Used Coffee Grounds

Coffee Grounds Have a Lot of Uses After You've Made Coffee with Them

Everybody drinks coffee. Well, maybe not everybody, but enough of us so that wet, cold, used coffee grounds are a daily throw-away for most households. That's a shame, because coffee grounds have a lot of uses! I mean, good uses, not just some kindergarten
craft medium or compost material (although you can do both of those things with them).

Out of doors

To remove bugs and tar from your vehicle, use a soft cloth and work up a lather with your regular washing solution. Add a tablespoon of coffee grounds to the cloth and use that to scrub the gunk off.

Dry coffee grounds can be burned in a charcoal pit to help heat it up. It burns hotter than charcoal, so be prepared to watch food more closely if you use it.

Coffee grounds make a very good addition to a compost pile or to work right into the top inch or so of soil in the garden and leave them there to compost.

If you leave them in a heap on top of the ground, they'll discourage mites and small bugs from attacking your plants. They'll also provide a slow release of nitrogen and, if spread thickly enough, keep down weeds and keep moisture in the soil.

Used coffee grounds are said to be especially effective against ants of all kinds, even fire ants. It's also said that if you put a ring of coffee grounds around a tree or plant, it will keep ants away from them.

If you have a worm bed, or if you'd like to encourage worms in your garden, coffee grounds are a great addition. If you have to transport worms, keep them happy in a container of moist coffee grounds.

In doors

Spread used coffee grounds on a cookie sheet to dry, then tie them up in a pantyhose leg or something similar and hang them in the closet to absorb odors, or push it under your car seat to rid your car of unpleasant odors.

They make a good, gentle abrasive for cleaning gunky things like ovens and grills, stinky ash trays, greasy pans and so on. Mix just a little dish detergent and scrub away.

Deodorize your hands while cooking by gently scrubbing them with used coffee grounds. Keep a shaker container filled with dried, used grounds within easy reach.

 
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Interesting! I should try putting my grounds on the fire ant beds since nothing else seems to get rid of them

Posted on 10/15/2008 at 10:10:00 AM

Maybe I'll start putting my daily coffee grounds in with the potted plants since I don't have anyplace for compost.

Posted on 03/27/2008 at 11:03:46 PM

I had no idea...

Posted on 09/23/2007 at 7:09:00 AM

I hit "enter" and my comment went through with only an initial... ;)

Posted on 09/05/2007 at 4:09:00 PM

I hope your mom likes it, Dawn.

Posted on 09/05/2007 at 4:09:00 PM

Thanks for the information. I just pasted it on to my mom because she keeps a garden every year.

Posted on 09/05/2007 at 2:09:00 PM

Thanks, Carol. :)

Posted on 07/15/2007 at 8:07:00 AM

Resourceful, you are!

Posted on 07/15/2007 at 7:07:00 AM

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