlight.

In the winter, I have an idea to put the jars in to an insulated cooler at night with a hot jar of water to keep them warm through the cold nights.

Backwoods Raw

I’m on my 82nd day of eating raw.    I don’t  remember how it all started but something on the Internet must of inspired me.  Then I asked the library to mail me a book on raw food eating and then I decided to try it.

All the stuff I read said you needed a bunch of  appliances—an expensive juicer, a 500 dollar blender, a dehydrator,  a food processor, and a refrigerator and freezer.

I have a knife and a grater.   I’m thinking about adding a potato masher to mash up avocados and tomatoes.

The book I read was called, “12 steps to Raw Foods: How to End Your Dependency on Cooked Food”

Some of her “scientific evidence” is skewed but I looked past it.

Cabin improvement: DIY Full View door

Problem: My door is blocking my view.

Solution: Buy a 450 dollar full view door, wrestle the 150lb thing home and attempt to install it.

OR

  • Chisel off the molding on the outside of door
  • Pop out the piece of plywood
  • Bring the piece of plywood to Home Depot, to the molding department, where they have a saw and miter box all set up and sell molding by the foot. Cut new molding to fit the piece of plywood.
  • Along with the molding, buy: some glazier points, water cleanup clear outdoor sealant, and some little finish nails or brads.
  • Bring piece of plywood to glass place and order a piece of tempered glass the same size as the piece of plywood. ( I asked for a little smaller, because the plywood was really tight.)
  • When you get your glass home, apply a bead of sealant around opening.
  • Press glass in opening
  • Install glazier points with a putty knife
  • Start the nails in the molding until the nail almost comes out the other side and then put on door and finish hammering.
  • Clean up the excess sealant on the glass.
  • Sit down and enjoy the view!

Difficulty level: Easy

Price: Under 50 dollars.

Web article that inspired me: How to put a window in a solid wood door