Friday, February 6, 2009

The Rewards of Minimalism



My breakfast menus for the last two days were published in November 1943 by Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co. in a booklet titled Meal Planning Guide. It was probably one of those giveaway-type things you send for with a self-addressed stamped envelope and a dime. Thursday's menu was super simple:

Tomato Juice
Ready-prepared Whole Grain Cereal

I tried the Weetabix again that I bought last month when I was looking for a whole-grain cereal I could serve hot. It's much, much better cold! Today's menu:

Applesauce
Corn Meal Griddle Cakes
Syrup

The Griddle Cakes were a little tricky. It was a very leisurely kind of recipe, with lots of stop and go. After boiling water, you poured it over a bowl of Corn Meal and set that to one side to wait for it to "swell." Then you added milk to the mixture and waited for it to cool down. Finally, it was time to add your dry goods, and - just before pouring it onto the griddle - fold a beaten egg into the batter. Corn Meal Griddle Cakes also took a bit longer on the griddle than did your plain ol' everyday Griddle Cakes. Like I said, a leisurely recipe. By the time my first batch was finished, it was almost time to leave for work. I think I must have inhaled my breakfast... I hardly remember what they tasted like! Well, I've got plenty of leftovers, so I'll take my time to enjoy them tomorrow morning.

Cleaning the bedroom last night was surprisingly easy. Yep, you heard it here first --- easy! I followed the steps recommended by the manual to a tee. You can kind of break the routine down into five parts. 1) Emptying the room out - hanging the bed covers outside to air, removing the sheets, bringing all the bric-a-brac out to the kitchen for dusting. 2) Bringing equipment into the room - vacuum cleaner, cleaning basket, clean linens. 3) Doing up the bed. 4) Dusting and vacumming. 5) Bringing the bric-a-brac back into the room and giving things a final straightening.

Not so bad. Of course it helps that I don't have very many things in the way of furnishings to clean. I moved cross-country two years ago and didn't bring anything that I couldn't fit in my car. So my apartment isn't exactly overstuffed these days. The manual attends to all kinds of items I didn't have to dust or brush or polish last night: no lamps, no dresser scarves, no draperies, no woodwork, no radiators, no baseboard, no upholstered furniture, no glass table tops, no shades, no curtains, no ash trays. That certainly made things easier. (And to think how much time I've spent wishing I could afford to have my stuff shipped out here!)

My bedroom doesn't feel all that much cleaner than normal, but the sheets have been changed, the carpet's been vacuumed, and the dust has been shooed back into the corners. And just doing that much every week - week in and week out - will be a big improvement. I think I'm going to add one or two of those "if necessarys" next Thursday, though, and step this up a notch.

5 comments:

Jo said...

Well done you! You have strengthened my resolve in the war on clutter. I laughed at the line 'take out bric-a-brac to dust in the kitchen'. If I did that in my daughters' room, it would take all day. Maybe we need to make some hard decisions re bric-a-brac...

Jitterbug said...

I just love saying the word. Bric-a-brac. I haven't yet figured out why the manual wants me to take all that stuff to another place to clean it up. What if my kitchen was clean already? (Which isn't the case now, but it might be someday!)

Shay said...

Reminds me of my father's comment about bric a brac: More things to dust.

Roxanne said...

Does the manual say "dust" or "clean" in the kitchen? If it says "clean" could it mean that you were to rinse off the dust and air dry?

I'm wondering because that's what I do. When I dust in the bedroom all the dust gathers together in huge bunnies and the bunnies travel to where I can't reach them LOL!

Roxanne

Jitterbug said...

"Polish or wash accessories and return to place with other objects removed during cleaning."

Roxanne, the manual never actually comes out and recommends the kitchen, but suggests that all your little things that need attention be "collected" and taken to another location for maintenance. They take the same approach when cleaning the living room and dining room, so my guess is that they think these kinds of things should be done in a workspace like the kitchen.

Shay, your father sounds like a very sensible man!