
My sister is home at last, so my niece is in good hands again - and I'm sick. I think I caught whatever virus Kitten was coping with, so I'm glad it held off until I could be sick on my own time. My routine took a hit on Thursday evening (I didn't get home until 1 a.m.) and again on Friday morning (just barely made it to work), but I'm taking it very easy this weekend. Trying to get lots of rest, but moving slowly through my accustomed chores. Did a little bit of Wednesday's marketing last night and this morning have just begun Thursday's weekly cleaning-of-the-bedroom.
Cleaning the bedroom isn't exactly a fast-paced chore. After stripping the beds and hanging the covers out to air, you tote your bric-a-brac out to wherever you're going to dust or polish it and bring your cleaning equipment and fresh linens into the bedroom. Then it's just a matter of waiting for fresh air to do its part of the job. You see, the mattress and pillows need to be aired, too. Now, if you were cleaning several bedrooms, you could probably work the timing out so that you were getting things started in each of your other rooms while you were waiting for the first room to be properly aired. Here are some guidelines from the manual for putting that fresh air to work:
Mattresses
Innerspring:
Sun and air once a week (strip off the bedding and open the windows wide for at least an hour).
Pillows
Air pillows at least once a month by placing them on chairs near an open window.
Bedding
Bedding should be aired at least once a week. Spread it over two chairs near an open window and leave it there for at least an hour. An occasional airing out of doors over a line is good for it. Choose a day when the weather is fair to warm.
My bedroom window is open and the blinds have been pulled so the mattress and pillows are getting as much fresh air as possible. I've hung my quilt and blanket over the railing outside on my landing, and I'll give them a good shake before bringing them inside. Get all the dust out. Apartment Land is not an ideal place for doing these kinds of chores - what I wouldn't give for an outdoor clothesline!!! - and I live in a city with a lot of crime, so I'm always a little worried my bed covers will disappear while they're airing!
Unless my appetite takes a nosedive, I'm going to try the first of my 1945 dinner menus this evening:
Steamed Rice
Buttered Carrots
Celery Cabbage Salad
Steamed Molasses Pudding
This is a weekday (Monday-Saturday) dinner with a few alterations. I'm omitting the meat course. 1940s home economists believed that each dinner should contain both a starchy vegetable or grain (potatoes, rice, etc.) and a bread. That's way too many carbs for me, so I'm going to have one or the other. Since my dessert is a bready-type dish, I'm going to opt for the Steamed Rice over the Enriched Bread this 'time round. The recommended beverages are Milk and Coffee. Do you drink a full glass of milk with your meals? It's been years since I did so, and though I'm not sure this is a good thing (am I really getting enough calcium?), the thought kind of icks me out after all this time. Coffee at breakfast is more than enough for me, so I think I'll just go with a glass of ice water at dinner. This time, anyway.
My hour is up and it's time to get to work making up the bed. Hey, if I'm going to be feeling under the weather all weekend, there's no place for recuperating like a fresh, clean bed!
5 comments:
OOh! would you mind listing the recipe for the molasses pudding?
If you have what I have had, be prepared. I just realized that today was exactly a week from when I felt the first tickle in my throat. Hubby had just got over the worst of his and then I got it and I have been horrible all week. I just made up my bed this evening which usually happens on Tuesday.
Good luck and although I am sure you will miss your little one, I bet you are relieved a little, non?
My nieces only live about 15 minutes away, so I get to see them a couple times a week --- no chance to miss 'em! Relief? Yep, definitely easier to have the responsibility back on mom's shoulders.
I'll definitely do up a post tomorrow all about my dinner - including the pudding recipe, though I wouldn't recommend that particular one.
I'm glad you're starting to recuperate!
um....I must have missed something. No protein with that dinner?
(it must have been HELL being a vegetarian in the US in the 1940's)!
Actually, there were probably about 20 grams protein in the carrots, rice, and pudding alone. The same amount of protein as in a serving of broiled fish, ground beef, ham, sardines, ribs, or a lamb chop. I don't think people stop to think very often that most of the animals they eat get their protein directly from grains and vegetables. It was actually a very filling meal.
good point about protein and nuts, too, protein.
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