Prasom
Pririnkti sauja kastonu, nulupti odeles, supjaustyti mazais gabaleliais. Virti puode su dviem stiklinem vandens 5-10 minuciu. Nukosti per smulku sieteli, ismesti vientisus gabaliukus ir palikti perfiltruota skysti atvesti. Sis skystis gali buti naudojamas kaip skystas skalbiklis:)
PERSPEJIMAS: Kastonu sultys, kaip saponinas, yra siek tiek nuodingos ir su jomis turi buti atitinkamai elgiamasi. (kaip suprantu, netinka vidiniam vartojimui).
Dar vienas receptas skalbikliui is putoklio gaminti:
Fabric Shampoo (can be used on upholstery)
1 Ounce dried Soapwort root or four handfuls whole fresh plant
3 pints water.
If using dried roots they should be soaked for nine hours before preparing. Chop fresh whole plant put in pan with cold water and bring to the boil. Cover and simmer for about half an hour. This applied to freh or dried Soapwort. Stir occasionally. Cool and strain. Use solution undiluted.
Papildyta:Ir dar keletas kastonu receptu is siu nuorodu:
http://www.itsnoteas...rg/...=asc t=0
"In the past, Horse-chestnut seeds were used in France and Switzerland for whitening hemp, flax, silk and wool. They contain a soapy juice, fit for washing of linens and stuffs, for milling of caps and stockings, etc., and for fulling of cloth. For this, 20 horse-chestnut seeds were sufficient for six litres of water. They were peeled, then rasped or dried, and ground in a malt or other mill. The water must be soft, either rain or river water, for hard well water will not do. The nuts are then steeped in cold water, which soon becomes frothy, as with soap, and then turns white as milk. It must be stirred well at first, and then, after standing to settle, strained or poured off clear. Linen washed in this liquid, and afterwards rinsed in clear running water, takes on an agreeable light sky-blue colour. It takes spots out of both linen and woollen, and never damages or injures the cloth."
"this is really interesting as I have access to 1000s nobody seems to want them here and so I have been splatting them for the fire BUT in emmaus today they had a load of linen sheets (10 for 10 euros with mildew and metal type stains (I bought them as backings for my quilting) but if i can get the stains out I can use them as sheets!! big bonus I aslso have river water (but I think that I will use the rainwater)"
"but I did do the experiment with the horse chestnuts
the stains did not come out of the sheets but they did clean up nice and were lovely and soft"
http://www.itsnoteas...een.org/...adcc 07d5e6ca
" know there is a thread about conkers but it is now a little old and I thought I'd bring it all up to date with some experiments I've been doing. On the first thread, slugboy wrote out an old recipe for using conkers to wash linen. Well, I've put it to use and it makes a great laundry bleach/cleaner. I followed the instructions by grating 5 conkers and mixing with about 1¼ litres rain water (taken from the garden tub and strained first). I left this to steep for about four days, stirring every so often. Then I liquidised the whole lot - to get as much out of the conkers as possible. I ended up with a creamy white, soapy liquid.
First of all I soaked the dishcloth and a very dirty towel in the undiluted mixture. They both came out so much cleaner and brighter I was impressed. Then (big mistake) I got a bit carried away and put some in the washing machine with a couple of tops (one bright yellow and one green) that had stains on them with a pair of trousers (mine, luckily) and a tea towel. Not a big wash, I know, but I wanted to try it out. I poured the liquid into the tray where the washing powder would go and of course it just poured straight through. Once washed, the only thing that came out ok was the tea towel. The tops and the trousers ended up with patchy marks (lighter) all over them! and the stains were still there!
So I have now figured out that it should be ok for whites - which I am washing at this precise moment! - and for things that don't matter if they fade a little. But probably best used as a soaking agent before the main washing process.
A couple of great side effects have been: my nails looked a lot whiter than normal once I'd finished making the liquid (I got it all over the place including my hands). And my dear Husband was given the task of washing things out when I'd finished and discovered that things like a glass jug came out looking quite sparkly. So the next experiment will be to try it in the dishwasher. (And I can't believe I have converted my stick-in-the-mud, bah-humbug husband to use it to wipe down surfaces, which also come up sparkling!!!)
Visai smagiai cia pasakoja isbandziusios
Papildyta:
Del kastonu rusies abejoniu nera - sie ir yra saponinu turintys kastonai, angl. horse-chesnuts
Grazus