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Saturday, November 15, 2025

The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever

The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever

If you’re looking for a homemade treat that tastes like pure nostalgic magic, you’ve just found it. This Best Caramel Popcorn Ever recipe is everything we love about old-fashioned sweets: warm, golden caramel, crunchy kernels, and that melt-in-your-mouth buttery finish that makes it impossible to stop snacking. Whether you’re making it for a cozy movie night, packaging it up for gifts, or preparing a big bowl for a holiday party, this caramel popcorn comes out perfectly every single time.

Inspired by the classic flavors that have made caramel popcorn a beloved American favorite for more than a century, this recipe takes simple pantry staples and transforms them into something truly unforgettable. Get ready; your kitchen is about to smell like a vintage candy shop, and your friends will be begging for the recipe!

I would love to share how to make the best caramel popcorn ever! It has a gooey, yummy caramel spread over popcorn or corn pops and stays soft but not drippy. It’s an old favorite that our family loves.

I guess that’s how I would describe this caramel treat. I use it for apples in the fall, popcorn in the summer, or anytime in between! This is a family reunion favorite shared treat!

This is so easy to make, and the caramel popcorn is so soft, you will love it! It’s one of those treats you can’t stop eating—you have to love it!

The Sweet History Behind the Best Caramel Popcorn Ever

Caramel popcorn may feel like a modern comfort treat. Still, its history stretches back more than a century—and it’s a story filled with American nostalgia, innovation, and wholesome fairgrounds charm.

Early Beginnings

Popcorn itself has been enjoyed for thousands of years, but it wasn’t until the late 1800s that caramel and popcorn came together. As popcorn surged in popularity—thanks to inexpensive corn and the invention of the steam-powered popcorn machine—creative confectioners started experimenting with sweet coatings to make popcorn even more irresistible.

Enter Caramel

Caramel, made simply from sugar, butter, and heat, became the winning combination. Around the 1870s–1880s, small candy makers began selling sugar-coated popcorn clusters at fairs, markets, and traveling shows. The sticky-sweet coating kept well and traveled well, making popcorn feel like a special treat.

Cracker Jack Makes History

In 1896, Frederick and Louis Rueckheim introduced Cracker Jack, the first mass-produced caramel-coated popcorn mixed with peanuts. This single product changed American snacking forever. It was featured at the Chicago World’s Fair, embraced by baseball fans, and eventually immortalized in the song “Take Me Out to the Ball Game.”

Cracker Jack proved that caramel popcorn wasn’t just a novelty—it was a national treasure.

Homemade Caramel Popcorn Takes Off

By the mid-1900s, home cooks began making their own small-batch versions. Recipes appeared in church cookbooks, community recipe cards, and family holiday traditions. Homemade caramel popcorn became a classic for:

  • Fall festivals
  • School bake sales
  • Halloween treats
  • Holiday movie nights
  • Neighbor gifts and party bowls

Families loved its simplicity and the magical moment when the warm caramel mingled with fluffy popcorn.

Today’s Caramel Popcorn

Modern versions use richer butter, pure vanilla, and baking techniques that create the perfect crunch without being too sticky. The best caramel popcorn today stays true to its roots: warm, buttery, golden, cozy, and full of nostalgic charm.

The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever

What Makes It the BEST?

  • Perfect sweet–salt–butter balance
  • Ultra-crunchy (never soggy!)
  • Easy ingredients found in any pantry
  • Seriously addictive

Star Ingredients

  • Popcorn
  • Butter
  • Brown sugar
  • Corn syrup
  • Vanilla
  • Sweetened Condensed Milk

Why You’ll Love It

  • Ready in under an hour
  • Smells like an old-fashioned candy shop
  • Great for gifting, parties, or cozy nights in
  • Kid-approved + crowd-approved

Perfect Occasions

  • Movie nights
  • Bake sales
  • Holiday tins
  • After-school snacks
  • Fall + winter gatherings

Pro Tips

  • Bake it low + slow for an even crunch
  • Break apart while warm
  • Store airtight to keep it crisp

Homemade Caramel Popcorn

The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever

Items Needed in the Kitchen:

The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever Ingredients

  • Brown Sugar is a mixture of granulated white sugar and molasses. It’s added for flavor and to help maintain moisture. Brown sugar caramelizes as it cooks, creating a robust, rich flavor that makes this caramel truly incredible!
  • Light Corn Syrup: is a mild-tasting sweetener perfect for making caramel popcorn, candy, frosting, and sauces. It is a transparent syrup made by extracting cornstarch with added vanilla flavoring.
  • Salted or Unsalted Butter: Salted butter helps prevent the caramel from crumbling. It also prevents the sweetened condensed milk from evaporating, creating moist, soft, and fluffy caramel popcorn. However, salt is already added to ready-made prepackaged popcorn and corn pops, so it is up to you whether you use salted or unsalted butter.
  • Sweetened Condensed Milk: is milk with sugar added and most of the water removed. It has a delightful, creamy flavor and a syrupy texture.
  • Popcorn is a corn kernel that enlarges and puffs up when heated. It’s perfect for absorbing the luscious caramel in this recipe!
  • Corn Puffs are similar to popcorn but without the kernels! I use Clover Clubs Corn Puffs, which is not the well-known Kellogg’s Corn Pops cereal.

Step One: Gather Ingredients

These are the only ingredients you need. Karo Syrup does not contain High Fructose Syrup.

The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever

Step Two: Grease Two Large Bowls

The first step is to take a plastic bag with some butter to grease two large bowls. One large bowl for the popped popcorn and another for the corn puffs. These are the bowls I use: Stainless Steel Bowls

Grease two Large Bowls

PopCorn

The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever

Corn Puffs (not the cereal kind)

Corn Pops

Step Three: Bring the Brown Sugar and Corn Syrup to a boil.

On the stove, at medium-high heat, bring the brown sugar and corn syrup to a boil.

The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever

Step Four: Stir Constantly

I’ve found that if I don’t continue stirring, the mixture can get “burned” on the bottom and stick to the pan. Stirring helps ensure that all the mixture comes to a boil, not just along the edges.

Combine the Caramel Ingredients

Step Five: Bring Brown Sugar and Corn Syrup to a Boil

Continue stirring constantly over medium heat until it starts to boil. 

Bring it to a Boil

Step Six: Add Butter and Sweetened Condensed Milk

Stir constantly and add the butter pieces and sweetened condensed milk.

Add the Butter Pieces

Sweetened Condensed Milk

Add the Sweetened Condensed Milk

Step Seven: Stir Constantly

Again, you need to continue stirring. As the mixture comes to a boil, it becomes lighter in color and thickens. Try to get the boiling mixture to 220°F to 240°F before turning off the heat. I used a candy thermometer, but almost any food thermometer should work fine.

Bring Caramel to a Boil

Step Eight: Cook Until the Mixture Forms a Semi-firm Ball

Cook to a semi-firm texture. To test the texture, drop some caramel in a cup of cold water. If it can be made into a semi-firm ball, it’s ready.

Caramel Soft Ball

Step Nine: Pour Caramel Over Popcorn and Corn Puffs – Stir

Pour the caramel mixture over the buttered popcorn and the corn puffs. Then, stir quickly with a silicone spoon, ensuring the caramel covers the popcorn and corn puffs in each bowl. This will mean bringing the caramel and corn from the bottom to the top during the stirring. Be careful as you do this since the caramel is hot.

Pour Caramel Over Popcorn

You’re welcome to serve the caramel popcorn and caramel corn puffs right from the large bowls, or you can spread them out on baking sheets or more dressy serving bowls. It depends on how you’d like them to look as you serve them. I wouldn’t put the mixture on a cooling rack as you let it cool to room temperature, like you did with your cookies. It would create a bigger mess and make clean-up more difficult.

Pour The Caramel over The Corn Pops

Finished Product:

The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever

The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever Recipe

The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever
Print

Homemade Caramel Popcorn by Food Storage Moms

Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Servings 15 people
Author Linda Loosli

Ingredients

  • 4 cups of brown sugar
  • 2 cups of light Corn Syrup
  • 1 cup of salted or unsalted butter (cut into pieces)
  • 2 14-ounce cans of Sweetened Condensed Milk
  • Buttered popcorn (bag)
  • Clover Club Corn Puffs

Instructions

  • Gather all of your ingredients. Take a plastic bag with some butter on it to grease two large bowls. One for the popped popcorn and another bowl for the corn puffs.
  • Bring the brown sugar and corn syrup to a boil.
  • Stir constantly and add the butter pieces and sweetened condensed milk.
  • Continue stirring constantly over medium heat. Cook until you can get the mixture to form into a semi-firm ball. To test out the texture, drop some caramel in a cup of cold water and if it can be made into a semi-firm ball…it's ready.
  • This makes a lot of caramel so you can make a large batch of caramel popcorn. I like to buy already-popped popcorn at Harmon's grocery store, or a similar grocery store. The corn puffs package I used today is called "Corn Puffs" from a company called Clover Club (not the cereal corn pops) and a package of buttered popped popcorn. Put the popped popcorn and/or corn puffs in a very large greased/buttered bowl so you are ready to stir the caramel over the 1 pound of popcorn very quickly. You can add peanuts, pecans, and almonds for a unique flavor. Enjoy!

Can I pop my popcorn instead of buying it?

You are welcome to pop your popcorn. I like the flavor of the buttered pre-made popcorn you can buy at the store. The popcorn and the caramel in the recipe are unbeatable! Plus, it’s all about simplicity, right? One less step if the popcorn is ready to go!

How do I store the caramel popcorn?

I highly recommend storing the caramel popcorn in an airtight container. If stored correctly, it will last about 3-5 days on your countertop. If you want a warm treat, I’d put the caramel popcorn in your microwave for a short period, depending on how much you’re trying to heat up. I wouldn’t try to reheat it in your oven.

What variations could I make to this caramel popcorn recipe?

I love this caramel popcorn the way it is! If you’d like to add ingredients to vary the recipe, I recommend adding nuts—such as cashews, pecans, peanuts, almonds, or walnuts. You could also drizzle milk or white chocolate over the caramel popcorn.

You could add a teaspoon or two of vanilla extract to the caramel mixture, but I feel the flavor is perfect and doesn’t need any additional flavoring. The options are endless with this recipe!

Some like to add a little baking soda to their caramel popcorn recipes, but I don’t feel that it is necessary for this recipe. The ingredients come together nicely without it.

If you want to make Caramel Apples with the Caramel Sauce

Wash the apples and dry them thoroughly. Put the “Popsicle” sticks into the apples, then place the apples on parchment paper in the refrigerator. The caramel sticks to cold apples better than room-temperature apples.

I usually have a small hammer next to the apples because it’s the only way to get the sticks into the crisp apples.

You can roll the caramel apples in mini chocolate chips (let the caramel cool down first, or they will melt), coconut, or chopped pecans.

Expect two things to happen after you make and serve these fun treats: (1) your fingers and teeth will get sticky caramel all over them, and (2) your family will beg you to make more batches once these are quickly eaten up. Enjoy!

Cinnamon Caramel Dip

Cooking From Scratch 101

Final Word

I hope you try making my caramel popcorn recipe; please let me know if you do. It is the best caramel popcorn ever!

The taste of brown sugar, light corn syrup, butter, and sweetened condensed milk caramelize as they heat is absolutely amazing! The chewiness is the perfect blend of gooey and just the right amount of crunch from the popcorn and corn puffs! You and your guests will go back for one handful after another!

Check for unpopped popcorn kernels, particularly if you pop your corn at home. Biting into a kernel can damage your teeth.

It’s great for parties, family reunions, and neighborhood get-togethers. It is also perfect for a snack while watching movies on movie night or for giving to your neighbors as a Christmas gift. May God bless this world, Linda

The post The Best Caramel Popcorn Ever appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

Taco Soup Ready In 30 Minutes

Taco Soup With Fritos

When life gets busy (and let’s be honest… when isn’t it busy?), having a quick, comforting dinner you can rely on is a lifesaver. This Taco Soup Ready in 30 Minutes is one of those go-to meals that never disappoints. It’s hearty, budget-friendly, family-approved, and made almost entirely from pantry staples you probably have on hand.

With bold taco flavors, creamy toppings, and a simmer time of just 15 minutes, this soup brings all the warmth of a long-cooked meal without the wait. It’s the perfect weeknight dinner, meal prep recipe, or cozy Sunday bowl after church. Best of all? You can customize it endlessly!

Kitchen Tools Needed

Taco Soup Ready To Serve

Why You’ll Love This Taco Soup

  • Ready fast: on the table in 30 minutes, start to finish.
  • Made with pantry staples: no last-minute grocery run required.
  • Budget-friendly: feeds a crowd without stretching your wallet.
  • Versatile: swap meat, beans, or toppings to match your family’s taste.
  • Freezer-friendly: double the batch and freeze for busy nights ahead.

1. Ingredients

Taco Soup Ingredients

2. Brown the Meat and Onions

Taco Soup Brown Meat And Onions

3. Add Remaining Ingredients

Taco Soup Add The Other Ingredients

4. Add the Seasonings

Taco Soup Add the Seasonings

5. Bring to a Boil and Simmer

Taco Soup Simmering

6. Add Your Favorite Toppings

Taco Soup With Fritos

Taco Soup Ready In 30 Minutes

Taco Soup With Fritos
Print

Taco Soup Ready In 30 Minutes

Course Main Course
Cuisine Mexican
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings 6 people
Author Linda Loosli

Ingredients

  • 1 pound Ground beef or equivalent freeze-dried ground beef (rehydrated)
  • 1 Large onion (finely chopped)
  • 2-14.5- ounce Cans of diced tomatoes
  • 1-16- ounce Can kidney beans (undrained)
  • 1-16- ounce Can of corn (undrained)
  • 1 Package taco seasoning packet (or just throw in some chili powder and cumin as I do)
  • 1-6 ounce Can tomato paste (optional), it thickens the soup

Instructions

  • Brown the meat: In a large pot, cook the ground beef and diced onion until thoroughly browned. You will want to drain any excess grease. Just to let you know, I used freeze-dried hamburger/ground beef (rehydrated).
  • Add seasonings: Stir in the taco seasoning until the meat is well coated.
  • Pour everything in: Add the tomatoes, corn, kidney beans, and diced tomatoes.
  • Simmer: Bring the soup to a boil, then reduce the heat and simmer for 15 minutes.
  • Taste and adjust: Add salt and pepper as needed, then ladle into bowls and pile on the toppings.

The Best Toppings

The toppings make this soup fun and customizable. Try any combination of:

  • Shredded cheese
  • Sour cream
  • Avocado slices
  • Tortilla chips or strips
  • Chopped cilantro
  • Green onions
  • Fresh jalapeños
  • Lime wedges
  • Fritos

Everyone can build their own perfect bowl!

Serving Ideas

This soup is hearty enough to stand on its own, but pairs wonderfully with:

  • Warm cornbread
  • Cheese quesadillas
  • A simple garden salad
  • Flour or corn tortillas
  • Mexican rice on the side

Storing & Freezing

  • Refrigerator: Keeps 3–4 days in an airtight container.
  • Freezer: Freeze up to 3 months. Thaw overnight and reheat gently on the stove.
  • Meal prep tip: Store in individual containers for grab-and-go lunches.

Taco Soup History

Where This Beloved American Comfort Food Came From

Taco soup may taste like a dish with deep roots in traditional Mexican cooking, but its actual origins are much more modern and American. While it borrows iconic flavors inspired by Mexican and Tex-Mex cuisine, cumin, chiles, beans, and tomatoes, taco soup itself is considered a U.S. creation, developed as an easy, hearty, one-pot meal for busy families.

Born from American Home Cooking

Taco soup began appearing in American kitchens in the 1970s and 1980s, right around the time that:

  • Packaged taco seasoning became widely popular,
  • Canned beans and tomatoes became pantry staples, and
  • One-pot meals were trending with busy home cooks.

It fit perfectly into the era’s “dump-and-go” cooking style: toss everything into a pot, simmer, and dinner is done. This convenience made it a go-to choice for church cookbooks, community fundraisers, and family recipe boxes nationwide.

Tex-Mex Influence

Although the dish is American, its flavor profile was heavily inspired by Tex-Mex cuisine, which blends Mexican ingredients with American comfort food traditions. Using taco seasoning, Rotel tomatoes, beans, and corn, you can create a hearty soup with the familiar flavors of tacos, but without the hands-on assembly.

The Home Cook Touch

Unlike traditional soups passed down through generations, taco soup spread through:

  • Potlucks
  • Church gatherings
  • PTA dinners
  • Community cookbooks
  • Word of mouth

Each family made it their own, swapping in their preferred beans, meats, or toppings. This customizable nature is one of the primary reasons it has become a beloved American classic.

Modern Popularity

Today, taco soup is considered a comfort food staple, especially in:

  • Busy households
  • Meal prep routines
  • Budget-friendly meal plans
  • Fall and winter cooking
  • Easy weeknight dinners

Its simple ingredients, bold flavors, and short cooking time keep it at the top of the “quick meals” list, mainly because it freezes beautifully and feeds a crowd with little effort.

A More Detailed History of Taco Soup

How a Simple, Flavorful Soup Became an American Pantry Staple

Taco soup often feels like it should have roots deep in Mexican culinary tradition. Still, its story is actually a fascinating blend of American convenience cooking, Tex-Mex flavor evolution, and 20th-century food industry innovations. While it celebrates Mexican-inspired ingredients, taco soup itself is a distinctly American invention, shaped by changing tastes and the rise of easy, affordable home cooking.

Early Foundations: Tex-Mex Takes Root

To understand taco soup, you first have to understand Tex-Mex cuisine, which began to solidify in the late 1800s and early 1900s in Texas communities where Mexican and American cultures blended.

Key Tex-Mex staples — chili powder, cumin-heavy spice blends, canned chili, and hearty meat-and-bean dishes — set the stage for what would eventually become taco soup.
But at this point, there was no taco soup yet — just the flavors that inspired it.

1940s–1960s: The Rise of Packaged Convenience Foods

Taco soup would not have been possible without mid-century ingredient innovations:

  • Canned beans became widely available and inexpensive.
  • Canned tomatoes with chiles (like Rotel) hit shelves in the 1940s.
  • Packaged seasoning mixes exploded in popularity.
  • Supermarkets expanded across the U.S., changing how families shopped and cooked.

These ingredients allowed home cooks to build bold Tex-Mex flavors quickly — without sourcing fresh chiles, spices, or slow-cooked meats.

1962: Taco Bell and the Americanization of Taco Flavors

When Taco Bell opened in 1962, tacos became mainstream in a way the U.S. had never seen.
This brought taco flavors into everyday American households — especially the classic combination we now associate with taco soup:

  • seasoned ground beef
  • tomatoes
  • beans
  • shredded cheese
  • crunchy corn elements

American families were becoming more comfortable with Mexican-inspired flavors, yet they still leaned heavily on convenience foods.

1970s–1980s: The Birth of Taco Soup

This is when taco soup, as we know it, first appears.

During these decades:

  • “Dump-and-stir” recipes became trendy in church cookbooks and homemaking magazines.
  • Ground beef dishes dominated family dinners because they were affordable.
  • One-pot meals were heavily promoted for busy working parents.
  • Packaged taco seasoning became a pantry staple across the country.

Taco soup fit perfectly into this cultural moment:
simple ingredients + quick assembly + familiar taco flavors = instant popularity.

It first circulated regionally in the South and Midwest, often appearing under names like:

  • Taco Soup
  • Tex-Mex Soup
  • Santa Fe Soup
  • Fiesta Soup

By the late 1980s, taco soup had cemented itself as a comforting, crowd-pleasing dish at potlucks, PTA events, and church gatherings.

1990s–2000s: Community Cookbooks Spread the Recipe

If you browse old spiral-bound church cookbooks from the 90s or early 2000s, you’ll almost always find multiple versions of taco soup.

These local cookbooks helped the recipe spread nationwide, mainly because:

  • Ingredients were inexpensive
  • The recipe doubled easily
  • Everyone could customize it
  • It fed large families affordably

This was also the era when taco soup became a freezer-friendly staple for meal-prepping moms, college students, and busy households.

2010–Present: Internet Recipes Make Taco Soup Go Viral

With the rise of food blogs, Pinterest, and Instagram, taco soup became even more popular.
Why? Because it’s:

  • Quick
  • Colorful
  • Budget-friendly
  • Perfect for cozy fall content
  • Easy to photograph and share

Most modern recipes still use the same core components that made the 1970s version famous:
Ground beef, beans, tomatoes, taco seasoning, and broth.

So… Is Taco Soup Mexican?

Not exactly.
It’s an American comfort dish with Mexican-inspired flavor profiles.

Traditional Mexican soups, like pozole, caldo de res, or sopa de tortilla, don’t resemble taco soup.
But the use of chiles, tomatoes, and corn echoes Mexican culinary traditions filtered through the American pantry.

In short:
Taco soup is a Tex-Mex-inspired American invention, born from convenience, flavor fusion, and home-cooking creativity.

Instant Pot® Beef and Bean Taco Bowls

Quick & Easy To Make Slow Cooker Mexican Soup

Final Thoughts

This Taco Soup Ready in 30 Minutes recipe is one of those comforting, dependable recipes you’ll make again and again. It’s fast, flavorful, and endlessly adaptable; the kind of dinner that makes you feel like you’ve got everything under control, even on your busiest days. Let me know if you try this soup, it’s one of our family’s favorites! May God bless this world, Linda

The post Taco Soup Ready In 30 Minutes appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

The A to Z Guide to Mealworm Farming

Chickens are omnivores, and as omnivores, they eat a wide variety of foods. Lots of plant matter, yes, but also animal protein. One favorite food that all chooks love is insects, and among insects, there is nothing that will get your birds excited like a juicy, wriggling mealworm. They’re an amazing source of protein, packed ... Read more

The A to Z Guide to Mealworm Farming can be read in full at New Life On A Homestead- Be sure to check it out!



from New Life On A Homestead

Friday, November 14, 2025

13 Creative Uses for Olive Oil

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

13 Creative Uses for Olive Oil

Olive oil is one of those must-have staples for every homesteader. It truly stands alone in terms of its nutritional benefits and in terms of its many other uses around your home and property. With its high concentration of monounsaturated fatty acids, which can help boost your “good” cholesterol (HDL) and lower your “bad” cholesterol (LDL), olive oil is also in rich in antioxidants that help fight inflammation in the body.

The cultivation of olives – and their precious oil – began around 5000 B.C. on Crete and its surrounding islands. Ancient Greeks considered the olive tree as a gift from the gods and, as a result, they incorporated its use into many religious rituals.

The ancient writer Homer, author of the epic poems The Iliad and The Odyssey, referred to olive oil as “liquid gold.” Others felt the same way – in the 6th and 7th centuries B.C., the Greek law punished the crime of cutting down olive trees with execution.

During the Roman Empire, olive oil became a trading commodity that spread throughout the known world.

Although ancient cultures used olive oil for cooking, they also discovered many other purposes for it, including everything from use for skin care and as a lamp oil. As you simplify your lifestyle and look for multiple purposes for the items in your possession, it is time to give olive oil another look.

Here are 13 uses for olive oil on the homestead that you may not have considered.

1. Door or Cabinet Hinge Lubricant

If you usually reach for WD-40 when you have a squeaky hinge, you might be interested in a hydrocarbon-free alternative. All natural olive oil can be used as an effective lubricant.

Simply wipe a squeaky hinge with a cotton ball that you have moistened with olive oil. Another option is to fill a spray bottle with olive oil and then lightly spray the hinge. Your squeaks will be a thing of the past.

2. Sticky Substance Remover

Have you done battle with stickers, paint, sap, chewing gum or other substances that stubbornly adhere to your belongings or to your hands? Next time, try scrubbing the sticky area with an olive oil and salt mixture.

For example, for sticky hands, rub one teaspoon of olive oil and one teaspoon of salt into your dry hands, working the mixture through your fingers and your palms. Rinse well with water.

3. Free a Zipper

Doing battle with a stuck zipper can be a real time waster and can even be embarrassing. Instead of pulling needlessly, apply a little olive oil to a cotton swab and then dab the teeth that are stuck. After you let the oil sit for a few minutes, you should be able to move the zipper easily.

4. Wood Cleaner and Furniture Polish

Olive oil is an effective cleaner for wood and wood furniture. You can create a natural, non-toxic furniture polish by mixing a teaspoon of olive oil with one-fourth cup lemon juice.

5. Leather Cleaner

Similarly, olive oil can be an effective leather cleaner for your leather clothing, belts, and shoes. By applying a thin layer of olive oil to your leather goods, you can preserve their suppleness and good looks longer. Just be sure to wipe away any dust before applying the olive oil.

6. Lice Remedy

You can combat a lice infestation naturally with olive oil. Here’s how:

  • Pour a tablespoon olive oil onto dry hair. Next, using a nit comb, remove any visible lice. Cover the head with a shower cap and leave hair untouched for about seven hours.
  • Now, comb a tablespoon of apple cider vinegar into the hair. Cover with a shower cap again and leave the mixture on overnight.
  • Next morning, shampoo hair and remove any remaining eggs with a nit comb.

7. Earache Remedy

Did you know that olive oil can provide soothing, natural relief for an earache? Simply place two to three drops of slightly warmed olive oil into the painful ear.

8. Sore Throat Relief

You can also help heal a painful throat simply by swallowing one tablespoon of olive oil. The soothing oil coats your mouth and your throat, easing soreness and reducing your urge to cough. Another related tip? Olive oil can help reduce snoring.

9. Hairball Prevention

Do you have cats? They are great as pets and as a means of decreasing the mice and rat population around your homestead. However, cats can be prone to hairballs.

By mixing in one-fourth teaspoon of olive oil into your cat’s food on a daily basis, you can decrease the likelihood of it getting hairballs. An added bonus is that olive oil helps your kitty’s coat look shiny.

10. Lamp Fuel

Olive oil works well as an emergency lamp fuel. It burns easily, and it does not produce the same amount of smoke as other oils.

Making an olive oil lamp is easy. To hold the oil, you can use anything from a used vegetable can to a clean glass jar to a hollowed out orange peel for a vessel.

Next, you need a wick. You can use a piece of cotton cut from old clothing or a strip from a mop head. Other options are paper towels or even fiberglass insulation. As you would with any open flame, use caution around an olive oil lamp. Here's a video that demonstrates how to make a simple olive oil lamp.

11. Improving Skin Health

Finally, olive oil is great for your skin and contains no potentially harmful chemicals. In fact, it is gentle enough for your baby’s tender skin.

Now that you know some of the many alternative uses for it, you will want to keep a bottle of olive oil or two in your pantry at all times.

12. Prevent Rust on Tools

Rub a thin layer of olive oil on metal tools like garden shears, knives, and hand tools. This will protect them from rust. It forms a barrier that repels moisture and extends the life of your gear, especially in humid or damp environments. Just wipe off any dirt or water first before applying.

13. Calm Minor Skin Irritations and Bug Bites

Olive oil can help reduce itching and inflammation caused by bug bites, mild rashes, or sunburn. Gently massage a small amount onto the affected area. Its anti-inflammatory and moisturizing properties help soothe discomfort and promote healing.

You May Also Like:

The post 13 Creative Uses for Olive Oil appeared first on Homestead Survival Site.



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Can Water Expire?

If you want a quick answer, here it is: no, water does not expire. But if you think that means your emergency stash is always safe to drink, you are one bad blackout away from learning the hard way. Water is eternal. Containers are not. The moment you bottle it, seal it, store it or […]

The post Can Water Expire? appeared first on Ask a Prepper.



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