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Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Cleaning with vinegar

The other weapon in the non-electric homemaker's arsenal is distilled (also called white) vinegar. This stuff works for so many purposes that it's hard to see how it could have been supplanted by the far more expensive, far more toxic array of commercial preparations (marketing strikes again, but that's a topic for another day).

In the kitchen:
  • Soak a cloth in vinegar and wipe the inside and outside of cloudy glassware to get rid of water deposits. Rinse well before using again, of course!

  • Make a paste with vinegar and salt to clean brass and copper pots.

  • Clean white deposits out of tea and coffee pots by letting vinegar sit overnight in them.

  • Wipe down your counters and stove with vinegar after washing the dishes. This will kill germs on the counters and get any last remaining oil or grease off the stove.

  • Many people grew up washing their windows with a mixture of vinegar and warm water, and wiping them dry with old sheets of newspaper. It still works, and you can clean wood stove doors, oven doors, and pretty much any other glass the same way.

  • Add one cup of vinegar to a gallon of warm water to clean no-wax floors. This will help remove stuck on food and dirt without taking off the shiny finish.

  • Clean wooden cutting boards with vinegar (don't let them soak in it, of course).

  • To get rid of fruit flies, put an inch of vinegar in a canning jar and punch small holes in the lid. Set on the counter near where you have a fruit fly problem.

  • Vinegar may help to discourage ants. Spray vinegar on countertops, around door and window sills, and any place you see them coming in. I say may help, because my ants paid no attention to it at all (they just walked around it, or found other ways to get in). But I've seen the suggestion in so many places that it evidently does work for some people. One thing I'm sure will work is to wash off any ant trails you find with undiluted vinegar. Ants leave chemical trails to help them find their way back to food and water sources, and to guide other members of their nest to your kitchen or bathroom. Wiping them away with a more strongly-scented liquid like vinegar keeps the ants from finding their way back. It may not prevent ant problems altogether, but anything that slows down an infestation is good.
In the bathroom:
  • To clean a clogged showerhead, unscrew it from the pipe and put it in a bowl filled with enough vinegar to cover the holes. Leave overnight or until all the holes are clear. If you can't remove the showerhead, you may be able to tie a plastic bag filled with vinegar over it and secure with a rubber band.

  • Pour vinegar into the toilet bowl (one or two cups, depending on bowl size), and let sit overnight to soften hard water deposits and generally disinfect and deodorize the toilet.

  • Clean a yucky shower door track with vinegar and an old toothbrush.

  • Clean grout between bathroom tiles the same way.

  • Wipe away mold and other bathroom grime with a solution of equal parts of vinegar and warm water. The vinegar will help keep mold from returning.

All around the house:
  • Clean natural wood panelling with a solution of 1/2 cup vinegar, 1/4 cup olive oil and 2 cups of warm water. This will remove fingerprints and crayon marks

  • Clean sticky scissors by wiping the blades with vinegar to dissolve tape residue and leave the blades clean and shiny.

  • Wash children's toys with a mixture of soapy water and vinegar.

  • Clean leather and vinyl with a cloth soaked in vinegar.

  • Set a dish of vinegar in the sickroom to reduce odors.
This is a sampling of the ways vinegar can be used for cleaning. For additional ideas, try:

Vinegar Tips
The New Homemaker
Cleaning with Vinegar at About.com

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posted by Liz @ 8:20 AM     |


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