Tips for Minimizing Cleanup after a Cookout

 

Do you look forward to cooking out with your friends and family but dread the inevitable cleanup that comes afterward? Cooking out can feel like a big responsibility. It’s not just about cooking the meat just right and making sure everything stays fresh and sanitary, but there’s a lot of responsibility left to you after the cookout is finished.

 

Who’s going to tidy up the patio, clean up all the dishes, pick up the trash scattered around the yard, and take care of the dirt that was tracked into the house? If these are the questions that loom in your mind when you’re thinking about cooking out, we have a few tips to help keep things tidy.

 

Set Out a Trash Can

If you constantly find trash in your yard or on the patio after a cookout, that probably frustrates you to no end. There’s a simple solution that will help handle most of that so you don’t have to spend a long time picking up wrappers and bottles afterwards. Place a trash can in the cookout area in a highly visible spot. It can be in the central area or just off to the side but close to where people will be congregating. This makes it easy for people to deposit their trash and helps them avoid temptation to just leave trash wherever they feel like it. If you don’t have a spare trash can to put out, you can always hang a garbage bag on your patio railing inside the grill, or even on a low tree branch (if you are having the cookout in the yard).

 

Consider Locking Up the Pets

You love your pets, but they may not love you having a lot of company over. All the people that are attending your cookout may scare your pets or cause them to behave poorly. This can lead to a lot of messes and spills that will need to be cleaned up. John with Queens House Keeping says “As much as your pets may not like being locked up, it could help with the cleanup later on”. Your pets may be much happier being out of the way and away from strangers. Some cats and dogs are very good around company and love all the attention, but for those that aren’t, getting them out of the way may be a good idea.

 

Close Off Your Home

Everyone has different rules about their cookouts, but if you don’t have any rules laid down, people may take advantage of your home. You may find people moving in and out of the house from the yard or patio if you keep the doors open or even unlocked. They may want to use your restroom, find drink refills, look for snacks, or find a more comfortable place to sit. If you want to save yourself a lot of cleanup and not feel like you need to hire a cleaning service after the cookout is over, then it’s a good idea to shut and lock the doors of your home once guests start arriving. You can always unlock the doors as needed to let people use the restroom, but you’ll likely be surprised how your guests can be perfectly happy without using your home once it’s off limits.

 

Set Up Dishes to Soak

Do you feel like it takes forever to clean off the cookout dishes when you’re done with your get together? All that stuck on food can be difficult to clean, but you can set up a sink of soapy water to soak the dirty dishes in right from the start. As soon as you make one of your dishes dirty and you’re done using it, it can go straight into the sink of soapy water. If you run out of space, you can always fill a large bowl or basin with soapy water and soak the dishes there. This will save you a lot of work later on, so you won’t have to spend so much time and effort scrubbing.

 

Clean as You Go

It’s a good idea to keep a wet cloth and other cleaning implements close by as you cook out. That way, you can wipe down surfaces as they become dirty. You should keep a broom, dustpan, and mop nearby to handle any spills as they happen. This keeps trashing to bring from spreading around and helps you get a handle on spills immediately before they become a larger problem. Keeping these items out on the patio or somewhere outside also helps you avoid walking through the house and tracking dirt through there. You’ll save a lot of time on clean up by planning ahead like this.

 

Give Guests Duties

If you’re realistic about the effort that goes into a cookout, you may realize that it’s difficult for you to clean up everything by yourself. Some of your guests may be very close friends of yours who would love to help out in order to make things easier on you. You can ask them ahead of time if they’d be willing to handle a few cleaning duties, like taking out the trash, putting away leftovers, washing dishes, or other small jobs that will have your cookout cleaned up quickly at the end. If you can get several people helping you, you won’t spend nearly as long as cleaning up, and you will be able to rest shortly afterwards.

 

Cook Some Things Up ahead of Time

The final tip I want to share with you is that you should try to do some of the cooking before the day of the cookout. Foods like potato salad, baked beans, casseroles, and your desserts could easily be made up a day or two in advance and still taste fresh on the day of the cooking. This will give you less cooking work to do on that day and fewer dishes to wash as well.

Cooking out doesn’t have to feel like a lot of stress can’t if you take the time to plan ahead and make things easier on yourself.

 

3 Super Simple Tips From Marie Kondo’s ‘Tidying Up’ That Will Transform Your Space

If you haven’t watched the show “Tidying Up” on Netflix or read the best-selling book The Life-Changing Magic Of Tidying Up, we highly recommend that you do so. Author and lifestyle coach Marie Kondo is an expert at taking homes with seemingly insurmountable messes and transforming them into a neat and minimalistic space.

While there are some steps in her lauded KonMari method that might not be realistic for someone with a hectic day-to-day routine, Marie also offers a number of super simple tips that anyone can use to make their apartment or house less cluttered and more enjoyable.

Here are three of those easy steps that we’ve actually tried ourselves.

1. Discard first and then organize.

Effective tidying involves only two essential actions: discarding and deciding where to keep things,” Kondo writes in her bestseller. “Of the two, discarding must come first.”

First things first, the purge. This step is one of the most life-changing, but also the most difficult. Getting rid of stuff you’ve had for long periods of time can be hard, especially when it comes to clothing, but you have to be tough with yourself. If you haven’t worn that tube top since the early 2000s, you’re probably not going to be wearing it again anytime soon. This step must always come prior to organizing because it’s much easier to do so when you have fewer belongings to sort and why spend time organizing something you’ll ultimately get rid of? Don’t make unnecessary work for yourself, you’ll just end up getting burnt out and give up.

2. Sort your belongings by category, not by location in your home.

@MarieKondo

Kondo says, “the root of the problem lies in the fact that people often store the same type of item in more than one place.”

When you start the process of tidying up, it might seem easier/more logical to section the process off by room. However, Kondo suggests focusing on organizing your belongings by category, not location. The reason being, that we often don’t realize how many multiples of things we have and end up storing the same things in more than one place. For example, say you start organizing books in your bedroom before tackling the bookcase in the living room where the books are intended to stay. Wouldn’t it make more sense to organize the bookshelf, as well as discard/donate books you don’t want, and then go throughout your house and collect books from places they aren’t meant to be so that you can make more space in those rooms and fill up your bookshelf?

3. Only keep belongings that spark joy for you.

Lastly, and most importantly, only keep the belongings that spark joy for you. Kondo says to “take each item in one’s hand and ask: ‘Does this spark joy?’ If it does, keep it. If not, dispose of it.”

This might seem like a silly practice at first, I mean let’s be real none of my bras spark joy for me, but I should probably still keep them. That being said, don’t kick it ’til you try it. If you can’t seem to find the “joy” in the sense that Kondo practices, maybe try holding each object and weighing its usefulness as well as how often you see it. Is this parka useful when I live in Texas? Probably not. When was the last time I saw it? A ski trip 10 years ago. K, time to donate you.

We know that starting the process of tidying up can be intimidating and overwhelming, but take it slow and don’t be afraid to let things go.

Trust us, you’ll feel so much better.

H/T Insider

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