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Cat Forum / Cat Anecdotes / November 2005

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WASHING CLOTHES - Old style

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Dave Gerecke - 17 Nov 2005 06:48 GMT
Many years ago a Kentucky grandmother gave a new bride the  
following recipe for washing clothes....  

1. Bilt fire in backyard to heat kettle of rain water.  
2. Set tubs so smoke wont blow in eyes if wind is pert.  
3. Shave one hole cake of lie soap in bilin water.  
4. Sort things, make 3 piles. 1 pile white, 1 pile colored, 1  
  pile work britches and rags.  
5. To make starch, stir flour in cool water to smooth, then  
  thin down with bilin water.  
6. Take white things, rub dirty spots on board, scrub hard,  
 and then bile. Rub colored, don't bile, just rinch and starch.  
7. Take things out of kettle with broomstick handle, then  
  rinch, and starch.  
8. Hang old rags on fence.  
9. Spread tea towels on grass.  
10. Pore rinch water in flower bed.  
11. Scrub porch with hot soapy water.  
12. Turn tubs upside down.  
13. Go put on clean dress, smooth hair with hair combs. Brew  
   cup of tea, sit and rock a spell and count your blessings.
No More  Retail - 17 Nov 2005 07:12 GMT
Sound like good old days at my grandma's house in Kentucky which is where is
was born and raised
jXwXeXrXmXoXnXt@sonic.net - 17 Nov 2005 16:01 GMT
> 10. Pore rinch water in flower bed.

I have friends who do this, actually! All their laundry water gets
used to water the garden. I guess we've come full circle.

Joyce
sriddles@aol.com - 17 Nov 2005 16:05 GMT
> Many years ago a Kentucky grandmother gave a new bride the  
> following recipe for washing clothes....  
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
> 13. Go put on clean dress, smooth hair with hair combs. Brew  
>     cup of tea, sit and rock a spell and count your blessings.

Besides the day-long chore of just doing laundry, remember they had to
make their own soap out of the fat rendered when they butchered their
own animals. *THat's* a day-long chore in itself. Don't know how they
did it. I daresay they didn't change clothes as often as we do.

Sherry
PatM - 19 Nov 2005 01:12 GMT
Hey, my sis still does this!  Makes soap out of the fat she renderes
from the animals she butcheres.  After it hardens she grinds it up to
use in her wash.  She also still uses a ringer washer although she does
have a nice electric dryer.  The soap has absolutly no suds and it's
really good at getting greasy/dirty clothes clean, but very harsh.  She
used to use it on her hair too, and it always looked like straw.  Very
hard on the hands.

-PatM
sriddles@aol.com - 19 Nov 2005 04:09 GMT
> Hey, my sis still does this!  Makes soap out of the fat she renderes
> from the animals she butcheres.  After it hardens she grinds it up to
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> -PatM

We did that *once*. Couldn't believe how much work it was. Even though
that was 30+ years ago, I still have one unused bar of lye soap. Just
to remind me what a dumb idea that was.
I still like the idea of soapmaking, though.  But this time I'd use
DH's byproduct beeswax, lanolin, olive oil, and such to make something
less harsh.
Sherry
Nan - 19 Nov 2005 13:51 GMT
>Hey, my sis still does this!  Makes soap out of the fat she renderes
>from the animals she butcheres.  After it hardens she grinds it up to
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
>-PatM

There was a song many years ago called "Grandma's Lye Soap".  I can't
remember all the words, but it started out: "Do you remember grandma's
lye soap, wouldn't suds and wouldn't foam."

Purrs and Hugs,

Nan and the furkids

A wise man talks because he has something to say;
a fool talks because he has to say something.
 
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