The Best Upcycled and New Jars For Your Farmhouse Pantry

Chances are you don’t have your Dream Pantry set up yet, and neither do I. But, it’s absolutely the RIGHT time to start planning and collecting the types of containers to use. Then you can design your pantry around the functionality you want to have!  There are two basic types of jars I have, upcycled and purchased.  I will show you where I find the best of both worlds.

And, yeah, I have a jar for that.

*This post may contain affiliate links. Please see full disclosure at the end of the post.

Most of the jars that I am using currently live on top of our sideboard.  The big jars inside the sideboard (which will eventually become a baking station) will remain accessible for cooking when the sideboard becomes the base for the island/breakfast table nook.  But, the rest of the jars will live in the pantry or in the glass and metal cabinets (that are not yet actually hung on the wall).  By the way, I am loving the sideboard, and it is going to work fantastic for what I want.

 

The Best Upcycled and New Jars For Your Farmhouse Pantry
The Best Upcycled and New Jars For Your Farmhouse Pantry: Shown Inside Restoration Hardware’s 20th C. English Brass Bar Pull Glass 4-Door Sideboard in Waxed Black

 

As you can see, my kitchen renovation is started-ish, but I’m betting it will be years before we put in the time and effort to get it finished.  In the meantime, we’re collecting pieces for the kitchen, and the metal cabinets I found are a house for my found and upcycled jars.  Freebies are my favorite.  So, where do I get all these free jars?  They’re from things we bought and used, and now I can reuse them for all kinds of stuff.

 

The Best Upcycled and New Jars For Your Farmhouse Pantry
The Best Upcycled and New Jars For Your Farmhouse Pantry: Upcycled Jars Shown in Aurelle Home Gunmetal Iron Tall Cabinet

 

Classico Pasta Sauce is our favorite, and it comes in an intentionally reusable mason jar. We use our sauce, soak jars overnight, pull the label off, and then run them through the dishwasher.  We use them for all kinds of stuff, nuts, etc.  And honestly, I find having them out and visible makes for healthier snack choices for kids AND adults.

The other jars are from salsas, mushrooms, olives etc, and I LOVE the assorted sizes.

If you’re impatient to start your jar collection, you can get reasonable Mason Jar Sets on Amazon but, I recommend waiting and getting the free ones as you use food jars!

 

The Best Upcycled and New Jars For Your Farmhouse Pantry
The Best Upcycled and New Jars For Your Farmhouse Pantry, Upcycled Classico Jars As Nut Storage

 

But, what about those GIANT jars, you ask?  They’re my FAVORITE, which is why I have so many.  What you can’t see is that they have a rubber seal on the lid that keeps them air tight and perfect for all your dried items in the pantry (dried beans, assorted noodles, quinoa, flour, dog biscuits, etc).

These are Anchor Hocking jars:  the smaller one is the 1.5 Gallon Anchor Hocking Montana Jar and the larger ones are 2.5 Gallon Anchor Hocking Montana Glass Jar.  I love these, hence the collection. I found them quite a bit cheaper on Amazon than any other sites which is awesome because the jar websites usually charge for shipping (which I don’t like doing because I’m spoiled by my Amazon Prime).

And, guess what, I’ve gotten almost all of them FREE  because I use my Amazon card points!

 

The Best Upcycled and New Jars For Your Farmhouse Pantry
The Best Upcycled and New Jars For Your Farmhouse Pantry, Upcycled Classico and Salsa Jars and Anchor Hocking Montana Jars

 

Do you have any favorite jars for upcycling?

Thanks for hanging out and check out other DIY and project ideas on our blog.  Cheers!

 

*Legal stuff:

I am honest about my experiences with different products and write because I enjoy it.  I do however, have the opportunity to earn money for my writing, also.

Slavetodiy.com is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.  Amazon offers a small commission on products sold through their affiliate links.  Each of your purchases via our Amazon affiliation links supports our cause at no additional cost to you.

If a blogger links to an Amazon product (with a special code for affiliates embedded in the link), and a reader places an item in their “shopping cart” through that link within 24 hours of clicking the link, the blogger gets a small percentage of the sale.  Amazon links are not “pay per click.”  If you click on the product link and stay around Amazon and purchase something else, however, I will get a commission on that sale.

Slavetodiy.com is also a VigLink affiliate advertiser which works similarly.

6 Household Items You Can Stop Spending Money On Right Now

Every month I get a delivery from Amazon of stuff I need to reorder. Every month. One month it occurred to me: Do I really need all this disposable stuff? The answer is easy. No. So I found easy, eco friendly substitutions for almost all of the items, and started saving upwards of $100 a month.

Every little step we take trying to be more frugal, and to throw fewer things away, ultimately saves us money and helps the environment just a little bit. It’s a matter of changing our minds, our habits, and teaching our children to do the same.

*This post may contain affiliate links. Please see full disclosure at the end of the post.

Here are the items I dropped from my monthly purchase list and what I replaced them with (most replacements are a one time purchase):

1) Dryer Sheets- $5.98 a month

Replace with wool dryer balls and essential oils.  That’s a one time purchase of like eight bucks for the dryer balls, and you can stop buying boxes of dryer sheets.  Less packaging waste, cardboard, money saved!  Plus I get to use all those essential oils I bought and haven’t used, so now I’m in there mixing scents like a boss. Boom.

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Wool dryer balls and essential oils replace disposable dryer sheets like a dream

Speaking of essential oils, we also stopped buying plug-in scents, because we already have the essential oils and diffusers.  Free up your outlets and get a healthier option with WAY less waste and cost by using an essential oils diffuser/humidifier.

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Lighted diffuser/humidifier replaces disposable plug in scents

2) Paper towels (or drastically reduce their use)- $38.84 a month (big families use a lot of these!!!)

At the dining table: Replace with cloth napkins.  Dude, you’re doing laundry, anyway.  My laundry is always moving, so throwing these in with an existing load costs you nothing (plus, my kids think we’re all fancy now eating with cloth napkins at dinner). They’re inexpensive and hold up well to frequent washing.  I went with black for everyday use to best hide stains.

For kitchen clean-up: Replace with bar towels.  I get that there are some things you don’t want to put into your washing machine.  I’m not cleaning up dog mess or cat vomit with these, but I figured out that most messes I was using paper towels to clean up, I could totally use bar towels (and they can be washed quickly with existing loads just like the cloth napkins).  These are rough, inexpensive flour sack towels and I love them.

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White flour sack towels for kitchen clean up

3) Ziploc bags $9.48 a month, gallon size $19.20 a month

Left-overs and refridgerator items: Replace with Glass Pyrex Containers.  I have two sets of these and they are one of my favorite things in the kitchen.  YOU DON’T NEED THOSE BAGGIES!  (I cringe thinking of how many baggies I’ve used over the years that should’ve gone into a covered glass container).  I love that all my little leftovers are super easy to see and they stack nicely in the fridge.  I also send them to work with Rainman and the containers don’t get ruined by spaghetti sauce because they’re glass.

For pantry storage (dried goods) I use salvaged (re-used) jars.

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My temporary pantry with Anchor Hocking Jars for large storage and upcycled jars for dried goods

For freezer bags: Replace with reusable silicone bags or other containers.  It doesn’t take any more effort to use these for pre-prepped freezer meals, and it’s so worth it.  And I don’t have to buy the disposable bags anymore.  This was one of the things I worried about MOST with transitioning away from baggies: RE-storing my meat, premade meals, soups, etc in the freezer, but they work GREAT, and seal well also.  The baggy below is the medium sized silicone bag with frozen tomoto soup stored in it. I have never had a leak and they are top rack dishwasher safe.

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Re-usable silicone bags for freezer and fridge storage

Below is a collection of my jars ready to hold odds and ends that would normally go in plastic baggies.  We use them for everything from chocolate chips, to nuts, to leftover sauces.

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Up-cycled jars for pantry dried goods

4) Plastic bags for your produce at the grocery store and grocery shopping bags

These are the WORST!  They can’t be recycled!  Replace with green produce bags, you can bring them to the store with you to get your produce: win, win. They really, for real make your produce last longer. That saves you even more money.  And you don’t have to throw those non-recyclable produce bags in the trash.

Disposable bags are easily replaced with buying Reusable Grocery Bags one time (many areas are banning single use plastic bags altogether).  These are inexpensive, washable, and foldable so they store nicely.

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Green produce bags REALLY work

5) Disposable Spaghetti Sauce Containers

Replace with Classico Sauces… But, dude. Did you know that Classico Sauces are intentionally made in reusable containers? It is actually our favorite sauce anyway, but I keep all of the containers and use them for storing nuts, etc. Why buy containers when these are basically free?  After we use them, I soak the label off, run them through the dishwasher, and voila, free storage container.  By the way, this is one of the items that I buy in Prime Pantry that is quite a bit cheaper than my local grocery store.

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Re-usable Classico Jars

In other news, my son just got home from school and busted me taking pictures of spaghetti sauce.

By the way, I definitely think that re-claimed glass jars make for Pinterest-worthy pantries and they’re FREE.

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One of the most important parts of the DIY process for us is trying to find ways to reuse items and make our home as self-sustaining as possible.  It’s a long journey but I’m happy to share so we can work toward helping our wallets and our planet!

For more on where to find free jars and the best oversized pantry jars for all your dried goods, check out our post on The Best Upcycled and New Jars For Your Farmhouse Pantry!

As a bonus to helping out your wallet, one of the most important steps in reducing your household waste (less carbon going to the landfill), is composting.  My compost container sits right in front of my chopping board, and it gets emptied into it’s bigger partner that lives outside when it’s full. And what do I get? Free fertilizer!  This one is super cool because it has charcoal filters that prevent the smell from escaping, which is fairly important.

6 Household Items You Can Stop Spending Money On Right Now
6 Household Items You Can Stop Spending Money On Right Now

I have two of these, different brands, but I’m pretty sure they’re all the same manufacturer:

And the big compost bin for outside (I like mine enclosed so it doesn’t stink up the backyard but a bin that you stir occasionally works just as well):

 

Cheers to taking steps toward saving money and creating a sustainable household! Check out more of our DIY, project, and inspiration posts over on our blog.  Cheers!

*Legal stuff:

I am honest about my experiences with different products and write because I enjoy it.  I do however, have the opportunity to earn money for my writing, also.

Slavetodiy.com is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.  Amazon offers a small commission on products sold through their affiliate links.  Each of your purchases via our Amazon affiliation links supports our cause at no additional cost to you.

If a blogger links to an Amazon product (with a special code for affiliates embedded in the link), and a reader places an item in their “shopping cart” through that link within 24 hours of clicking the link, the blogger gets a small percentage of the sale.  Amazon links are not “pay per click.”  If you click on the product link and stay around Amazon and purchase something else, however, I will get a commission on that sale.

Slavetodiy.com is also a VigLink affiliate advertiser which works similarly.