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Clever Uses for Old Coffee Beans

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Use coffee as a garnish.

Old coffee beans can be a wonderful addition to your home. Place some on the bottom of the glass, and then place a candle on top for a beautiful look. You can also make artwork and crafts to decorate your home or give it to your friends who like coffee. The world’s largest coffee bean mosaic uses one million coffee beans. While you don’t have to make such a big deal, you enjoy seeing what you can make yourself.

Use it as a dye.

Grind these old coffee beans and grind them to make a natural color. You can control your color results by making strong or weak coffee. Strong coffee will produce dark brown, while weak coffee will produce light brown. After making your coffee, put it in a pot and bring it to a boil. Throw it into your fabric and shake it to make sure it’s completely coated. Let the cloth sit for at least an hour. Let it sit longer to get a darker color. Take the cloth out and rinse it immediately with cold water until the water is clear. To dye, soak the cloth in a cold water bath with vinegar for ten minutes, and then use your cloth!

Use As a Meat Tenderizer

Do you like a nice, tender steak or a wonderful juicy chicken? You can use your old coffee beans to soften your flesh. Cooked coffee is full of enzymes. These enzymes make the meat softer when marinated. Use your old beans to make a strong coffee pot. Once it is cool enough, marinate your meat in it for 24 hours. You can also add coffee grounds to your rubbing to make your meat caramelized sweet and delicious. This is especially true when you grind coffee and have a barbecue.

Clean your dishes.

Do you have pots and pans with dried or burnt guns? Coffee grounds can be used to help remove it and make your pan look as good as new. Just put some wet coffee grounds on the pot or pan, then rub it as usual. The natural hardness of the coffee grounds will help clear the gum and leave you with a clean pan.

Home and garden use for old coffee beans

There is probably no gardener on earth who is unaware of the benefits of using old coffee grounds in the garden as a nutrient. In fact, if someone asks you, “Can you use expired coffee grounds in the garden?” Or “Can you fertilize coffee grounds?” You know they are new gardeners. In fact, coffee grounds provide many benefits to the garden, such as providing organic matter while helping to aerate the soil, which is slightly acidic and is ideal for roses and flowers in the nightshade family of plants.

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Ways to reuse Coffee beans 6

In addition, there are other uses for indoor coffee. One thing many people do is try to burn coffee to get rid of pets, garlic, and other unpleasant odors that you don’t want to stay in your kitchen for long. On the other hand, you don’t want your pet to run around in the kitchen, so if you want to know, “Does the coffee field stop the dogs?” Maybe the answer would be better for your garden. Dogs naturally hate the bitter, acidic smell, so one way to prevent Fido from digging up their newly planted roses is to sprinkle a lot of soil with bitter orange in the soil around the plant.

Health and Beauty

There is something else that most people are not aware of. Did you know that there are many uses for unhealthy coffee for health and beauty? Unused coffee grounds make a wonderful and completely natural exfoliating technique. You can safely use coffee grounds on your face which not only helps to remove dead skin cells but is also used effectively to treat natural acne.

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Then there are the rumors that coffee stops your growth. This is an old question and if you really want to know if coffee stops you from growing, see what Harvard Health has to say about it. Apparently, there is no scientifically supported data on this, but it seems that this misunderstanding came from osteoporosis. It has been rumored that coffee causes osteoporosis, a condition that can lead to a decrease in height. However, the two are not related. Coffee does not cause osteoporosis or short stature, simple and straightforward. If you can’t believe everything at Harvard, who can you trust?

Getting Back to Basics

So, now that you have a few ideas running around in your head, let’s get back to basics on how to use coffee beans for more ‘normal’ uses. Once you’ve gotten out the old coffee bean grinder, you can use it in your garden or home as a natural bug repellent or cover a few beans with melted chocolate. Some people love those yummy coffee nibs they find online or in gourmet coffee shops. In an effort to duplicate them at a lesser cost, they take out the old fondant pot and melt a bit of chocolate to dip the beans in. Unfortunately, those coffee nibs are not coffee beans. They are cacao beans and that, in itself, is why they taste like chocolate-covered coffee beans. Yes, there are such things as chocolate-covered coffee beans, but they are not coffee nibs.

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Some Random Thoughts

When seeking clever uses for old coffee beans, some people think that maybe they can use them to get a bit high. If you are among those who can question you get high off coffee beans, the answer isn’t as simple as you’d probably like. In the first place, you can’t grind and smoke coffee beans like you would a cigarette. You wouldn’t like the taste! Besides, it doesn’t work that way. However, you can learn how to make coffee with whole beans that are very, very strong. It’s the caffeine content that gives you that extra rush of energy. Then there are those who make a DIY used coffee grounds concoction that they eat or drink for the extra caffeine they don’t want to waste.

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