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"NEW!
IMPROVED! WITH THE CLEANING ACTION OF
BLEACH AND THE FRESH SCENT OF BAKED
APPLES,
IT'S....."
Ah, the miracle cleaners!
If you look at the coupon sections of your
Sunday paper, cleaners are big business.
There are always plenty of coupons for
cleaners, all claiming to miraculously
clean everything. We often see products
advertised now that brag about how they
have the scent of a rose and the "added
power of baking soda" (or other basic
cleaners, like bleach). Why not just use
the baking soda? Why buy something
expensive, over hyped and prepackaged when
the baking soda is sitting in your kitchen
cabinet?
Take a look at your favorite cleaners -
what's in them that makes them really work
well? I had to hit myself over the head
for this one! My favorite cleaner is
Clorox Cleanup with Bleach. Why am I not
just trying the bleach by itself? Why do I
still feel like I need the miracle
cleaner? Sometimes it is hard to change
when we are conditioned by commercials.
They tell us we need these miracle
cleaners that are strong enough to kill
microbes on Mars but still have a "lemony
fresh scent." I think the key to any
change is to make the transition
gradually. In this case, you do that by
replacing your store bought cleaners as
they run out and ignoring those
commercials!
The whole topic of natural cleaners,
homemade cleaners and natural homemaking
has been the topic of many books. I cannot
claim to be an expert, as I too am slowly
replacing my commercial cleaners (bought
with double coupons and free after
rebate!) with homemade cleaners. What I
found while researching this article is
that there is a ton of information out
there!
Here are some homemade solutions and uses
for things you may already have in your
home. I have tried some of them. Not all
of them will work "miraculously", but they
will probably get the job done. Please let
me know how the homemade cleaners you try
work out for you! And be sure to send in
your favorite homemade formulas that I may
have left out.
Some safety
tips
1.
NEVER
MIX BLEACH AND AMMONIA
TOGETHER!This
combination is deadly! Also, never mix
products together that contain bleach with
products that contain ammonia. This
includes dishwasher detergent (contains
bleach). I would even go as far as storing
them in different places just as a
precaution.
2. ALWAYS check labels on products
before combining ANYTHING. It's not worth
making these cleaners if you wind up in
the hospital or the morgue, so PLEASE
BE CAREFUL!
3. KEEP ALL CLEANERS AWAY FROM
KIDS - even though these are
environmentally friendly, they are still
not safe for children , so please keep
these away from your kids.
General Uses
For:
Ammonia
- good grease cutter, wax stripper, and
window cleaner.
NEVER
MIX WITH
BLEACH!
Bleach
- great for whitening anything, removing
molds and mildews, and general cleaning.
Best used diluted with water.
DO
NOT MIX BLEACH WITH VINEGAR, TOILET BOWL
CLEANER, OR
AMMONIA.
The combination of bleach with any of
these substances produces a toxic gas
which can be hazardous. We want to save
money without jeopardizing our lives!
Baking Soda - Extremely versatile,
baking soda is an all-purpose, nontoxic
cleaner. It cleans, deodorizes, scours,
polishes and removes stains. There are
entire books out about the zillions of
uses of baking soda, and the best thing
about it is that it's cheap!
Borax - (sodium borate) It
deodorizes, removes stains and boosts the
cleaning power of soap. It also prevents
mold and odors. Great alternative for
those who do not want to use bleach.
Cornstarch - cleans and deodorizes
carpets and rugs, you can use this to
replace expensive "baby powders" also.
Ketchup - great for cleaning
copper
Lemon juice - great for whitening
items, but vinegar is cheaper . It also
cuts through grease and stains on aluminum
and porcelain
Pure Soap - cleans just about
anything and is mild
Salt - believe it or not, regular
table salt makes an abrasive, but gentle,
scouring powder. Who would have known?
Washing Soda - (sodium carbonate)
Cuts grease and disinfects. It will also
increase the cleaning power of soap.
White Vinegar - very cheap and
versatile, great for whitening, also
fantastic for cleaning hard surfaces,
windows and shining up metal surfaces.
Removes mildew, stains, grease and wax
buildup. This is another natural cleaner
that whole books have been written on!
Some helpful
hints:
1.
Make your cleaners ahead of time.
2. Organize them according to location
they are used in, keeping out of reach of
children. I like to keep all kitchen items
under the (baby-proofed) sink, in a caddy
(recycle a detergent box or milk jug for
this) so they are handy. I make extras of
items for the upstairs and downstairs
bathrooms.
3. Buy your ingredients in bulk. This way,
you save money twice! You save by buying
in bulk (on sale of course!) and you save
because you have what you need on hand,
avoiding a trip to the store!
4. Store your ingredients in reusable
airtight containers. I like to purchase
spray bottles in bulk for this purpose,
since it is not safe to reuse bottles that
had commercial cleaners or chemicals in
them. Milk jugs are great to use too.
5. Make large batches of several cleaners
and store them in recycled milk jugs.
6. Wear rubber gloves when you clean to
avoid skin irritation (and chapping in my
case!)
2 cups rubbing alcohol (70% isopropyl)
1 tablespoon mild dishwashing liquid (for
hand washing dishes, NOT dishwasher
detergent-it contains bleach!)
1 tablespoon ammonia
2 quarts water
Stir all ingredients together in a bowl.
Fill a CLEAN spray bottle (not recycled
one) with cleaner and store the rest
tightly sealed in a large bottle. Use witha cloth or sponge to clean the bathroom
fixtures, kitchen fixtures, appliances,
chrome, plastic countertops, and painted
surfaces. Rinse with a clean cloth or
sponge after cleaning.
Homemade Dust and Furniture Polish
I tried this one and it is not only
easy, but cheap and very effective. No
more pledge for me! I have a lot of
woodwork in my home, and was very excited
to find a cheaper polish!
1 cup vegetable oil
1/2 cup lemon juice
Pour oil and lemon juice into a squirt
bottle or jar. Stir to combine. To use,
dip dust cloth or rag into oil, blot the
oil by folding the cloth together, and
then dust your furniture. Leaves a
beautiful finish!
All Purpose Quick Shiner
This shiner is mild and safe to use
for all surfaces
1-1/4 cups white vinegar
1-1/4 cups water
22 ounce spray bottle
Pour vinegar and water into the spray
bottle. Shake gently to combine. To use,
spray on and wipe off.
All Purpose Window and Glass
Cleaner
Vinegar cuts grease and leaves windows
sparkling clean. Best of all, this mixture
is absolutely safe. It's the best choice
if you have young children in the
house.
1/4 cup white vinegar
1 quart of water
Pour vinegar and water into a bowl or
container, or mix the ingredients in a
spray bottle. Clean windows directly with
a sponge dipped in the bowl of cleaner or
spray on and wipe clean. I have heard that
you can use newspaper to clean windows
quite well, I have always used old cloth
diapers.
Sink Cleaner
Replace Comet and other abrasives with
this homemade one. Combine baking soda and
salt (I am guessing in equal amounts) to
scrub stainless steel.
Oven Cleaner
1/4 cup ammonia
2 cups of warm water
Pour ammonia and warm water in a baking
dish and leave in a warm oven overnight.
This will loosen the grime in the over,
which you can then clean with an
ammonia-based cleaner or soap and water.
You can also scour with baking soda.
Cleaning Silver
Don't buy one of those metal plates
that you put in warm water to clean
silver. This is the same thing! I found
this trick in Make
it Lastby Earl Proulx, one of my favorite
books on maintaining your home and
possessions. I have done this on some
silver plated forks and spoons that I got
very cheap at a yard sale and they came
out great!
This trick works like magic and kids love
it.
Aluminum foil
Baking soda
Salt
Very hot water (can be boiling if you
like)
Combine the above ingredients in a clean
kitchen sink. Put your tarnished silver
and silver-plated items into the sink and
let set for a few minutes. Watch as the
tarnish disappears from the silverware and
reappears on the foil. This is a natural
chemical reaction, and a great way to
teach the kids some science!
Note:
This trick works so well that it will
clean out the nooks and crannies that give
some silverware the "aged" look, so you
may only want to do this occasionally. I
had to include these formulas from
Homemade Cleaners because they were
actually tested and compared against
commercial brands. We like that!
See how they
performed:
MULTIPURPOSE
CLEANER
Rating: Excellent. Performed as well
as top-of-the-line commercial
products.
Uses: Many. Tile and linoleum
floors, Formica countertops, appliances,
etc.
Hazards: Read about ammonia
above.
Cost: About 40 cents a gallon (not
including water)
1/4 cup baking soda (sodium
bicarbonate)
1 cup household ammonia
1/2 cup white vinegar
1 gallon warm water
Mix ingredients and store in
tightly-capped container.
OLD-FASHIONED GLASS AND WINDOW
CLEANER
Rating: Very good. The best commercial
preparations left the window only a little
shinier. Even though the cornstarch makes
the mixture slightly gritty, it didn't
scratch the glass. Poisonous.
Hazards: Ammonia is poisonous, so
keep. the mixture away from children and
arrange good ventilation. Wear gloves
because it's a heavy-duty cleaner and
rough on the hands.
Cost: About 20 cents a gallon (not
including water)
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1/2 cup household ammonia
1/2 cup white vinegar
1 gallon warm water
Mix the ingredients in a bucket and use to
scrub windows. Try not to clean glass the
sun is shining on because it will dry too
fast and streak.
VINEGAR WINDOW CLEANER
Rating: Very good. We'd been warned
that plain water could do as well as a
vinegar solution, but our subjective
impression was that the vinegar made it a
lot easier to get rid of smudges. In
theory, vinegar is supposed to remove
hard-water spots.
Hazards: May be hard on your hands,
but safe enough to drink.
Cost: About 7 cents a gallon (not
including water)
1/2 cup white vinegar
1 gallon warm water
Just mix and scrub.
DILUTE BLEACH
Rating: Very good. In the ballpark
with commercial cleaners, but few
name-brand cleaners got rid of smudges
with less scrubbing.
Hazards: Bleach is poisonous, so
keep it away from children. It will bleach
anything it touches, so use only on
colorfast items. Check the solution first
on a hidden spot.
Uses: Same as above.
Cost: Less than a penny a gallon
(not including water)
2 tablespoons or 1/8 cup liquid bleach
1 quart cold water
Mix in a scrub bucket. Moisten an old
cloth with the solution and wipe onto
surface. Let stand about 2 minutes and
rinse well.
DILUTE AMMONIA
Rating: Very good. A few of the best
commercial cleaners outperformed it.
Hazards: Ammonia is poisonous and
its fumes sting the eyes and throat. Wear
gloves. Don't mix with chlorine bleach
because the combination produces poisonous
gases called chloramines.
Uses: Same as above.
Cost: About 8 cents a gallon (not
including water)
1/2 cup household ammonia
1 gallon warm water.
Mix in a pail and use to scrub.
METAL POLISH
Rating: Good. Does the job but you
need to scrub more than you would with a
commercial cleaner.
Hazards: Safe enough to eat, and
it's not gritty enough to scratch the
metal.
Uses: Suitable for brass, bronze,
copper and pewter. Not for silver, silver
plate and jewelry.
Cost: Less than a penny for about 3
tablespoons of paste (not including
water)
1 tablespoon flour
1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon white vinegar
Combine salt and flour in small bowl and
stir until blended. Add the vinegar and
mix into a thick paste. Smear on the paste
with a damp sponge or cloth and rub
gently. Let the polish dry for about an
hour. Rinse well with warm water and buff
dry with a soft cloth.
WALL CLEANER
Rating: Very good. A few commercial
preparations required less scrubbing.
Hazards: See ammonia above. Don't
let children eat the borax either.
Uses: For painted walls, not
wallpaper
Cost: About 6 cents for 2 quarts
(not including water)
2 ounces borax
1 teaspoon ammonia
2 quarts water
Dissolve the borax and ammonia in a
bucketful of water. Scrub a really dirty
wall from the bottom up. if you scrub from
the top down, the dirty water will run
down over the dry, soiled wall leaving
hard-to-remove streaks. Oddly enough, it
won't stain wet, clean walls. For textured
walls, old socks are good scrubbers
because they won't tear off in little
pieces as easily as a sponge might. To
keep water from dribbling down your arm,
fasten an old washcloth around your wrist
with a rubber hand.
About the Author:
Kim
Tilley is the mother of three boys. She is
the online editor for Frugal
Moms. She is also a tightwad at heart. Her
interests include cooking, crafts,
gardening, computers, and saving money!
When not typing away at the computer, she
entertains herself by chasing kids and
finding ways to create something out of
nothing! Visit Kim's website at
http://frugal-moms.com
Let's Get Cooking!
While there are many reasons for teaching kids to cook -- less expensive than eating out, preserves family heritage, etc, the most important
reason is that by teaching your child to cook, you're giving him a better chance to be a healthy grown-up. Enabling your child with the ability
to appreciate freshness and to transform ingredients into tasty foods opens their eyes to making wiser choices about what to eat...