Category: Conscious Consumerism: Shopping & Reviews

  • Getting Eco with Easter

    Getting Eco with Easter

    easter bunnies

    The rabbit of Easter. He bring of the chocolate.

    ―David Sedaris, ‘Me Talk Pretty One Day’

    Whether Easter is a religious day for you or no, the theme of hope— resurrection and soul cleansing intersecting with the emergence of spring— cannot be denied.

    I find it obnoxious that this day, with all its beautiful natural symbolism, has become yet another opportunity to sell us wasteful trappings: the plastic braided baskets, full of artificially flavored and colored candies individually wrapped in plastic, nestled into annoying plastic “grass.” Plastic eggs, encased in plastic packaging, intended to be thrown away and rebought each year. Cheap toys and poorly made stuffed animals. Even the real eggs are co-opted; there are as many kits out there now offering stickers and bedazzling jewels and plastic wrap thingies to decorate them as there are the standard dye kits.

    I’d like to gently suggest that we especially try to tread lightly, when preparing for this day that celebrates new life.

    green easter

     

    Easy Tips for an Eco Easter

    The Basket:

    Go reusable. I’m willing to bet you’ve got half a dozen wicker baskets in your house already; just tie a cheery ribbon around the handle and you’re all set. Or think outside the basket! I bought the kids these adorb pails a decade ago and only bring them out for the big day.

    easter pails

    The Grass:

    Does anyone actually still buy that horrible staticky plastic grass? I’m hoping not, but just in case here are some alternatives:

    • run some tissue paper (you hang on to that from Christmas & birthdays, right?) through the shredder. Construction paper works too; bonus points if it’s been already drawn on and being reused.
    • A cute t-shirt is both practical and cushion-y.
    • You’re also hanging on to your packing materials, right? Styrofoam peanuts can be reused, but bubble wrap doubles as an Easter morning gift. Show me a kid that doesn’t love love popping bubble wrap. Go ahead, I dare you.
    • Why not line the bottom of your basket with potting soil and grow some real grass in there? Or something else quick-sprouting; mixed greens, maybe? Or fill with a flat of wheatgrass, lemon grass or catnip. 

    The Candy:

    Quality over quantity! I’m all for letting the kids eat the heck out of the Easter candy on Easter Day (and only Easter Day), so I prefer not to give them too much of it anyway.

    • Go fair trade with chocolate if you can.
    • YummyEarth makes delicious organic and natural candies.
    • Endangered Species Chocolate bars and bites are fair trade, made with shade grown cacao and natural ingredients, and 10% of net profits are donated to the Rainforest Trust and Wildlife Conservation Network with a minimum annual donation of $10,000. It’s sold at Target and online.
    • Throw some homemade treats in there, or these incredibly awesome “surprise” eggs:

    The Egg Hunt:

    • ApplenAmos wooden eggsIf you must buy the plastic eggs, resolve to put them away in a box clearly labeled EASTER so you can reuse them for years to come.
    • Even better, buy these biodegradable eggs made from corn starch instead of petroleum-based polymers and use them year after year.
    • Even better than that: I love these wooden eggs (pictured, available here), dyed with all natural non toxic soy paints and sealed with olive oil and beeswax polish.
    • Or even better than THAT, hide dyed eggs. Just make sure you don’t hide them anywhere pesticides have been used; I wouldn’t eat them after exposure.

    Speaking of Dyed Eggs:

    Yes, the kits you can buy at the store are non-toxic now. But—

    • you’ll get more vibrant colors with food coloring, which you probably already have in your pantry.
    • This kit uses dyes made from natural and organic fruit, plant and vegetable extracts from annatto seed, curcumin, purple sweet potato and red cabbage.
    • Or, have some fun whipping up your own natural dye concoctions! In the past we’ve tried coffee, blueberries, red cabbage, tumeric, paprika, beets, onion skins (red and yellow), and frozen raspberries, with varying degrees of success. Kids love playing mad scientist; try anything that’ll stain your lips, fingertips or napkins. Just boil your base in water (the longer the better), add vinegar, and pour over your egg. The longer it sits, the more intense the color.

    The Gifts:

    For the kids: skip the cheap stuffies and plastic dollar store toys. Try items that will be used beyond the holiday season, like my list of the best 5 toys for creative outdoor play, or non-toxic art materials. (Might I suggest these paper dolls outfitted with the Great Fashion Designs of the Nineties? Oh em GEE)

    For the adults: Confession— I really dislike traditional Easter flowers like hyacinths and lilies, I find their scent cloying. Rather than just suggest finding organic spring bulbs, I’d like to steer you towards the idea of a starter kit for herbs, or an air-purifying hardy indoor plant. It goes without saying that the best gifts don’t come from a gas station with a spray painted sign reading EASTER FLOWERS.

    give a flock

    Give a Flock:

    Every year I read stories imploring people not to buy baby chicks or bunnies for their kids at Easter. Is this really a thing? I’m not going to tell you not to buy chicks. In fact, I suggest you buy a dozen and send them to me.

    Or, you could buy a symbolic donation of a flock of chicks to a family in a poor country through Heifer International. The eggs are a source of sustenance, and a source of income. Heifer offers training  to help the family to learn how to run their own business; once that family’s business is off and running, they then pay it forward (eggs and training) to another family in need.

    This is so in line with the Easter themes of rebirth and renewal and hope. It makes my heart glad.

     

    That’s all I’ve got 🙂

    Any more ideas on how to make Easter a little more “green?”

     

  • Review: Green Chef Organic Meal Kit Subscription Service

    Review: Green Chef Organic Meal Kit Subscription Service

    Green Chef review

    One cannot think well, love well, sleep well,
    if one has not dined well.

    -Virginia Woolf

    Waaaaaay back when I started blogging, I took part in a lot of food challenges. I meal planned. I kept the grocery budget way low. I cooked from scratch: breads, pastas, all manner of desserts. I ate local (within 100 miles) and some meals a week exclusively with foods from our farmers’ market. I went vegetarian. Much more recently, I’ve done a paleo challenge and the Whole 30 (twice).

    That was while I was still primarily a stay at home mom with littles. Once I started working, the hours kept accumulating, and then the kids got older and I added part-time chauffeur and soccer mom to my workload. So my new favorite food challenge is trying out different meal kit subscription boxes.

    Who should try a meal kit subscription plan?

    If you’ve never tried one, these services create meal plans for the week, and then ship you exactly the ingredients you need to prepare those meals, along with detailed directions. It’s a perfect system if any of the following apply to you:

    • You’re busy and don’t have the time to dedicate to planning out healthy meals and going to the grocery store.
    • You’d like to try more adventurous meals but don’t keep a lot of food in your fridge and pantry outside your everyday staples.
    • You’d like to involve your kids in the cooking process, perhaps to encourage them to try new foods.
    • You’d like to cook more but don’t have a lot of experience.
    • You have a tendency to optimistically buy healthy ingredients that then go bad before you get a chance to use them all.
    • Using very fresh ingredients or supporting regional farms is important to you.

    On the flip side, any meal subscription service is going to be more expensive than if you sat down and meal planned according to what’s in season and on sale. You are paying a premium for convenience; I’ll not pretend otherwise. But if you’re currently wasting food or eating out a fair amount or picking up a lot of stuff you don’t need at the store because you shop with a posse, the difference in cost week by week may be negligible. (Where you live and shop makes a difference too.)

    Green Chef Review

    As a Moms Meet blogger, I was invited to try out the family plan from Green Chef. (New customers get $50 off their first box with my affiliate link!) Green Chef is a USDA-certified organic meal kit delivery service; ingredients are pre-measured and largely prepped, including homemade sauces and marinades which come in great containers for reusing for packing hummus, guac or applesauce in lunchboxes.

    There’s a lot of stuff in that box and everything was in excellent condition.

    These were the ingredients for one of our meals; the labels are conveniently color coded to the recipe page, so you can make your kids take care of prep work.

    This was a 40 minute meal, which brings me to another point: these are not necessarily super quick and easy meals. It’s not boxed mac and cheese. The meals were simple, but still involve chopping and cooking.

    As I said earlier, this is particularly nice for those who aren’t very experienced cooks, as all the steps are laid out clearly for you. It’s also a stealthy way to make your kids spend time with you. Mine will generally help when I need it, albeit reluctantly, but they’re always more actively involved with a meal kit, because no one can resist dictating and double checking step by step directions.

    Pan meatballs have always been hit or miss for me, but by following the directions exactly (meatball size, amount of oil, pan heat, cook time) I wound up with meatballs that weren’t blackened on the outside but were cooked all the way through. Yay!

    The second meal involved salmon, which I can’t eat, so my brother and his family got to enjoy that one. NOTE: you CAN opt out of seafood or another protein when you subscribe to the Omnivore, Carnivore or Family Plan. I just didn’t have that option open to me as a tester.

    It’s a shame, because it sure looked pretty.

    Sidebar: my brother’s house has much better light than mine.

    They also eat really early! Holy cow, dinner out of the oven at 4:54? I’d forgotten what it was like to have small kids. My kids are just getting home then, and that’s when they don’t have a game.

    Their finished meal. I’d Instagram that:

    The verdict:

    Both our families have their picky eaters, who liked some aspects of the meal more than others (my nieces favored their potatoes over the salmon, the men in my family tried picking out mushrooms or kale but it was so incorporated they did wind up eating some). That’s to be expected when kids are trying new foods; it takes up to ten tries to develop a taste for savories, and meal kits are a fun way to deliver that exposure without a lot of food going to waste from the experiment.

    Overall, the meals were well received! A little out of some people’s comfort zones, but enjoyable, and for the more developed palates pretty darn tasty and healthy. The orzo leftovers were even better the next day. Looking at the site, there are plenty of meals that would work out well for my family that we’ve never tried before. I’d just have to skip the seafood.

    One thing to note: it seemed like salt and pepper were included in the directions way more than necessary. Keep a light hand with the salt, people. A little goes a long way.

    The packaging:

    I’m always overwhelmed by the amount of packaging in any of these meal subscription boxes. Good news though: all the materials Green Chef uses are either comprised of recycled materials or recyclable. In some cases, both. More details on Green Chef’s eco-friendly packaging here.

    For smaller households:

    Green Chef also offers a number of 2-person plans (3 dinners a week for 2 people).

    • Omnivore: meat, seafood, and vegetarian dinners.
    • Carnivore: Meat and seafood lovers, dig in. Every dinner includes a land or sea protein plus veggies.
    • Gluten-Free: Always gluten-free and flavor-full, with meat, seafood, and vegetarian dinners.
    • Vegetarian: More than just salads, every dinner makes veggies the star in unique, delicious ways.
    • Paleo: Eat like an epicurean caveman. This paleo menu is rich in fresh produce and proteins.
    • Vegan: Plant-based just got better. An innovative menu with natural, specialty ingredients.

    Try Green Chef out! It’s fun, healthy, family time. 

    And don’t forget, you get $50 off your first box when you order through my affiliate link!

     

    I received this product for free from Moms Meet (momsmeet.com), May Media Group LLC, who received it directly from the manufacturer. As a Moms Meet blogger, I agree to use this product and post my honest opinion on my blog. The opinions posted are my own.

  • Comcast Comfort and Joy: A Green Gift for Someone Who Has Everything

    Comcast Comfort and Joy: A Green Gift for Someone Who Has Everything

    Ah! There is nothing like staying at home, for real comfort.

    ―Jane Austen

    *Xfinity has a whole lot to offer families! A big thanks to them for sponsoring this post: enter to win a Nest programmable thermostat below! #XfinityMoms*

    Baby, it’s finally cold outside, and while I respect those intrepid souls who brave low temps to go caroling or outdoor ice skating, nothing seems as appealing to me after dark as snuggling up under a nice warm blanket and catching up on my shows. 

    It’s a specific kind of comfort and joy: that no-pressure time with your close family, where you’re free of commitments for the rest of the day, free to wear your most comfortable clothing, free to cuddle and laugh and maybe drift off to sleep.

    It’s something you wish you could wrap up and give to those who don’t already have it. And in a way, you can.

    I’m all about gifting experiences rather than things during the holidays, and when I recently visited the Comcast store in Cherry Hill it struck me that for those who don’t already have them, the newest perks Comcast has to offer are awesome out-of-the-box gift ideas. Not only do they provide the framework for family time, but they’re gifts that keep on giving all year long providing comfort and joy. 

    How? Well, I’ll tell you.

    5 Ways Comcast Xfinity Provides
    Year-Round Comfort and Joy

    They’ve partnered with Netflix

    Seriously, how did we survive before Netflix? Having to wait for shows and movies to air on TV seems torturous now. I love me some solid Netflix time with my kids, but the WORST is when it lags. Not only is it frustrating, breaking up the continuity of the plot of whatever we’re watching (Black Mirror just doesn’t have the same impact watched in five minute increments), but the kids will give up and wander off to the far corners of the house to do their own thing if it doesn’t resolve quickly.

    With the integration of Comcast X1 and Netflix, you’re not at the mercy of your wi-fi. No more slow buffering. No more “loading” screen or timed out connection. It’s a Christmas miracle!

    Littles can safely hang out in the Kid Zone 

    Remember when PBS was your only option for keeping kids entertained during the day unless you had extended cable or a steady supply of VHS tapes? Not to knock PBS, of course, but variety is the spice of life and I remember watching a ton of soap operas when I was young simply because it was on and I’d already watched whatever PBS was running at that hour.

    The Comcast X1 Kid Zone is a super kid safe entertainment. Parents set the age limits, and have the comfort of knowing their kids can safely explore within this programming and choose what to watch next on their own (the voice-controlled remote makes this especially easy). You can have the next show autoplay for ongoing entertainment. If you’re wondering about a specific show, you can check the details and ratings provided through Common Sense Media. Parental control settings are saved in the cloud, so even if there’s a power outage kids can’t reset and access non-approved content.

    Obviously, kids shouldn’t be in front of the TV all day, but sometimes you just gotta get stuff done, and I see this feature as being particularly helpful for people babysitting. (I still can’t figure out how to start movies on my brother’s DVD player.) 

    Fun fact: simply being in the room viewing kids’ shows with them helps them to learn from what they are watching.

    Never miss an episode, guest appearance or game again

    This feature will bring joy to hardcore fans who want to see it all. Tell your DVD to record every episode of Doctor Who, or every time Twenty One Pilots appears on a show. Comcast also has a ton of sports packages available— you can get 24/7 coverage of football, basketball, baseball, hockey. Soccer fans can see every team and over 240 regular season games. You can track multiple games or access stats in real time without taking your eyes off the game you’re watching. And you can take the game with you on your phone or other mobile device.

    And, you guys. You can take all this stuff on the go with you. You’re not tied to the cable box. Just download the Xfinity TV app and you can access most channels and everything on your DVR from your phone or tablet. Long drives with kids, time consuming commutes on the bus or train, sitting in waiting rooms or waiting for a table at a crowded restaurant… all that has changed.

    Fun fact: watching football (or participating in other “epic fandoms”) can make you happier and healthier.

    Integrated apps bring the web to your big screen

    Xfinity X1 not only curates trending top TV shows and movies for you: it also gathers together digital content from the web, from viral YouTube videos to digital content from your favorite magazines. And, using integrated apps, you can easily pull up your Facebook live video from your tween daughter’s winter band concert to play during dinner at Grandma’s. I bet she’ll really like that. (Grandma, that is. Your tween will probably disown you for the evening.)

    Xfinity Home keeps you safe and connected

    The future is now. Xfinity Home is the definition of comfort when you’re away from home, with options for 24/7 professional security monitoring and live video monitoring.

    • You can see for yourself that your kids arrived home safely, or that the nurse stopped by to check in on your father.
    • Install enabled light switches or outlets and you can turn indoor and outdoor lights on and off while away from home (or when you’re too tired to get out of bed, whatever, no judgment here).
    • Double check that you closed the garage door, and make sure your curling iron isn’t going to burn the house down.
    • Remotely let in the neighbor so they can feed your cat, and then remotely lock the door behind him.
    • Access your programmable Nest thermostat so you’re saving energy during the day but only bumping up the heat when you know you’re about to walk in the door.

    Amazing, right? Check out Comcast Xfinity X1 and Xfinity Home for yourself and put it at the top of your list as a no-clutter gift solution for that hard-to-shop-for someone who has everything.

    Don’t worry, they’ll still have something to open: it’s hard to not act like a kid with a new plaything when you’re faced with a voice controlled remote.

    I also feel compelled to note that Comcast is listed as one of the Top Ten Companies for Veterans, according to DiversityInc; they’ve saved over 15 million gallons of fuel since 2010 thanks to fuel efficient vehicles and self-install options; they’ve recycled over 8 million pounds of e-waste in one year.

    Locally, Comcast recently gave over 14,000 pounds of food to 93.3’s Preston & Steve in their annual food drive!

    Giveaway!

    Comcast Xfinity is providing a Nest thermostat to give away. Trust me, you want it:

    • automatically adapts to your schedule after a week of use
    • can be remotely controlled from your phone; the app shows daily and monthly use so you can improve
    • studies show it can save an average of 10-12% on heating and 15% on cooling bills, paying for itself in under two years
    • different ring styles available, so it looks great whatever your home decor style
    • and now, it lights up when you walk into the room!

    Enter via the Rafflecopter widget below; this giveaway ends on December 20th, 2016 at midnight. Good luck!