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Canning Day Quilt

Archive for the ‘clean it’ Category

More Baking Soda Magic

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“Honey, It’s your night for the dishes…”  Hmmm, he’s not taking the bait.

What do you do with a pan like this?  I think I could soak it for three weeks and it would never come clean… unless…

It’s baking soda to the rescue…

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I sprinkled some into the pan…

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And then I scrubbed it…  I wish I had a time lapse camera or a video.  I was amazed at how quickly the gunk came off…

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I rinsed out the pan and sprinkled a little more baking soda to get some little black bits still left.

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Ta Dah!  That pan shines like the top of the Chrysler Building.

Baking soda cleans just like magic.   Well… I did have to scrub.

But not nearly as hard as I thought I would.  So it’s the closest thing to magic I’ll ever come to.  I never could figure out how to wiggle my nose like Tabitha and have my jobs  magically done.  (Even though heavens knows I tried about a 1000 times when I was ten and my mom had given me a long list of jobs.)

Baking soda works really well for glass baking dishes as well.  A friend of mine had old baked on yellowish-brown stuff on the handles of her Pyrex casserole dishes (from non-stick cooking spray.)  We scrubbed them with a little baking soda and it came right off.

I’ve used it on my nonstick pans as well… I just needed to rub a bit of oil into the pan when I was done to re-season it.  It works on my Le Creuset (enamel coated cast iron pans) too.

Don’t you just love to find something that is great at cleaning, non-toxic and really inexpensive?  I do.

Mighty 20 Mule Team Borax

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In my quest for earth-friendly and inexpensive cleaning supplies I have found another favorite product…  20 Mule Team Borax.

I might be tempted to like it just for it’s name.  It really sounds like it “pulls it’s weight” in the cleaning department.  It’s not new-fangled… my grandmother used it and loved it (and probably her mother too.)

Did I mention it is a naturally occurring mineral composed of sodium, boron, oxygen and water?  Very cool.  And it won’t hurt the environment.  Here are a few ways I have used it:

  • Cleaning toilets–  Just sprinkle 1/4 cup into the bowl and let it sit for 30 minutes or overnight (I can’t leave it overnight, someone always gets up to go the bathroom!)  Scrub with a toilet brush.  It does a great job getting rid of stains and making the toilet smell fresh.
  • Getting rid of ants: My mom had an invasion of ants this Spring.  An exterminator wanted $60 to come get rid of them.  She “Made it Do” by using Borax instead– No chemicals and no waste of money!  Mix equal parts of Borax and jam.  Cut an index card into 4 pieces.  Place a small amount of the Borax/jam solution on the index cards and place cards everywhere you are seeing the ants.  It took just a few days and the ants were totally GONE.  My Mom felt like superwoman…  then she went out and spent that $60 she saved on fabric!  (Just a note if you have pets… Borax can be toxic if ingested, so don’t leave those little cards around where your pet might eat them.)
  • Cleaning my tile floors–  It worked awesome for cleaning my bathroom tile floors.  Mix together one to two gallons of warm water with 1/3rd cup borax, a teaspoon of liquid dish soap.  For serious grout cleaning: Combine 1/2-cup baking soda, 1/4-cup borax and hot water to form a thin paste. Pour over the tile, scrub and rinse.  If it leaves a residue on the grout after rinsing, dip a clean cloth in white vinegar and wipe the tile down again.  It even removed a few stains in the grout that had been there for a while.
  • As a laundry booster– I have used it in loads of stinky laundry (ie. my husbands workout clothes) and it worked great at removing odors. I just added 1/2 cup in with my regular detergent.
  • Deodorizing mattresses– I sprinkled Borax on the kid’s mattresses and rubbed it with a damp towel.  I let it dry and vacuumed it up.
  • Cleaning the garbage can– I poured about 1/4 cup of borax into the garbage can and then used a sponge dipped in warm water and scrubbed.  It cleaned nicely and really removed odors.  Once the can is dry, you can leave a little Borax at the bottom to absorb odors.
  • Cleaning floor boards-  I sprinkled a little Borax on a soft damp cloth and wiped the floor boards down.

These are just a few of the many uses of Borax.  I feel like I have just scratched the surface of what it can do.  Have you ever been excited to clean?  I am right now.  Is that Spring Fever talking or what… I just need about 5 more hours in the day to do it!

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