Home & Hearth
From scratch cooking, natural cleaning, seasonal rhythms, and the simple joy of a well-run home. Practical skills for everyday living.
10 articles
What “home and hearth” actually means here
This corner of Wild Hearth Life covers everything that happens between the garden gate and the dinner table. Sourdough on the counter. A quart of homemade chicken stock simmering on the stove. Beeswax wraps drying on the rack instead of a roll of plastic in the drawer. The kitchen herbs I cut every morning. Cleaning routines that do not require six different bottles under the sink. None of it is dramatic, none of it is fast. All of it makes the house feel more like a place where things are made instead of a place where things are stored.
Why I started cooking and cleaning from scratch
The original push was money. I was tired of buying seven dollar jars of “artisan” jam at the farmers’ market when I had black raspberries growing on the back fence. Then it was waste. The plastic-wrap drawer was always empty and the recycling bin was always full, so I learned how to make beeswax wraps for about two dollars apiece. Then it was control. I wanted to know what was actually in the all-purpose spray. Five-ingredient natural cleaning supplies turned out to handle every job a closet full of branded products had been doing. By that point I was hooked. From-scratch cooking and home production stopped being a project and started being how the kitchen ran.
Where to start if you are new to home production
If you have never made anything from scratch, the highest return on first effort is bread. A sourdough starter takes seven days to wake up and then feeds you bread for years. After that, herbs. A windowsill herb garden changes how you cook every meal because basil and thyme stop being a decision and start being something you snip on the way to the stove. After that, pick the cleaning supply that frustrates you most and replace it with the homemade version. Most readers find that within six months of working through those three projects, the kitchen and home routines look almost nothing like they did when they started, and the household budget for consumables has dropped substantially.
A note on rhythm
Home and hearth work follows the seasons. Summer is for preserving, fall for stocking the pantry, winter for soap-making and bone broth, spring for the deep clean. The seasonal homemaking guide walks through how to align household tasks with the calendar so the work feels paced instead of relentless.
The economics, briefly
People sometimes ask whether the from-scratch route actually saves money once you count time. Honest answer for our household: yes, but only on the things you make often. Sourdough is a clear win because we eat bread several times a week and a loaf costs about sixty cents in flour and salt versus six dollars at the bakery. Jam is a clear win in any year the berries are abundant and free. Soap is a wash on cost (the lye, oils, and fragrance for a year of bars roughly equals what we used to spend) but a clear win on quality and waste. Bone broth is essentially free because we already had the bones. The math does not always come out ahead — beeswax wraps are barely cheaper than the disposable plastic — but the consistency, the absence of mystery ingredients, and the meaningful drop in single-use packaging are the reasons we keep doing it.
