• Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • The Pressure Canning Cookbook
  • Blog
    • Subscribe
    • Welcome!
  • Perfectly Preserved Podcast
  • About
    • ADW Manifesto
    • Work With Me
      • Read
  • Shop
    • My Account
    • Cart
    • Checkout

The Domestic Wildflower

Handmade Food & Craft Tutorials for Beginners

  • Courses
    • Free Canning Basics
    • Everything Canning Course
    • Steam Canning Workshop
    • Free Homemade Cocktail Mixers
    • Wildflower Mixology
    • Crochet Basket Workshop
  • Can & Preserve
    • Never Canned?
    • Steam Canner Equipment Bundle
    • Shrubs Course
  • Sew
  • Cook
  • Craft
    • Crochet Step-by-Step Guides
      • Crochet Basket
      • Giant Yarn Throw
      • Thick & Thin Throw
  • Living
    • Creativity Challenge
    • Clean
    • Kids
  • Rentals

Blog

2 Easy Salsa Canning Recipes for Beginners

January 7, 2019 by Jenny Gomes 1 Comment

Making homemade salsa is a great way to use up all of the extra tomatoes from your garden and store them for winter. Discover how to make these 2 Easy Salsa Canning Recipes for Beginners.

2 Easy Salsa Canning Recipes for Beginners

This post contains affiliate links.

2 Easy Salsa Canning Recipes for Beginners

Ranch Style Salsa Recipe 

This salsa recipe is ranch-style because the onions, tomatoes, and peppers are roasted either under a broiler or on a grill until charred (blackened). Perfect for brand new beginners because it cooks up quickly, is giftable, is delicious, and is relatively fast. Read on for the recipe!

2 Easy Salsa Canning Recipes for Beginners

Roasted Chipotle Salsa 

This salsa is similar to a salsa that you would get before your dinner at a Mexican restaurant, but with a smoky, chipotle taste. You can add more or fewer chipotles/hot peppers depending on your preferred degree of spiciness. For what it’s worth, my husband’s comment about this recipe was, “It’s got a kick!”

2 Easy Salsa Canning Recipes for Beginners

Eager to learn to make these salsa canning recipes, but not sure how to can yet? Don’t worry: I have a Free Canning Basics Course that you can take with printable visual guides, videos, and more to get you started! Sign up here!

Canning Personalities Quiz

To go with the salsa recipes above, I thought you would need to add to your Amazon cart these blue corn chips (my fave and my kids love them too!)

I am definitely getting this chip and dip serving platter because it’s a beautiful bamboo and the center dish could be swapped out for a wide mouth pint jar of salsa 🙂

Filed Under: Can

Learn How To Sew

January 7, 2019 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

This post will share my best recommendations for learning how to sew with the best expert advice I can round up for my readers. Sewing saves money, is creative, fun, and is much easier than people think. Learn how to sew below!

Learn How to Sew

Sewing is one of those skills that people think will be really difficult, expensive, and time-consuming. Actually, sewing is none of those things.

Sewing is really pretty easy- especially if you have someone to show you STEP BY STEP what to do. I have had the pleasure of being a senior project mentor for several young ladies and teaching another person to sew has made me realize that good, clear instructions make sewing more fun and effective for everyone. Teaching made me a better sewist!

Sewing saves a lot of money. Knowing how to hem pants, repair a tear, create a skirt instead of buying one, or copy a dress you own instead of splurging on a second save untold dollars for those who can sew. It is SO NICE being able to sit down and quickly take up the straps on my first grader’s top because they “aren’t RIGHT!!!” *cue whining voice* so that they ARE right. Sewing allows me to make a garment more modest, more flattering, and last longer. I routinely buy clothes for my kids a full 2 sizes too big and just sit down right after they’ve been washed and take them up and in until they grow into them, at which point I get my seam ripper out and let them out again. Not to toot my own mending horn, but my husband’s work jeans have lasted…and lasted….and lasted. His buddies have sent stacks of jeans home with him and it’s a favor I gladly will do; so few people know how to sew and it is such a quick and easy thing!

Sewing projects don’t have to take a lot of time. I mean, sometimes I will reward myself for a busy week by sewing a Saturday away but most of my projects are quick; a pair of stretchy baby pants (the cutest thing a beginner could sew, probably) can be completely done in probably 20 minutes, even if you’re a brand new beginner. I made all our cloth napkins years ago to reduce waste and after I cut the squares out, I just sewed the hem around each one whenever I had 5 minutes. It took a week of 5-minute snippets, but here I am 8 years later, wiping kid faces with those hemmed napkins and they only took me a few minutes to sew.

Today, my kids are (almost) 5 & 7 and they love to help me at the machine and it is really fun to include them in what’s I’m working on.

Learn How to Sew
Sewing with my kids.

I’ve shared a handful of my sewing projects here on The Domestic Wildflower; here are a few:

1 Tank 3 Ways

1 Sewing Pattern, 3 Variations: Simplicity 1589 | A Domestic Wildflower click through to read this helpful beginner sewing post that demonstrates how easy it is to make very different garments from one pattern.

Scoopneck Knit Tank

Scoopneck Tank: Beginnner Sewing Project with Pro Tips for sewing knits!

The Barette Bralette

How To Sew Lingerie: 3 Easy Steps for Beginners | How to Sew a Bralette with a free pattern, simple tools, and easy steps!

How to Sew Spandex

How To Sew Spandex

but I have to say that way before I started my blog, and when I was starting to sew beyond a pattern and search then-very new Pinterest for ideas, I found my all-time-favorite blogger, Merrick of Merrick’s Art. I found a tutorial of hers where she took a man’s polo and cut the collar off, took in the sides, and completely changed the neckline. It was adorable, and I copied it and wore it to work.

I’ve been a teacher for 11 years now (I can hardly believe it) and I can say with certainty a few things. I’m very particular about how I’m taught anything, and Merrick is easy to learn from.

She’s a natural sewist AND a natural teacher. 

Merrick and her friend Leanne, another fantastic blogger at www.elleapparel.com created a sewing video course that you NEED to take if you want to learn to sew this year.

Learn how to sew with Modern Girl's Guide to Sewing

The video course is called The Modern Girl’s Guide To Sewing and in it, you can choose between 2 different courses to take: Beginning or Intermediate.


Learn how to sew with Modern' Girl's Guide to Sewing

Learn How To Sew

If you’ve never sewed before, dive into the Beginner’s Course. In it you’ll learn about your sewing machine, different stitches and what they do, needles (which I think is VERY important in terms of success or failure with different fabrics!), hemming (hello, the most useful thing ever!), waistband creation, and how to make a skirt.

In the Intermediate Course you’ll learn about sergers, darts (the seams that make a garment fitted and look amazing on any body shape), POCKETS (after this lesson EVERYTHING you sew will have pockets, I promise!), pleats, standard and invisible zippers, inserting sleeves, non-elastic waistbands, professional necklines, and how to sew a simple but impressive shift dress.

The courses can be purchased individually or separately but I want to be sure you understand how transferable the skills are in each course. Not ONLY will you be able to sew your own perfectly fitting clothes, but you can also use these skills to sew:

  • Curtains
  • Baby clothes
  • Bags
  • Reusable shopping totes
  • Halloween costumes
  • Cloth napkins

And you can alter

  • Costumes or dance recital outfits (I do this for all my daughter’s friends)
  • The ankle/hem of pants & jeans
  • baggy tees with no shape
  • bridesmaid or formal dresses- you’ll save SO much money avoiding “professional” alterations!
  • Skirts from long to mid to short
  • kids clothes- I buy a size or two big and take in the waist a bit so I’m not constantly buying new items
  • home goods like tablecloths, baby slings, and so much more!

Think of mending

  • work jeans
  • kids clothing
  • your favorite pants that still look amazing
  • seams that have come undone
  • lost buttons
  • broken zippers

The Modern Girl’s Guide to Sewing is a video course taught by two experts that I know you’ll LOVE and come away with skills you can apply RIGHT AWAY.

If you want to learn how to sew, check out the courses HERE!

Learn to Sew

Filed Under: Sew

3 Easy Pickle Canning Recipes for Beginners

January 2, 2019 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

Pickles are easy for new or beginning canners because they can up quickly and are fun to share as gifts. They are also a nice, savory departure from the canning standby of sweet jams. Read on for 3 Easy Pickle Canning Recipes for Beginners!

This post contains affiliate links.

3 Easy Pickle Canning Recipes for Beginners

Pickled Pearl Onions

Pickled pearl onions are an ideal recipe for steam canning, so I’ll include instructions for both steam canners and water bath canners. They are delicious on poached eggs, in salads, as part of an hors-d’oeuvres plate, and in a cocktail like a Bloody Mary. They are my favorite on poached eggs on toast with cheese, avocado, tomato, bacon…try it. You won’t be sorry.

3 Easy Pickle Canning Recipes for Beginners

Steam canning is a really easy, lightning fast way to can all your favorite canning recipes. Read more about it in this post, or download the free Steam Canning Fact Sheet & Equipment Checklist here!

Carrot Pickles

Carrot pickles are one of my favorite pickles because they aren’t cucumbers 🙂 I actually don’t care for cucumbers much, to be honest, which I know is really silly but they just don’t light my fire. Canning them isn’t as easy as you might think; cucumbers for pickles should be small, very firm, and very different than what you’d want sliced up in a salad. Because of their mild flavor, you have to choose vinegar that really is tasty because it’s taste is what shines or screams. You have to use caution against boiling them too hard or too long for fear of making them mushy, and God knows no one wants a mushy pickle. This isn’t meant to discourage you but rather to educate and to offer an alternative if cucumbers aren’t your jam anyway.

3 Easy Pickle Canning Recipes for Beginners

Pickled Bread and Butter Jalapeños

The purpose of this blog is not to merely document what happens in my little kitchen and sewing area, though that does happen a lot I admit, but to help you all learn how to make more by hand, cook more from scratch, do more for yourself, and improve your domestic lives by leaps and bounds as a result. And lots of you want to learn how to cook spicy, pickled savory things.

The best way to maximize your canning time when canning these easy pickles is to use a steam canner. I wrote a helpful post about how to maximize your steam canning time here!

Filed Under: Can

7 Tips For Healthy Succulents

December 10, 2018 by Jenny Gomes 2 Comments

Want to know why your succulents keep dying? Need tips for healthy succulents? Read on for how to keep your succulents alive and well with this expert post.

7 Tips For Healthy Succulents

This post contains affiliate links.

Wildflowers, this is a guest post written by an expert gardener because I am a dismal gardener. You know me as a canning enthusiast, probably, and as such, most people assume that I also garden. I don’t. I struggle to keep the pot of mint (which essentially is an invasive weed, if given enough water) by my steps alive. I can, however, grow a fantastic jar of sprouts (read how here) I had so many readers ask questions about gardening I thought I needed to ask for some expert advice. My friend Emma from Fixtures and Flowers shares her best tips for keeping succulents alive and identifying why yours aren’t. Read on for 7 tips for keeping your succulents alive and thriving, Wildflowers!

Growing Succulents

Human beings have an innate desire to nurture and make things grow. This primary drive applies to loved ones, pets and yes especially to the indoor plants and flowers in the backyard garden as well.

For experienced but busy gardeners that still want to make something grow, most peers would recommend growing succulents. They always look beautiful, have a wide variety to choose from and are supposedly easy to take care of. Its common knowledge that succulents don’t need as much water as regular plants.

With everyone saying succulents are very easy to maintain, its a wonder when they end up dying for one reason or another. Killing a succulent can become a severe blow to the ego of a gardener. These are the reasons why the plant died, so all one needs to do is avoid making the same mistake twice, and the next succulents will thrive.

7 Reasons Why Your Succulents Keep Dying

Granted that succulents are supposed to be the easiest plants to care for, almost every gardener has made the mistake of nearly killing or accidentally killing their first succulents.

Overwatering

Too much water can be the death of any succulent which is often the case. When gardeners see any plant, it is pure instinct to water that plant every day. Some catch themselves about to water their succulents a day or two after they watered them and are able to stop themselves.

Most people ignore the reminders of their peers to not water succulents too frequently. Succulents are cacti, but they do look exotic and beautiful, unlike spiky cactuses.

It can be somewhat confusing so watering these eye-catching plants becomes natural and is the most notorious culprit for the death of many succulents.

There are ways on how to save overwatered succulents. The first sign of an overwatered succulent plant is falling leaves. When one notices that a slight bump to the plant results in leaves just dropping to the ground, then that means the plant has been overwatered.

The simplest and most effective way to know the right time to water a succulent is by touching the soil. If the topsoil feels damp then it’s too soon to water the plant again.

One can go a step further to check the moisture in the ground by using a stick or even a finger to push down into about an inch of the soil to review its internal moisture level. There really is no set number of days when one should water succulents.

Pro Tip: Some say every three days should be fine but sometimes even a week later the soil is still moist. It really depends on just how wet the soil is to know the right time to water.

If the succulent has already turned black, don’t worry, one can still save the plant and salvage the situation. Take a pair of shears or scissors and cut out the blackened parts. It is essential to cut the rot from the rest of the healthy plant before it spreads.

In case the succulent is also a cactus, meaning it has thorns, make sure to use gardening gloves before handling the plant.

Removing all the rot from the plant should be enough to save it. The decay is a result of too much watering. Use the tap, stick or finger method to gauge the moisture level of the soil before watering again.

Lack of Water

On the opposite end of the spectrum, some succulents die from being completely ignored. That may work if the plant is located outdoors. If the plant is positioned on an elevated level away from the garden sprinklers, the moisture in the air, morning dew will help water the plant.

If the plant is indoors then ignoring it, could prove to be a death sentence for it. When the leaves of the succulent start to develop wrinkles, then that would mean that the plant is starved for water. Life can be too hectic even to pay attention to a plant but when one notices wrinkles on their succulents make sure to give them a proper watering.

A wrinkly succulent can get back into shape after a couple of watering cycles. Be careful with over watering as that can be more damaging to the plant then under watering it.

7 Tips For Healthy Succulents

The Container Has No Drainage

Some plant containers that come with store-bought succulents don’t have any drainage holes. Drainage holes allow water to flow through the soil and out of the pot. Too much water can cause the succulent plant to rot, so it is also essential to use potting soil that drains well.

For drainage holes, it is a simple matter to create drainage holes under the container. If one is growing the succulent indoors then putting a net or screen on the bottom part of the pot will prevent soil from escaping.

Succulents need good drainage, the right soil and a container that drains well, without these the plant will end up going black, rotting and will eventually die. Using gravel in your garden can help create a soil mix that drains well.   

The Pot is Too Tiny

Some homemakers love the exotic look of succulents, so they buy some and bring them home. The container that the plants come in is usually too small for the plant to grow properly.

After a few months in the same container and when the plant itself seems to have expanded beyond the circumference of the pot then it is time to re-pot the plant.

Succulents that are watered correctly will thrive, but their growth will be limited to the space they are given. Tiny containers will prevent the plant from receiving enough nutrition.

This succulent pot isn’t tiny AND has great drainage.

7 Tips For Healthy Succulents

They Freeze

Most succulents become dormant during the winter months. They do not need to be watered during this time. Some make the mistake of watering them while they are dormant and end up killing their plant.

Watering succulents during winter will cause their roots to rot which will then spread throughout the plant. In case the plants are located outside bring them indoors to protect them from the frost.

The same thing needs to be done in case the area is experiencing a lot of rains, and the succulents are outside, bring them inside the house.

If the succulents are planted into the garden and not in containers, then one can protect them by covering them with a cloth or a plastic bag. It is best to plant them under large trees which can also protect them from the elements.

The Soil Lacks Nutrients

It is ideal to use a good quality potting mix when growing succulents indoors. Since plants derive all the nutrition they need from the surrounding soil, it is essential to provide them with what they need.

High-quality potting mix is a favorite among gardeners since the soil mixture has been optimized to grow plants to their full potential.

Add some compost, natural fertilizers, or slow release fertilizer to the soil, and the plant will be as healthy as can be. Ignore their nutritional needs, and they become prone to disease or even pests.

Try this potting soil for happy succulents! 

It is The Wrong Temperature

Succulents just like any other plant need the right dose of light and darkness. Too much of either and the plant will not grow properly. Too little of both and the succulent’s growth may become stunted.

There are many varieties of succulents, and each kind has their own set of light or shade requirements. Succulents that are green or yellow in color usually prefer the shade. While succulents that are orange or reddish prefer to bask in the sun.

For best results research the light requirements of the succulent or to be safe provide them with equal amounts of sun and shade.

If you’re not sure about the soil’s temperature, try this soil-specific thermometer! 

7 Tips For Healthy Succulents

Succulent Success

Accidentally killing a succulent is not the end of the world. One just needs to evolve and practice the methods above to maintain healthy plants. Always be aware of the correct watering cycle to avoid over or under watering the plant. Protect them from frost and stop watering during the winter. Save dying plants by cutting out the parts that have decayed.

 

About the guest author

Emma is a part-time property developer, part-time home improvements and gardening blogger at Fixtures and Flowers, and full-time Mum. Given her background, Emma has a lot of advice, tips, and tricks that she loves sharing on her blog.

 

Filed Under: Living

Mixology Matrix

November 23, 2018 by Jenny Gomes Leave a Comment

This beautiful, printable guide gives a budding, homemade cocktail mixologist a  27 recipe guide for homemade mixers and countless ways to mix them into cocktails or mocktails sure to impress and refresh. Read on for how to create farmer’s market fresh drinks quickly and easily all year round!

27 Recipe Mixology Matrix

This post may contain affiliate links.

Mixology Matrix (Shrub Recipe Ebook - Homemade Cocktails)

I started learning more about mixology when I was exploring what I call pre-preserving. Shrub making, for example, is a form of NO COOK preserving that’s done on your countertop. If that’s so exciting to you, sign up for the FREE Shrub Making Email Course here!

For me, learning (and subsequently, teaching my blog readers) about easy, delicious cocktail mixers has so little to do with alcohol, and so much more to do with confident hosting. I LOVE helping you feel ready to greet guests with glasses of beautiful drinks that were simple to make and refreshing to drink.

I wrote the 3 page Mixology Matrix to share the culinary, contemporary, and classic combinations of homemade mixers, alcohols, and more to craft drinks quickly and easily.

The Mixology Matrix can be viewed from your phone, desktop, or print.

You get 27 fresh, unique cocktail recipes on this matrix!

Imagine flavors like jalapeño-infused syrup + fresh peach puree, plus an optional shot, or fresh watermelon syrup + an herbal infusion, or a pineapple shrub plus a shot of tequila in sparkling water…these flavors are miles more interesting than what you’ll find on a grocery store shelf and so much easier than you think. You’ll be making mason jar-worthy drinks for a crowd with this easy guide.

Use this download’s log to record your own simple syrup infusions and shrub creations for the next mix-session.

The 27 Recipe Mixology Matrix is available now for just $7. Dive in now to start creating countless combinations of refreshing, thoughtful drinks for your guests (and yourself!) today!

Buy Now!

Mixology Matrix (Shrub Recipe Ebook - Homemade Cocktails)

Filed Under: Cocktails

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 22
  • Page 23
  • Page 24
  • Page 25
  • Page 26
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 66
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Categories

Follow me here, there, & everywhere!

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Search

Get The Pressure Canning Cookbook

Get 10 Free Recipes Now!

Best Chicken Coop

Footer

Get Started Pressure Canning

Shrubology Ebook

Shrubology: Refreshing Homemade Fruit and Vinegar Syrups for Cocktails
Make easy, no-cook fruit & vinegar syrups for cocktails & mocktails! This ebook shares crowd pleasing recipes and simple to understand ratios so you can make a shrub on your countertop any time- without a recipe. Dive into these Prohibition Era drinks today!

Copyright

Copyright 2019
The Domestic Wildflower
www.thedomesticwildflower.com.
All content created by Jennifer Gomes unless otherwise noted.

Copyright © 2025 · Lifestyle Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in