Monthly Archives: May 2008

Plenty

Recycla loves to read. She goes to the library every week and she’s pretty certain that her photo is hanging on the wall of the Amazon.com employee lunch room, as her Christmas ’07 purchases alone very likely funded everyone’s year-end bonuses.

One of Recycla’s favorite things to do is sink into a comfortable chair and read a magazine. She has quite a few subscriptions and also regularly picks up more magazines at the store. Recycla subscribes to several eco magazines — big surprise, right? — and one that she particularly enjoys is Plenty.

Plenty is sassy, irreverent, and generally fun.  This is an intelligent magazine with excellent in-depth articles about living green in the 21st century.

Best of all Plenty practices what it preaches. The magazine is printed on paper that is 85-100% recycled and contains 20-30% post-consumer material. The energy used to print the magazine and run the office is offset. And, if you want to really help cut back on waste, you can get your magazine electronically.

Plenty also has a website that is just chock-full of articles, gear guides, and so much more.

Recycle encourages you to give this magazine a try. The chances are quite good that you’ll find at least one or two tips that will help you save Planet Earth. And, when you’re finished with the magazine, don’t throw it away or even toss it in the recycling bin. Instead, pass it on to someone else so that they too can be inspired to make even just one simple change.

[Recycla is not employed by Plenty Magazine, nor was she compensated in any way for this review. All images courtesy of plentymag.com.]


Fast fact: Just say no

If you’re using hand sanitizer on yourself or your children, now is the time to stop.  For more information, click here.

Fast Fact courtesy of The Daily Green.

Magazines without waste

Here’s a great way to get your magazine fix without adding to the paper production and shipping emissions that come with a subscription.

Zinio is a digital magazine provider that gives you access to the full content of 20 current magazines at a time. Currently, they’re offering everything from PC World to Penthouse – just don’t get caught reading the latter at work.

Recycla will fully confess that she is not a Zinio subscriber at this time, as she absolutely adores getting a magazine in the mail and then settling herself into a comfortable chair to enjoy an hour or so of reading pleasure. When she’s finished with her magazines, she passes them on to other people for them to enjoy too.

Fast Fact: Recycling electronics

Have a computer or a cell phone or an iPod that you are planning to get rid of? Click here and find out eco ways to do so.

Fast Fact courtesy of the Daily Green.

The ultimate Eco Warrior

Recycla has homework for you. You have to read a book. Yes, a book. Don’t worry, it’s not War and Peace. Instead, it’s this:

Living LIke Ed: A Guide to the Eco-Friendly Life by Ed Begley, Jr.

Whether you are a novice Eco Warrior looking to get started or a more experienced greenie looking to make more changes, this book should be on your reading list. Written by the infamously green actor (who was biking to awards ceremonies before Priuses were even invented), the book covers six broad areas in which you can make changes — Home, Transportation, Recycling, Energy, Garden/Kitchen, and Clothing/Hair/Skin Care — and gives hundreds of tips from the easy to the more ambitious.

Begley is not the only person who offers advice; his wife Rachelle chimes in frequently with her perspective (often, the exasperated housewife who eventually sees Ed’s wisdom). Other experts are brought in to offer their opinions too, giving the book more gravitas than it might have otherwise had.

At less than 200 pages, this is not a weighty tome. You can read it in an evening or flip through it as the mood strikes you.

Happy reading!

Rent it!

Does this look familiar?  A garage or basement full of gadgets, tools and appliances used once, twice or maybe only a few times a year. Does this warrant full payment, maintenance and storage? Is it really worth it to sacrifice garage space for a rototiller you use one time a year? Cupboard space for a roaster you use for an annual holiday party? Closet space for a carpet cleaning machine you drag out twice a year?

Part of a “Greener Consciousness” is having less stuff. A great way to achieve this end is by renting or borrowing. For minimal cost, you can enjoy all of the benefits of a rototiller, movie, party tables and chairs and even an RV. Since buying less stuff means a smaller carbon footprint, renting and borrowing is not only an economically sound choice, it’s environmentally beneficial as well. Most hardware stores offer a huge inventory of items to rent, and many cities have party warehouses where you can rent the necessities for any size of bash for any type of celebration. The concept of renting and borrowing has evolved far beyond video stores, time share condominiums in Florida and public libraries–you can even share ownership of a car through Flexcar and Zipcar.

Borrowing can be beneficial too. Two of our neighbors borrow our rototiller every spring, in turn one lends us his full-size pickup truck on the rare occasion we have something large to haul. Another neighbor lends his tractor for field work. We lend out books, cake pans, card tables and chairs, extra rakes and pitchforks and shovels, garden hoses, sprinklers, serving trays and lawn chairs as freely as most neighborhoods exchange recipes. In this spirit of generosity, we have what we need when we need it, and most items are returned with a plateful of fresh-baked cookies. Personally, I think there is no better payment for use of a rototiller than warm chocolate chip cookies.

The next time you’re considering purchasing an item that you’ll use only once or twice a year before finding space to store it, rent it or borrow it instead. Your wallet and your storage cupboards will thank you.

Rhubarb

One little thing can revive a guy,
And that is a piece of rhubarb pie
Serve it up, nice and hot
Maybe things aren’t as bad as you thought.
Momma’s little baby loves rhubarb rhubarb
Be-Bop-A-Re-Bop Rhubarb Pie
After the last few months of winter’s bland diet of squash potatoes, and other root vegetables, the tongue yearns for something tart to awaken it to springtime. In northern gardens, one perennial plant’s fibrous stalks are the cure-all to livening up a diet. Rhubarb!
It’s a vegetable, it’s a flower, it’s ready to be cut first thing in spring. A close relative of the garden sorrel, rhubarb originated in Asia 4,000 years ago. Highly valued by cooks, fresh-cut stalks of rhubarb lend a distinctive flavor to pies, jellies, sauces, compotes and juice. It’s rich in Vitamins A and C and dietary fiber. Some say the best rhubarb comes from Michigan and Canada, it clearly benefits from harsh winter weather. In fact, it requires 2 months of cold weather which is why southern gardeners have a devil of a time growing this highly esteemed plant.
The rhubarb plant is hardy, requiring organic matter in the soil and that’s it. It’s not delicate, it’s not prone to disease or insect infestations, it only grows where it’s planted with no muss and no fuss. Cut the stalks, give ‘em a rinse, chop them up and you’re good to go! Rhubarb and organic gardening go together like, well, rhubarb pie and ice cream!
If you’re not a rhubarb convert yet, here are some recipes to help you get started:

Aunt Deb’s Rhubarb Cake, complements of Daisy at Compost Happens:
Place these ingredients into a greased and floured 9X13 pan.
3 cups cut up rhubarb

60 mini marshmallows (or enough to cover bottom of pan)
3/4 cup sugar

Cake Batter:
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup shortening or butter
2 eggs or 1/2 cup egg substitute
1/2 cup milk
1 Tablespoon baking powder
1 3/4 cup flour

Cream sugar and shortening (or butter). Add eggs and milk. Stir in baking powder and flour. Spread evenly over rhubarb mixture. Bake at 350 degrees for 40-45 minutes. Serve upside down plain or with whipped cream or vanilla ice cream. Mmmm…delicious.

Rhubarb Pickles from Ceil Allen
2 cups apple cider vinegar
1 tablespoon coarse salt
1 1/2 cup sugar
1 teaspoon whole cloves
1 2-inch piece of fresh ginger, peeled and sliced
4 dried chili peppers
1 pound fresh rhubarb, cut in 5-inch pieces

Mix vinegar, salt and sugar in stainless steel saucepan. Cook until salt and sugar dissolve. Add cloves, ginger and chili peppers. Boil one minute. Pack rhubarb into sterilized jar. Pour hot mix over and cover completely. Cover and refrigerate overnight, or up to one week only.

Rosy Rhubarb Preserves from Katheryn Schoppers

12 cups rhubarb, cut in 1/2-inch pieces
4 cups granulated sugar
115-ounce can crushed pineapple
2 3-ounce strawberry Jello

Method:
Combine rhubarb, sugar and pineapple in a large kettle. Place over low heat and stir until the sugar dissolves.
Cook over medium heat until it becomes clean and begins to thicken. Add Jello and stir to dissolve.
It may be sealed in sterilized jars or cooled and frozen in jars or freezer boxes.

This recipe uses more fruit and less sugar than most jam recipes.

Rhubarb Pie from Bucky Rogers

Fill pie crust 3/4 full of cut up rhubarb.

Cook:
3/4 cups cream
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 tablespoons flour
3 eggs
salt

Maybe some nutmeg.

Just before it boils, pour over rhubarb.

Bake at 350 degrees about 1 hour.

Cut rhubarb with scissors, it’s easier.
Salt takes the “bite” out of rhubarb.

***For more rhubarb fun, you can head to the Annual Rhubarb Festival in Lanesboro, Minnesota on June 7th!

Eco Scrapbooking

Scrapbooking is one of the hottest hobbies in the U.S. While Recycla personally does not scrapbook, she appreciates the creativity and effort that go into each page. Unfortunately, scrapbooking produces a lot of paper waste.

The good news is that there is an eco alternative — digital scrapbooking. Scrap Girls provides all the necessary online tools to help you put together some very creative scrapbook pages. You just browse the templates, upload your photos, and add your captions. All without using a single piece of paper or needing to purchase special scissors or having to hunt down the perfect stickers!

If any of you Eco Warriors have tried this, please let the Eco Women know what you think.  And for those of you who are scrapbookers, have you found any other ways to green your hobby?

Tar-zhay gets a little more green

Mega-retailer Target has just joined the growing list of stores who will offer alternatives to evil plastic bags. For more, click here.

Yay Target!

Lather up

Recycla is a shampoo girl.  She loves — nay, insists on — having squeaky clean hair.  She also is a wee bit picky about her shampoos.  The first thing she insists on is having shampoo that’s free of parabens and other yucky stuff.  After that, there are only a few scents she really likes and she often changes shampoos based on the season.  For some reason, Recycla likes mint- and/or lavender-scented shampoos during the cold months and floral shampoos during the warm months.

Right now, Recycla’s favorite shampoo is Avalon Organics’ Lavender Nourishing Shampoo.  An 11 oz. bottle is about $9, but that bottle lasts a long time.  Recycla loves how clean her hair feels and really loves the smell, which is light and fresh.  As Recycla’s husband hasn’t complained about the bathroom smelling “too girly,” Recycla thinks that’s a bonus too.

How about you, fellow Eco Warriors?  Any favorite shampoos?