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Category : Gardening

Uses for Leftover Water from Boiling Eggs

When you boil an egg, some of the calcium from the shell leaches into the water.  This is a good thing!  You now have water plus calcium.  Here are two good uses for the calcium water left over from cooking eggs.

  • When the water cools down, use it to water tomatoes.  It will add some calcium to the soil which can help prevent or treat blossom-end rot.  (Add crushed up egg shells for more effect.)
  • Use the water in making soups and stock.  The calcium survived being boiled out of the egg shell, it will survive a little soup-making.

Five Uses for Leftover Egg Shells

Ever wonder what to do with leftover egg shells from cooking or baking?  Here are a few ideas for leftover egg shells:

  1. Soil Amendment- Crush them up (mortar & pestle, food processor, blender, etc.) and add them to your soil before planting tomato plants.  Tomatoes love the extra calcium, which “may” help prevent blossom-end rot.
  2. Seed Starter- Start your tomato seeds in the shells and plant them directly in the ground.  No more need for those plastic seed starter trays.  You need reasonably intact shells for this.
  3. Create Decorative Eggs- You can carefully prick the ends of the egg and blow the contents out for use in recipes, and then decorate the shells.  LearnPysanky.com has step-by-step instructions on how to make traditional Ukrainian decorative eggs.
  4. Bird and Deer Deterrent- If you don’t want to bother finely crushing the shells for your tomatoes, give the shells a quick crush and add them to the soil where you want to discourage birds from eating your newly planted seeds, as well as in the soil surrounding plants you don’t want the deer to nibble on.  Who wants to walk on sharp egg shells?
  5. Sidewalk Chalk- This is a great project for the kids to help make and then use to play.  Complete instructions can be found on Make-Stuff.com

This site is dedicated to helping people learn homesteading skills.  The category list will continue to grow as this web site grows, but here is a quick description of each category:

  • Food Preparation
    Food should be prepared from single-ingredient items (for example, pork, milk, basil, honey, butter, eggs, carrot, etc.), and from as many items that can be produced in one’s own garden as possible.  No MSG, HFCS, or other dangerous pseudo-food need apply!  This is the only way to ensure the freshest, healthiest, most cost efficient way to prepare food for your family.  There are two subcategories here: Recipes and TechniquesRecipes are for natural, homecooked meals from scratch.  Techniques are descriptions of basic cooking skills and methods that people may not have tried before or ever had the opportunity to learn before.
  • Food Preservation
    Each type of food has its own best way to be preserved.  Some foods are best preserved through canning, while others are better dried, frozen, or smoked.  There are subcategories for Canning, Dehydration, Freezing, and Smoking.  Instructions on each method, details about equipment, as well as recipes (which are cross-referenced in the Recipes category) are found in these subcategories.
  • Gardening
    Only organic, natural, and sustainable gardening tips and techniques are permitted on this web site.  This category will likely grow some subcategories for specific trees, plants, and techniques.
  • Home Remedies
    Treat this section as you would information on common first aid, not medical advice.  Please seek the advice of a physician for proper diagnosis and recommended treatment.  However, many plants,  natural materials, and methods have a long history associated them with relief from common ailments.    Please be aware that plants contain hundreds of chemical constituents, and can have contraindications.  Always verify information on herbs from a well-written herbal (links to good books on herbalism will be provided) or with a trained herbalist.
  • Homeschooling
    Homeschooling is becoming much more common since many public schools are simply underfunded and more concerned about standardized test scores which effect their federal funding than whether or not the students are actually learning anything, and private schools are often too expensive for the average person to afford without a loan.  Look here for information on curricula, networking with other homeschooling parents, etc.
  • Homesteading
    This is a general category of homesteading skills, tips, and other useful, related information that doesn’t fit anywhere else.
  • Housekeeping
    Here, you will find tips on organization and how to make non-toxic homemade cleaners.  Again, materials used should be things you can reproduce as often as possible, or are extremely frugal to purchase.  Too many people are exposed to suspected carcinogens in common, expensive, commercial cleaning products.  Better to make the more frugal, safer alternatives at home.
  • Livestock
    Information on different breeds, animal housing, beekeeping, chickens, goats, sheep, horses, and more.
  • Needle & Thread
    Everything to make thread, cloth, yarn, and how to turn them into clothes, decorative applications, and household accessories.  Details are found in the subcategories of Embroidery, Knitting, Sewing, Spinning, and Weaving.