Showing posts with label office refreshments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label office refreshments. Show all posts

Thursday, 9 June 2011

Seven Unusual Uses for Coffee

Ahh. A lovely cup of joe in the morning to revive your body ready for the day ahead. In my opinion, there really is nothing better than that to get your day started.
But, coffee isn’t just a wonderful stimulant – I’ve used the excess beans and grounds from our home coffee machine for a variety of things and here’s my Top 7 Unusual Uses for your Coffee!

TOP 7 UNUSUAL USES FOR COFFEE

7. GETTING RID OF ANTS

Two years ago we had an anthill pop up in our garden, threatening to destroy my lovely hard work – by simply pouring coffee grounds into the hill and in a circle around it, the ants moved on. Ants purportedly HATE black coffee!


6. REMOVING STRONG ODOURS

Ever had food go out of date while still in the refrigerator, or have a power outage and be left with odourific defrosted food in your freezer, and be left with that horrible, horrible smell that takes hours to remove? FEAR NO MORE. Simply pour used OR new ground coffee into a bowl or two and leave overnight. Coffee works as a great odour neutraliser.


5. GIVE YOURSELF A FACIAL
Instead of buying those rather expensive mud packs from the supermarket, dry out your used coffee grounds and use them as a facial cleanser; grounds are great for skin dermabrasion.


4. GIVE YOUR ASHTRAY A CLEAN

Surprisingly coffee is not a bad degreaser for those tough-to-clean items. Try using ground coffee to clean out any ashtrays or, in general, greasy surfaces – the grounds have good abrasive properties and leave behind a nice smell!


3. USE IT ON YOUR PLANTS

It’s not really a secret but ground coffee beans help enrich soil to aid in plant growth – instead of chucking those used grounds away, sprinkle them on the soil of your hydrangeas! No milk and sugar though, please!


2. AS A NATURAL HAIR COLOURANT!

Henna and black coffee work well together to cover up grey hairs, and your bonce will look a lovely Henna red! Just don’t forget to not boil the mixture! Henna and black coffee can also be combined as a safe temporary tattoo!


1. RUB THEM ON YOUR DOG!

After you give your pet a well-deserved bath, rub the grounds into his/her coat. Coffee grounds are purported to repel fleas rather effectively!


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Finding new ways to resuse coffee is a fun and green method to help our environment, can you think of any more? Post your ideas in the comment section below.

Until next time,

David Cocozza

Wednesday, 6 April 2011

Bottled Water Coolers – A Hygiene Horror Story?

People often talk about “water cooler gossip”, an image that formed part of mainstream media culture in the late part of the 20th Century – I have no doubt this is where bottled water coolers became popular, and as of 2011, there are estimated to be over 400,000 bottled water coolers in the UK alone using up an estimated 300 million litres of water each year.1
A clear healthy living message for all of us from the youngest to the oldest is to drink a sufficient amount of water every day and the last 12 years have seen a significant growth and having clean drinking water, readily available in just a few metres walk, is something that we now take for granted.

On the back of this, the assumption is being made that because water is good for us, the water from water coolers is safe.

Unfortunately this may not always be the case.
Back in 2007, Consumer Focus Scotland undertook a report and published some very startling discoveries. Of a random testing of 35 samples taken from bottled water coolers for microbiological examination, a staggering 40% failed to meet standards set for water purity by the European Drinking Water Directive.2
Horrifyingly enough, one sample even gave a positive enumeration of E. faecalis. This indicates contamination from a faecal source, possibly due to cross-contamination from a user with poor personal hygiene.

Inherently, bottled water coolers are designed to be unhygienic.
Think about it.
·         A leisure centre user fills up their empty bottle using the water cooler, with the neck of the bottle touching the tap – saliva, bacteria, germs and who knows what else are coming into contact with the tap.
·         An office worker does not wash his hands after using the toilet and decides to get a drink, by touching the tap he is contaminating the cooler.
I am often asked to source and implement water solutions, and there are some fantastic alternatives to bottled water coolers on the market now. In fact, I have declared to never sell a bottled water cooler again.
For those of you that cannot currently move away from bottled coolers, general best-practice advice and something I pass onto all my clients with water coolers on premises is they should ensure that;

1. The exterior of the coolers, including the dispensing taps, are cleaned at least once a week;
2. Bottled water coolers are cleaned internally every three months;
3. POU water coolers have their filters changed every six months;
4. Water cooler users are made aware of their responsibility to use units hygienically, possibly using pictorial advice on or near the coolers themselves.

Over the next 5 years, “bag in box” and like-for-like systems will experience a huge growth in popularity. Could this decade spell the end for bottled water coolers in the UK?

For our health's sake, I sincerely hope so.

Regards,

David Cocozza

Footnotes
1 – Source: BWCA Conference 2011