lizabbett
The Answer
I would like to thank all of you have been playing along at home, but the
answer is...
They are all things that I wash in my shower!
That's right folks, I've gone Kramer. When you have a small kitchen sink,
no washing machine, REALLY dirty spinach and no hot water in the bathroom
sink (and scalding hot water in the kitchen sink), there's only one thing
to do: hit the shower.
I was just amused by my own vegetarian ridiculousness the other day when I
bought a pound (half kilo, really) of spinach and tried to wash it. I
rinsed it, scrubbed it, soaked it in saltwater, soaked it in vinegarwater,
and rinsed it again. (Lemme tell ya, appreciate that triple-washed,
pre-bagged spinach!) Then I cooked it, and it shrank to the size of a
tennis ball. All in all, it was two days of work for a single-serving side
dish. And there was still some grit.
_______________________________________________________________
Save rainforest for free with a Planet-Save.com e-mail account:
The Answer
I would like to thank all of you have been playing along at home, but the
answer is...
They are all things that I wash in my shower!
That's right folks, I've gone Kramer. When you have a small kitchen sink,
no washing machine, REALLY dirty spinach and no hot water in the bathroom
sink (and scalding hot water in the kitchen sink), there's only one thing
to do: hit the shower.
I was just amused by my own vegetarian ridiculousness the other day when I
bought a pound (half kilo, really) of spinach and tried to wash it. I
rinsed it, scrubbed it, soaked it in saltwater, soaked it in vinegarwater,
and rinsed it again. (Lemme tell ya, appreciate that triple-washed,
pre-bagged spinach!) Then I cooked it, and it shrank to the size of a
tennis ball. All in all, it was two days of work for a single-serving side
dish. And there was still some grit.
_______________________________________________________________
Save rainforest for free with a Planet-Save.com e-mail account: