Nothing warms up the holiday season quite like a blazing fire. One environmentally conscious way to bring warmth to your home is by creating logs using upcycled coffee grounds. These coffee logs have been shown to burn hotter and longer than traditional wooden logs, do not require any felling of trees, and emit fewer greenhouse gases than burning traditional wooden logs. If that is not incentive enough, you can create them by using ingredients you already have in your home. Pre-used wax from old candles, leftover dried coffee grounds from your morning cup, and even reused take-out chopsticks from your evening food delivery combine to create your very own eco-friendly fireplace log.
What you will need
• One 9 X 5 inch baking pan
• Approximately 7.5 ounces of candle wax (or 2.5 12 X 1-inch pillar candles)
• 1 – 2 Cups of molasses
• 6 – 20 Heaping tablespoons of dry coffee grounds
• Stirrer (an old whisk, paint stirrer or disposable chopsticks will do nicely)
Directions
1) Preheat your oven to 260F.
2) Combine molasses and candle wax in your bread pan. The amount of molasses used varies by reference recipe, with the consensus being to make sure you have a generous portion coating the bottom of your pan. I used a full 2 cups, and there was an excess of molasses. I believe 1.5 cups would be sufficient. The molasses helps to bind the log together.
3) Heat the mixture for 30 minutes at 260F. At the same time place a separate metal tray containing your coffee grounds in the oven. This will ensure that any remaining moisture is removed from your coffee grounds. Once the wax is completely melted, remove the pan from the oven and make certain your coffee grounds are completely dry. Add the grounds to the mixture.
4) Mix in enough grounds to obtain a sludge-like consistency (see picture below). Depending on the type of wax, how much wax, and the amount of molasses you used the quantity of grounds needed will vary. I used 2 cups of molasses and 7.5 ounces of soy wax. Using a traditional tablespoon as my measuring device, I needed 20 heaping tablespoons of grounds. It is of the utmost importance that your grounds are completely dry and that your mixture is thoroughly and well blended with a glossy, sludge-like consistency before setting the log. Adjust the amount of grounds used to obtain this mold-able form.
5) Cover the pan with aluminum foil and press firmly on the top of your log. Remove the foil and freeze your log for at least one hour.
6) Once cooled, cut around the edges of the pan to remove the log. I used a sharp knife and then turned the pan over, firmly tapping the underside with a hammer. My log came out easily.
7) Once you have removed your log from the pan, it is ready to burn. Flip it over so that the “glossy side” is facing up and place it in your fireplace. You can use a fire starter or the kindling of your choice to ignite the log. This log burned for a little less than an hour, and the smoke was minimal, the house smelled amazing — like molasses coffee cookies.
With thanks to:
https://www.ehow.com/how_4866384_make-log-using-coffee-grounds.html
https://www.instructables.com/id/How-to-make-a-FireLog/
Very clever – I may just try this! Thank you for sharing. Thank you too for stopping by my blog and for the follow. 🙂
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