The Cosmic Cleaner

Let me just start off this post saying I did not fall off the face if the earth. It seems like forever since my last post. I’ve started a couple in between but haven’t found the time to finish them. Hobby time is definitely far and few between when you live with an 9 month old.

Speaking of my lovely 9 month old, she is sleeping right now. And I took the day off from work. I’ve found that those two things must coincide for me to do anything that falls into the “hobby” category.

My normal nap time activity is cleaning. Though I have to admit its so hard to stop everything that needs to be done and just clean. But sometimes, it’s just necessary. Today, the second my daughter’s head hit the pillow, I was like a cleaning tornado. My bathrooms needed some serious attention. Enter my next product review: Comet.

When I got married I took a “cleaning supply” trip to Target with my mom. I dont know about you, but I just love dropping hundreds on cleaning supplies. Anyway, she had many tips and suggestions that day, but the one product she was dead set on me purchasing (and ironically the cheapest item) was Comet. $375 later, this stuff (which I think retails for 99 cents) is one of my favorite cleaning products.

I use Comet on every surface in my bathroom; shower, toilet, sinks. It’s powder, so it becomes just abrasive enough to scrub away any soap scum or grime, but sensitive enough to not ruin finishes.

I recently noticed my kitchen cabinets had stains on them that I was having a hard time getting off with my standard kitchen cleaner. I asked my mom, obviously. Her answer: Comet. The cabinets cleaned right up.

Comet is like Bar Keeper’s Friend’s little brother. Similar application, but less intense. Which is nice for every day.  I don’t feel like I have to put on rubber kitchen gloves when I use it.

Although I try to gravitate towards more natural products, theres the exception to every rule. There is certainly no “certified organic” stamp on the Comet bottle. But sometimes disinfecting comes before going green, especially when it comes to bathrooms. After all, how often do you really scrub your toilets? Everything in moderation…

Last but not least, Comet smells clean.  There’s something nice about cleaning yourself in a clean environment. What a concept! There are so many cleaning products that smell artificial and fruity, which always throws me off. If I wanted fruit I would eat an orange… When I clean my bathroom, I want bleach. (I just re-read that sentence… maybe I sucked in too much Comet on today’s cleaning spree).

Well, I hope my subscribers welcome me back. If you haven’t missed me, I at least hope your pleased to hear from me 🙂

xoxo, The Joly Homemaker

A Cutlet Above the Rest

I’ve had a super busy last couple of weeks and have fallen a little behind on my blogging. The good thing about being busy is that it has fueled the blogging brain with things I’m excited to share. Yey!

It’s not often that I cook with my mother. When I want one of her recipes I usually call her and get instructions over the phone, or in a series of text messages that read like this: “Mix in eggs n romano. Not too much, but enough. Eyeball it.” Or, “If medium pan fill water half way, if bigger than medium but not large, fill 1/3. Judge by size of escarole head.” Very specific. I know exactly what I’m doing.

If you have an Italian mother like I do, you know exactly what I am talking about with the vague ingredient amounts, and multistep procedures of cooking Italian. That’s because in this heritage, cooking is certainly not a science… it’s an art.

On Sunday my mother came over and I mentioned that I was going to make Chicken Parmesan. Whenever I tell her I am making something that she specializes in I can sense the silent cringe. This time was not an exception. As I took out the ingredients and started the prep work, I had a sneaking suspicion that my mother did not have the will power to leave these precious cutlets alone in my care. She starting correcting and suggesting and next thing I know I am the student in my mother’s Intro to Chicken Parm class. Fine by me.

I learned two time-tested tips in the kitchen with my mom. The first is this: Brown shopping bags are a perfect surface to place food that has just been cooked in oil. They are thicker and larger than paper towels, and can withstand becoming soggy when saturated with oil. Also, it’s a great way to re-use and re-purpose those brown bags and save about 100 paper towels it requires to soak up the excess oil produced by 20 chicken cutlets.

The second tip I learned is something I thought I already did, but was mistaken: Clean while you are cooking. I say I was mistaken because I always pick-up-and-put-away when I cook, but at the end I am still left with a sink full of dirty dishes and pans, and countertops that need cleaning. My mother was wiping counters, filling the dish washer, and scrubbing pans in between flipping cutlets. Talk about multi-tasking. By the time all 20 cutlets were laying on their brown bag beds, my kitchen was cleaner than before we started. Amazing.

I think it’s easy to find cooking overwhelming. By the time you buy the food, prepare it, cook it, and clean, you’ve nearly lost your appetite and just want to take a nap. Combining the cooking and cleaning into one step is a little corner that can be cut to make the process more doable. And a hot meal is a lot more appealing in a clean kitchen, isn’t it?

Needless to say, my chicken parm was award winning. I gave a portion to my sister-in-law who said they were breaded to perfection. They would be after 30 years of cutlet-frying experience. Watching someone who knows what they are doing is the best way to shorten the learning curve on whatever is it that you are attempting, and avoid the frustration of learning by your own mistakes. And an extra bonus- it’s more entertaining to cook with someone else!

My mother will kill me for posting this shot I snapped of her in action.

Class in session! My mother will kill me for posting this shot I snapped of her in action.