Grilled Hobo Packets are a great way to use garden/seasonal veggies such as green beans, zucchini, onions, peppers, potatoes…and whatever else you want to throw in!

Guest post from Brigette Shevy
We Love these Easy Hobo Packets
My husband’s family first introduced me to this easy, economical, and versatile meal. We cook it on the grill, but it can also be cooked over a campfire (or in the oven in colder months).
I love the fact that my kids can help put these together, “creating” their own personal meal – which in turn seems to help all those healthy veggies become magically more appealing to little people (or maybe it’s that I serve this with ketchup — something that seems to make everything better at our house!).
After the individual packets are made, I like to write the child’s initial on the outside of their foil packet so I don’t need to keep track of which one belongs to which person.
There are endless possibilities and combinations with this meal. You can even make it vegetarian by leaving out the meat.
I almost always have the ingredients for this on hand, so it doesn’t require advance planning or preparation on my part. It’s hearty and filling enough to be a meal-in-one, although it pairs fabulously with grilled bread or a simple fruit salad.

Ingredients for Hobo Packets
- Smoked Sausage/Kielbasa, cut into bite-sized chunks
- Potatoes (I use one small/medium potato per person/packet.)
- Carrots
- Other vegetables (onions, cabbage, green beans, peppers, zucchini, mushrooms, etc.)
- Butter or olive oil
- Salt and pepper
- Other seasonings of your choice (Possible seasoning options: garlic salt, seasoned salt, fresh minced garlic, onion or garlic powder, and/or dried herbs, etc.)
- Aluminum foil (about 18-inches long per packet)
- Ice Cubes (2 per packet)
- Ketchup and/or BBQ sauce for serving
How to Make Hobo Packets
1. Preheat grill to medium.
2. Scrub and chop the vegetables (the smaller the pieces, the faster they will cook). I don’t peel the potatoes, but you can if you prefer.
3. Pile sausage, potatoes, carrots, and other vegetables as desired in the center of each piece of foil.

4. Dot with butter (or drizzle with oil) and season generously with salt, pepper, and other seasonings as desired.
5. Add two ice cubes on top.
6. Bring long ends of foil together and fold up several times. Repeat with the sides so that packet is sealed.

7. Grill over medium heat (or medium-low, depending on your grill) for 15 minutes.
8. Flip over and grill another 15 minutes.
9. Check potatoes for desired tenderness and continue grilling if necessary. They will probably be done at this point, but it will depend on your grill and how thick you’ve cut the vegetables.
10. Remove packets from grill, dump onto plates, and sprinkle with shredded cheddar cheese.
11. Serve with ketchup or barbecue sauce if desired.


Grilled Hobo Packets
Ingredients
- Smoked Sausage/Kielbasa cut into bite-sized chunks
- Potatoes I use one small/medium potato per person/packet.
- Carrots
- Other vegetables onions, cabbage, green beans, peppers, zucchini, mushrooms, etc.
- Butter or olive oil
- Salt and pepper
- Seasonings of your choice onion or garlic powder, and/or dried herbs, etc.
- Aluminum foil about 18-inches long per packet
- Ice Cubes 2 per packet
- Ketchup and/or BBQ sauce for serving
Instructions
- Preheat grill to medium.
- Scrub and chop the vegetables.
- Pile sausage, potatoes, carrots, and other vegetables as desired in the center of each piece of foil.
- Dot with butter (or drizzle with oil) and season generously with salt, pepper, and other seasonings as desired.
- Add two ice cubes on top.
- Bring long ends of foil together and fold up several times. Repeat with the sides so that packet is sealed.
- Grill over medium heat (or medium-low, depending on your grill) for 15 minutes.
- Flip over and grill another 15 minutes.
- Check potatoes for desired tenderness and continue grilling if necessary. They will probably be done at this point, but it will depend on your grill and how thick you’ve cut the vegetables.
- Remove packets from grill, dump onto plates, and sprinkle with shredded cheddar cheese.
- Serve with ketchup or barbecue sauce if desired.
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Brigette is a full-time wife and mother who is blessed with three amazing bundles of energy (ages 5, 3, and 1). She enjoys music, experimenting in the kitchen, homeschooling her children, finding great deals, long-distance running, and anything chocolate.
Get rid of fruit flies with vinegar

According to Mavis from One Hundred Dollars a Month, you can use Apple Cider Vinegar to get rid of fruit flies. Has anyone tried this before? I’d love to hear if it’s worked for you!
Do It Yourself: Chrysanthemum Mirrors

SuzysSitcom.com shows you how to make beautiful chrysanthemum mirrors.
Do you have a fun and frugal DIY idea to share? I’d love to hear about it! Read the submission guidelines and submit it here.
This week’s menu
Breakfasts
Oatmeal, Cereal and/or Banana Oatmeal Smoothies — since we have swimming every morning, we’re keeping breakfasts really simple at our house right now
Lunches
Lunch at church function — brought a big tossed salad
Snack-y lunch
Avocado Egg Salad, carrot sticks, apple slices
Cheese Quesadillas, sliced veggies, fruit
Peanut Butter & Jelly Sandwiches from the freezer, veggies, apple slices
Leftovers x 2Snacks
Fruit/Veggies
No Bake Mocha Chocolate Chip Cookies
Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup Baked Oatmeal
No Bake Energy BitesDinners
Dinner with extended family — brought a big tossed salad
Sausage & Veggie Stovetop Hash, Blueberry Cobbler in the Crockpot
Steak, Scalloped Potatoes in the Crockpot, Fruit Salad
Quinoa, Tomato, and Avocado Salad, Grilled Chicken, Fruit Salad
Lasagna on the Stovetop, Homemade Rolls in the Crockpot, steamed broccoli, fruit
Dinner with friends — bringing a relish tray
Dinner with extended family
What’s on your menu this week? Share details and/or your link to your menu plan in the comments.
10 goals for this week

I think this might be a first: I actually crossed everything off my goal list for last week! I’m not sure what it was except for the fact that I did really make my goals a priority, we stayed home more, and no one was sick! 🙂
Last week’s goals:
Family/Mothering Goals
1. Finish reading Wilma Rudolph: Olympic Runner aloud to the children.
2. Continue with swimming lessons for all three children.Personal Goals
3. Finish reading Beyond Bath Time plus one other book.
4. Sleep for at least 7.5 to 8 hours every night.
5. Continue on with the Choosing Gratitude 30-Day Devotional.
6. Exercise at least five times.7. Finish listening to Stop Acting Rich.
Homemaking Goals
8. Organize my top dresser drawer.
9. Try at least two new recipes.Business Goals
10. Edit and submit an article for publication on RooMag.com.
Here are my 10 goals for this week:
Family/Mothering Goals
1. Start and finish reading Stuart Little aloud to the children.
2. Continue with swimming lessons for all three children.
3. Write a love note to Jesse.
Personal Goals
4. Start and finish reading The Simplicity of Homeschooling, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, and The Mom Walk.
5. Sleep for at least 7.5 to 8 hours every night.
6. Exercise at least five times.
Homemaking Goals
7. Start working on planning out our Fall Schedule.
8. Try at least two new recipes.
Business Goals
9. Finish editing my new ebook (more details coming soon!)
10. Projects finished for LitFuse Publicity campaign.
How did you do on last week’s goals? What are your goals for this week? I’d love to have you share your progress on last week’s goals and your goals for this coming week in the comments. Of, if you’ve blogged about it, leave your direct link below. Let’s cheer each other on to live purposeful and productive lives!
You can download a free customizable weekly goal-planning sheet here.
Gluten-Free Cinnamon Biscuits in the Crockpot

For those of you who were asking, Frugal Farm Wife converted my Crockpot Cinnamon Biscuits recipe to be gluten-free! Check out her Gluten-Free Crockpot Cinnamon Biscuits Recipe here.
Losing Power, Gaining Focus

Guest post from Jenn of Hang On, Baby, We’re Almost… Somewhere.
When a storm blew through the DC area and left millions without power the week before the 4th of July, we were among the millions. I am thankful that, for us, the outage ended relatively quickly — in 72 hours. Still, in three hot summer days, we learned some lessons that I think speak to my budget-aware side.
1. Without an Air Conditioner or Electricity, Our Day Revolved Around the Sun
Our awareness grew of the time of day, position of the sun, and maximizing light and air flow while minimizing heat. We all pitched in to manage our environment, raising or lowering shades, opening or closing doors and windows, re-icing the food we kept in coolers.
The day seemed more purposeful, less “Where does the time go?” than when we rely on a thermostat to control our temperature. I am using some of these techniques now to try to lower our electric bill.
2. Cold Showers Aren’t As Bad As I Thought!
Even in the hottest part of summer, I’ve always taken hot showers. I’m cold-natured, I’ve thought for years, and I need hot showers to stay comfortable.
Turns out, I live in a chilly climate, albeit an electrically-powered one. You plop me down outside for three straight days of weather in the upper 90’s (mid-30’s in Celsius), and I like a cool shower as much as the next gal!
3. Storm Shades Really Do Work
We discovered that the pulley-run storm shades that are on the windows of our home are one of the best ways to manage heat flow in the house. We loved them already because we can make our bedrooms almost completely dark even in broad daylight, but they made an enormous difference while fighting the heat.
Installing them here in the U.S. would most likely be expensive (we’re blessed that the home we rent already had them installed!), but similar methods can be adopted using things like blackout curtains, window film, and wooden blinds.
4. We Survived Just Fine Without TV.
My kids don’t enjoy TV as much as I thought they did, but my 10-year-old son does love the computer as much as we thought he did.
We talked more and were outside more, but we didn’t have to resort to major outings to manage to pass our time together. We just did simpler things, mostly at home.
All that focus on being kind to each other and building good relationships sure paid off when we didn’t have the distractions of TV, the Internet, video games, cooking, ironing, and laundry. That realization was the most valuable of all these lessons.
Jenn LeBow is a native Texan; lover of Jesus; happy wife of Honey, a Diplomatic Security Special Agent; mom of four (mostly) delightful kids: Cartwheel, 21; Einstein, 10; Blossom, 8; and Ladybug, 3; debt-free; and a voracious reader, whose appetite for books is reluctantly subjugated to other duties in her life. She blogs at Hang On, Baby, We’re Almost… Somewhere.
Free printable Oven-Free Menu
15 Ways to Have More Energy (Part 5)

We’ve been talking about ways to have more energy this week. If you missed the first two posts in this series, read them here.
13. Choose Gratitude
Your attitude can make or break your situation. You can choose to focus on what you don’t have or you can choose to be thankful for what you do have.
There is always, always, always something to be thankful for. When you have a thankful, grateful spirit, you’ll automatically have more joy, zest for life, and energy. It’s the natural outflow of gratitude. And not only will you have more energy, but I promise you’ll just plain enjoy and appreciate life a lot more if you choose gratitude.
Struggling to be thankful in the midst of hard circumstances? Try writing down a list of your blessings. As I’ve found, when you start writing down your blessings, you just may have trouble stopping!
14. Don’t Compare Yourself to Others
Don’t compare yourself to others. It’s never productive and it’s a great way to waste great amounts of time and energy.
I recently learned this lesson in a very personal way. Here’s a snippet from my post
It hit me anew just how easy it is to want what we don’t have–better hair, better decorating skills, a better personality, more creativity, more spunk… there’s always someone who it seems we’d like to trade places with because they have what we want.
But trading places with someone wouldn’t fix anything; we’d just inherit a new set of things we wish we could change. No one has it altogether. Everyone has struggles and difficulties.
Comparison only leads to discontentment.
We can’t change who we are, but we can make the most of our situation. We can’t choose the personality we are born with, but we can choose to be thankful–even in the midst of difficulty.
And we can choose to be intentional and purposeful in how we live our lives so that we make the most of all that we’ve been given instead of wishing we were someone else.
15. Wrap Your Life Around Things That Matter
When you spend your life dedicated to what really matters, you’ll have so much more energy and excitement for waking up and living each day. I try to ask myself often, “What will matter in 25 years from now?” And then I seek to wrap my life and invest my days into those things.
Live your life with outstretched arms. The more you live for others, the more you step outside your comfort zone, the more you give freely and generously of your resources and time, the more you’ll wake up feeling blessed, motivated, and inspired to life to the fullest!
At the end of my life, I don’t want to look back with a lot of regrets and wistful thinking. I want to give everything I have to this one life I have — because I only get one shot at life!
photo courtesy of BigStock
Olympic Rings Fruit Pizza
In celebration of the Summer Olympics beginning today, we did some fun activities today:

We used chocolate-covered sunflower seeds I got at the health food store to make Olympic Rings.

Silas had a little bit of trouble lining up the seeds with the lines, so I ended up just having him match the colors and put them in the circles.


The kids were looking at Pinterest with me the other day and saw a picture for Olympic Rings Fruit Pizza and begged if we could make it.




While our Olympic Rings Fruit Pizza didn’t look quite as great as the original recipe, the kids had so much fun making it and were so excited to show Jesse when he got home from work!
OVER-SPENDING EVERY SINGLE MONTH?Grab these FREE Budgeting Sheets!
Click here to download!Freebies In My Mailbox

I got some great freebies this past week!
Free Schick Hydro Razor
Free Arm & Hammer Sensitive Toothpaste sample
Free Tide Pods
Free Febreze Set & Refresh Air Freshener
Free Tea Forte samples
Free Tampax sample pack
Free Escada Perfume sample
What freebies have arrived in your mailbox this week?
By the way, if you want to start getting great freebies in your mailbox, just start signing up for the freebies I post every day that interest you. Within 4-6 weeks, your mailbox will start filling up with great freebies!
Reader Tip: How to Avoid Garage Sale Pitfalls

Jessica emailed in the following tip:
Summer is in full swing and like many bargain hunters, I love a good garage sale. It’s like a treasure hunt. Looking though one box or pile after another, searching for that one needed item.
Garage sales, however, can have their downsides as well. Here are three pitfalls to avoid when going to a garage sale:
1. Don’t buy what you don’t need.
Just because it’s cheap doesn’t mean you need it. Spending a $1 on a set of curtains may be a great deal but if you have three sets of curtains at home and have no need for another why waste the money.
The best way to garage sale is to have a list of items that you need and are looking for. I also try to make a list of my children’s clothing sizes so I can purchase a size up of off season clothing they will need in the future.
Also remember to travel with a tape measure this will keep you from buying that item you just knew would fit but turns out to be too big for your space.
2. Try before you buy.
If you are going to buy electronics, kitchen appliances, yard equipment, or anything that requires electricity or batteries, make sure you try before you buy. In my experience garage sale hosts are happy to demo an item for you to show you all the bells and whistles.
Make sure you run it through all the cycles and ask if the owner has had any problems with the item. I may just be blessed but I have never had a bad experience buying any items such as these at a garage sale most people are honest with the things they sell but you always want to do your due diligence.
3. Watch your mileage.
When you go out hunting for your treasures have a plan. Look through your local sale papers, check Craigslist, and look online for other garage sale postings in your area. Most will have a list of items that they are selling and this will help you decided on a route before you leave the house.
Driving around on a Friday or Saturday morning just searching for signs or going all the way across town for a sale that turns out to be nothing can be hard on your gas tank and eat up your garage sale savings.
Garage sales can be a lot of fun and a great way to stretch the family budget. Just remember to set some simple guidelines for yourself before you start and you can really watch the savings add up.
15 Ways to Have More Energy (Part 4)

We’ve been talking about ways to have more energy this week. If you missed the first two posts in this series, read them here.
10. Laugh Often
It’s well been said, “Laughter is the best medicine.” It’s amazing how smiling, laughing, and seeing the humorous side of life can just make life more enjoyable — and give you much more zest for life!
We laugh a lot at our house. We laugh at ourselves, we laugh at each other, and we sometimes laugh for seemingly no reason at all — or at least we forgot what it was that we were first laughing about. 🙂
Yes, sometimes we’re just a bit on the crazy side around here — like when Jesse and I decided to create a good night cheer for the kids before bed the other night. We were all pretty much rolling on the floor after our attempts at putting together a cheer with chant, jumps, hand motions, and all. 😉 However, we believe life is meant to be savored — and sometimes being silly just makes it a whole lot more fun!
I’m always on the lookout for a funny story to share with Jesse from something the children say or do. If I find some funny photo or saying on Pinterest, I’ll email it to Jesse or save it to show him when he comes home. And we also love to watch comedy clips or funny movies as a family.
Look for the humor in life — and you’ll probably start to find it just about everywhere!
11. Clear the Clutter
Whether it’s paper clutter, an overloaded email inbox, or lots of stuff in your house that you don’t love and use, clutter can drain you, bog you down, and zap your energy and creativity.
Everyone has a different level of clutter tolerance, but if you’re tripping over excess stuff at your house and struggling to find stuff in piles of unopened mail, chances are your home could use a little purging.
Going through my house from top to bottom twice a year and doing a complete clutter overhaul is something that has been extremely effective in helping us keep a handle on clutter. I also find it helpful to ask myself five questions about what I own:
::Do I need this item?
::Do I use this item on a regular basis?
::Do I like this item?
::Is this item taking up space I don’t have?
::Could I bless someone else with this item?
12. Stop Worrying
We can waste precious amounts of time, energy, and thought worrying. And how much of the time do the things we worry about actual come to pass?
Instead of letting yourself just go round and round fretting over what probably never will be, redirect that energy into something positive. Anytime I catch myself worrying, I try to instead pour that energy and time into something more productive: reading, writing, exercising, listening to an audiobook, cleaning, singing, or serving someone else. Most of the time, I quickly forget about what I was worrying about!
As a Christian, I also have made a commitment to pray instead of worry. When I start mulling over something and being concerned or fearful over what might be, I try to remember to refocus my thoughts on what I know to be true: God is in control and He will give me grace for whatever situation comes my way. And then I pray and commit that situation over to Him — and I get busy doing something else that’s much more important and productive than worrying.

…To be continued tomorrow.
photo courtesy of BigStock
Crockpot Cinnamon Biscuits
These slow cooker cinnamon biscuits taste just as good as cinnamon rolls without all the extra time and effort. Plus, since they bake in a slow cooker, you won’t heat up your kitchen!

I recently came across a recipe slow cooker “Cinnamon Rolls” and I was very intrigued. So naturally, I had to try it for myself.
But in typical Crystal fashion, I had to tweak the recipe a bit, too. 🙂
Spoiler Alert — We LOVED them!
I was really happy with how they turned out.
They were yummy, easy to make, and with the alterations I made, they are good for you, too.
Best of all, we had hot biscuits without heating up the house!
Now I’m all inspired to try making other breads in the crockpot!
While the original recipe calls these Cinnamon Rolls, since they aren’t rolled up in any manner, I changed the name of the recipe to Cinnamon Biscuits, as that seemed better suited.
Ingredients for Slow Cooker Cinnamon Biscuits
- 1 recipe of your favorite biscuit dough (I used Homemade Whole-Wheat Baking Mix mixed with enough milk to make it into a biscuit dough.)
- 1/4 cup butter melted
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1/2 cup raw sugar (you could also use brown sugar or regular sugar)
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
How to Make Cinnamon Biscuits in the Slow Cooker
1. Thoroughly grease the crockpot with butter or shortening.
2. In a small bowl, melt butter in the microwave and stir vanilla into it.
3. In another small bowl, combine sugar and cinnamon.
4. Roll out biscuit dough and cut into biscuits with a biscuit cutter.
5. Dip biscuits into melted butter mixture, then into cinnamon sugar mixture. Put in crockpot in a single layer.
6. Cover the crockpot with a tea towel or paper towel (to reduce condensation) and put lid on.
7. Turn crockpot on low and bake biscuits for 2-3 hours until done.
You can glaze with a powdered sugar & milk glaze, if you’d like. Or you can leave them unglazed like I did. I thought they were plenty sweet without the glaze!

I let Silas make his own biscuits with some of the leftover dough!



Slow Cooker Cinnamon Biscuits
Ingredients
- 1 recipe of your favorite biscuit dough (see notes below)
- 1/4 cup butter melted
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1/2 cup raw sugar or brown sugar
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
Instructions
- Thoroughly grease the crockpot with butter or shortening.
- In a small bowl, melt butter in the microwave and stir vanilla into it.
- In another small bowl, combine sugar and cinnamon.
- Roll out biscuit dough and cut into biscuits with a biscuit cutter.
- Dip biscuits into melted butter mixture, then into cinnamon sugar mixture. Put in crockpot in a single layer.
- Cover the crockpot with a tea towel or paper towel (to reduce condensation) and put lid on.
- Turn crockpot on low and bake biscuits for 2-3 hours until done.
- You can glaze with a powdered sugar & milk glaze, if you’d like. Or you can leave them unglazed like I did. I thought they were plenty sweet without the glaze!
Notes
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Today’s shopping trips: The health food store & Walgreens

We went to the health food store and Walgreens today. Here were our purchases:
The Health Food Store Shopping Trip
Ezekiel Sprouted Tortillas –$3.99
Raw Cheddar Cheese from a local farm — $5.93
Quinoa — $2.42
Pears — $0.99/lb. — $1.69 total
Chocolate Covered Sunflower Seeds (we’re going to use these for some Olympics-themed activities — I was looking for an alternative to M&Ms and these fit the bill!) — $6.70Total with tax: $22.24
I’ve never purchased quinoa (can you believe it?!) and have been wanting to try it. I was surprised at the price tag on it from the bulk bins, so I’m going to be on the hunt for a better deal on it since I’ve heard it’s really good and good for you. If you have a recommendation for where to get a good deal on it, I’d love to hear!

Walgreens Shopping Trip
10 Memo/Composition books — $0.20 each with coupon
5 Highlighters — $0.19 each with in-ad coupon
Glue — $0.39
Jumbo Glue Stick — $0.39
Erasers — $0.39
2 packages Sticky Page Markers –$0.39 each
2 packages of Wexford Dividers — $0.39
3 Clear School Boxes — $0.49 each with in-ad coupon (2 not shown as they were snagged to be put to use by two eager kiddos as soon as we got home!)
Total with tax : $8.21


Do you have a fun and frugal DIY idea to share? I’d love to hear about it! Read the submission guidelines and submit it 



