Most DIY instructions I read use 100% cotton fabric to make the wrap. The reason is, if you use stretchable material like cut outs from your old t-shirt, the beeswax may not able to coat the surface fully or the wax may crack once you stretch the finished product.
I read from the instruction posted at Apartment Therapy that “the best options for fabric are something about the thickness of a bed sheet with a very tight weave”. So you can consider using your used bedsheet to make beeswax wrap.
From that article I discovered how partially waxed wraps can be saved by using the beeswax beads or pellets and parchment paper method. You can sprinkle a small amount of wax beads on those areas that did not get waxed, place a parchment paper over un-waxed side of the fabric and iron over it.
So, now I know, there are actually other ways to making beeswax wrap. You can also learn the methods and how to use your wraps by watching this video.
Another discovery I made is that you can even make Beeless Vegan Food Wraps! You use carnauba wax or candelilla wax flakes with jojoba oil as shown in this video.
Wednesday, February 5, 2020
Tuesday, February 4, 2020
How To Chop Every Vegetable
Before we start on that, let us learn how to handle the knives first.
Now let us learn how to slice (nearly) every vegetable at the market from Amy Chaplin.
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