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How much "Housekeeping&q uot; clutter is too much?

(69 Posts)
Desdemona Sat 25-Mar-17 18:28:31

I have been reading various brochures, emails etc the last few days from the likes of Lakeland, Betterware, Joseph Joseph etc.

They have a multitude of products and tools for sale to do even the simplest of jobs - there are loads....Upvc cleaner (I use a damp cloth), Granite worktop cleaner (again, I use a damp cloth!)...a special tray for soaking your oven racks in???

So my question is....how much of this stuff is too much - which products are worth it - and have you got any special "magic" tips for keeping your home spick and span?

HannahLoisLuke Sun 26-Mar-17 17:32:44

Forgot to mention my Easy Yo yogurt maker, which is basically a large plastic vacuum flask. I find if I make up the mix according to instructions but using a tablespoon of live yogurt mixed in warm milk ( not the makers packet mixes, expensive and powdery taste) then put the whole flask inside another gadget, the wonder bag which is essentially a beanbag with a drawstring top, that maintains the heat more efficiently and next morning, lovely homemade yogurt.
Must admit though, it is a bit of a faff.

pollyperkins Sun 26-Mar-17 17:33:49

Never use sandwich toaster, only very occasionally us breadmaker and also the slow cooker I nagged and nagged DH to buy for my birthday. Hes a bit cross as I so rarely use it but when I do a casserole I put it in the oven on a timer with jacket potatoes so it would be a waste to have oven and slow cooker on. I think Im doing something wrong as I cant think what to use it for that I cant do equally well in the oven.

Cherrytree59 Sun 26-Mar-17 17:38:00

jayanna bumped the 'making bread in
slow cooker' food thread its now on active listsmile

JanT8 Sun 26-Mar-17 17:48:50

We are on our second Breadmaker and we never waste any bread at all. When we bought the first one, a Panasonic, our daughter said 'Mum you're wasting your money, you'll never use it', but we always use it. Love it!
A garlic crusher only needs to be basic as cloves need to be peeled, halved and the shoot removed, unless you really don't mind 'garlic breath'. Surprisingly many people aren't aware that it's the shoot that causes the breath to smell.

Blinko Sun 26-Mar-17 18:44:14

Enjoying this most informative thread. My life saver is my combination microwave oven. I never use the main oven now, it's the combi on convection every time. Just DH and me to cook for though.

Suestar14 Sun 26-Mar-17 18:49:25

I love my karcher window vac it does save a lot of time but yes have bread maker I don't use and also spiraliser only used a couple of times! I do like my soup maker though just throw in some rough chopped veg and stock and it ,ales soup in half an hour while you can go off and forget it for a bit as it switches off and keeps it warm

CrazyDaisy Sun 26-Mar-17 19:05:50

Chewbacca Have a look on ebay. There are lots of Moulinex products on there.

TillyWhiz Sun 26-Mar-17 19:47:11

Oh the Lakeland oven shelf soaking tray! So useful as a toddler's paddling pool, pot plant soaker, freezer defrosting tray - not had a shelf in it yet!

Norah Sun 26-Mar-17 21:14:24

I make bread daily, the bread mixer is a must.

Mapleleaf Mon 27-Mar-17 08:43:40

Hello everyone,
Been reading this thread with interest. Like most of you, I've got some gadgets that get lots of use and others that barely see daylight but keep them "just in case" ?
The ones in regular use and which I'd replace (and indeed have in one case) are my bread maker - used every week, my slow cooker, used regularly in the cooler months, and my dyson cordless which is whipped out every day. Dust gatherers include a juicer, a coffee machine and a deep fat fryer!

Mapleleaf Mon 27-Mar-17 08:45:04

Forgot to add my hand mixer as another regularly used gadget ?

JackyB Mon 27-Mar-17 12:09:49

The gadget I used daily was the Nicer Dicer which made perfect cubes or sticks of fruit or vegetables for salads, stews and soups and particularly for even-sized chips. I say "used" because they have now changed the design.

The old one worked by pushing the blades down onto the food, but the new design pushes the food through the blades and it's not as good. As my old one has broken, I can't decide whether to replace it with one of the new ones or not.

It's funny how one woman's daily used gadget is another woman's dust collector.

keffie Mon 27-Mar-17 19:01:51

My best ever buy was the ice cream maker from Lakeland last October. Hubby is now on a special liver disease diet (from being diabetic and alot of pain medication over many years) He has to eat 6 times a day and has been put on a high carb/high protein diet.

Its working however Lakeland made a fortune out of me last year. I decided to replace alot of my kitchen equipment as alot of it was getting on a bit and with the adult youngsters no longer at home, bar 1 of 4. I have just about managed to keep away from duff buys, bar 1, though it's hard.

My duff buy was a soup stand: I bought it for making soup in advance to freeze. You can put your freezer bag in it, to put your soup in the bag without it spilling. It's more hassle than it's worth. Cost £14-99 and well I guess it will go to the charity shop when I am sick of it taking up room in the cupboard.

My best buy was the ice cream maker. My Hubby loves ice cream. After seeing a program on ice cream (I thought I was buying decent for my Husband) we were totally put off the shop bought.

There was only Haagan daz that came out looking like ice cream when it was melted. The others looked like well bowls of snot. Given my husband has ice cream everyday Haagan Daz was going to cost £20 per week.

I went out and bought an ice cream maker (£58-00 originally £73-00 as it was in the sale) It paid for it's self in less than 3 weeks.

It is quick to make the mix. 10 minutes tops. Then chill overnight in the fridge. Put it all in the ice cream maker and 40 minutes later you have gorgeous ice cream.

eddiecat78 Mon 27-Mar-17 19:44:57

Spiralizer - why did I bother? If the veg aren`t exactly the right diameter and consistency it just chops them into little pieces. And I`ve never been able to cook "courgetti" that doesn`t make any source watery and horrible!

Jalima Mon 27-Mar-17 23:28:32

You can buy spiralized veg in M&S (and probably other places too), probably cheaper in the long-term than buying a spiralizer and using it just a few times grin
I did resist buying one of those.

I do fancy an icecream maker though but it wouldn't be good for my diet .....

PamelaJ1 Tue 28-Mar-17 08:39:05

I have two favourite, cheap, gadgets. A long insulated pair of tweezers to get toast out of the toaster, I also use it for removing teabags from mugs.
Two bright green , small insulated grips , they fit over the pan handles ( not the long handles- the small loopy ones?) brilliant from kleeneeze

travelsafar Tue 28-Mar-17 08:45:52

love my veg peeler i use it to destring celery, peel veg and fruit wouldnt be with out it.

overthehill Tue 28-Mar-17 09:54:21

We're off to the Ideal Home Exhibition tomorrow (free tickets wouldn't bother otherwise) and made mental note not buy any gagets there. In the past bought many a thing that looks fabulous there, but get it home and it's rubbish. Eg magnetic windows washers, rubber broom, water sprinkler and more I can't think of.