Author Topic: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar  (Read 35542 times)

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Chesslike

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30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« on: Aug 26, 09, 03:00:10 PM »
30 household uses for vinegar
Posted Aug 26 2009, 07:28 AM by Karen Datko

This post comes from Nora Dunn at partner blog Wise Bread.

Who knew that vinegar could do so much? It serves a purpose in just about every room of the house, and there are dozens of household (and personal) products that vinegar can replace, as you will see below.

It's cheaper, better for the environment, and better for your health and home (in eliminating unnecessary chemicals). No wonder vinegar is one of my favorite cleaning hacks.

All-purpose cleaners

Vinegar in general is a natural and inexpensive disinfectant. It can be used on almost anything except marble. So, stick it in a spray bottle and get to work. Here are a few recipes for various cleaning purposes:

    * All-purpose cleaner: two parts vinegar, one part water.
    * Extra-dirty spots: Scour dirty areas with baking soda, then spray the all-purpose cleaner (recipe above) over the area and wipe clean.
    * Floor cleaner: Brew a cup of peppermint tea (use one tea bag: one cup for you, one for the floor). Squeeze half a lemon into the floor mix, and add one cup of vinegar. Mop away with your solution. the vinegar disinfects, the tea has antibacterial properties and removes marks, and the lemon freshens and disinfects.
    * Urine stains on carpet (presumably from pets): Blot up the initial stain, flush it with water, then apply equal parts vinegar and cool water. Blot it all up, rinse, and let dry. This will eliminate odors and stains.
    * Hard-water stains and mineral deposits: Allow a cloth soaked in vinegar to sit on a hard-water stain (for example, behind your faucet) or mineral deposit for a few hours. Wipe clean.
    * Appliance cleaning: Clean your coffee maker or laundry machine or dishwasher by running vinegar through it, followed by water. This reduces soap buildup and keeps everything in working order.

In the kitchen

    * Remove labels from glass jars: Saturate the labeled area in vinegar and scrape the stickiness right off. This is a great way to prepare canning jars for household decorations.
    * Dirty pot bottoms and cooking utensils: Fill the pot with enough water to cover the stain, add one cup of vinegar, and boil rapidly for five minutes. Let cool, then scrub the stains off. While you're at it, put your stainless steel cooking utensils in the pot to get them sparkly clean too.
    * Fruit stains on hands: Had a little too much fun making that cherry pie or berry salad? Just rub your hands with vinegar to remove the stains.
    * Coffee stains on china: Use a mixture of salt and vinegar to clean coffee stains from china.
    * Wooden cutting boards: Wooden cutting boards are great, except they can be a hothouse for bacteria (especially if grooves have been cut into the board with use). Disinfect it regularly with vinegar to keep it (and your food) clean.
    * Veggie maintenance: Clean and crisp up your veggies by soaking them in a mixture of water and a tablespoon or so of vinegar. Any bugs lingering on your produce will float away, and your soggy celery will come to life again (depending on how far gone it was to begin with).
    * Smelly onion hands: Eliminate onion odor from your hands by rinsing them in vinegar. This also apparently works with other stinky parts of your body that soap isn't cutting through, such as underarms.
    * Clean sticky scissors: Sometimes those scissors get so gummy you can't even make them work. Just wipe them down with vinegar, and they'll be like new again.

Laundry

    * Fabric softener: There are a few fabric softener strategies you can play with. Add equal parts vinegar and baking soda, OR just a half cup of vinegar to your wash when you would add fabric softener (final rinse cycle). Line-dried towels will come out softer with a vinegar-based softener.
    * Laundry: You can also add 1/2 to one cup of vinegar to your wash water, which does the following:
          o Reduces the amount of soap you need to use.
          o Reduces lint.
          o Brightens colors, and stops them from running.
          o Acts as a rinse aid.
          o Keeps the washing machine running clean and well.
    * Stain removal: Use vinegar on stains before washing to remove stubborn ones like perspiration, fruit, mustard and coffee.

In the garden/around the house

    * Kill grass and weeds: Pour or spray full-strength vinegar on grass or weeds poking through your driveway or rearing their heads in other unsavory places.

In the car

    * Frost-free windows: If you know a chilly night is on the way, you can ensure that your windows will be frost-free when you wake up in the morning. Simply mix three parts vinegar to one part water, and coat your windows with the mixture the night before.

In the bathroom

    * Kill soap scum: Wiping a scummy area with vinegar and rinsing with water will do as good a job as any at attacking your bathroom shower grime. If the scum is particularly stubborn, scrub with baking soda (a great natural abrasive) after wiping with vinegar. Rinse with water.
    * Unclog your shower head: Unscrew it, throw it into a pot of equal parts vinegar and water, and boil for a few minutes to loosen deposits that are blocking your shower head.

Personal use

    * Hair rinse: If vinegar removes soap scum on your tiles, it stands to reason that it will also remove soap scum on your hair. Rinse with a cup filled with a half cup of warm water and a half cup of vinegar, and your locks will be shiny and free of buildup.
    * Dandruff treatment: Using the same technique as the hair rinse above but with a higher concentration of vinegar also acts as an effective dandruff treatment.
    * Acne treatment: Apply equal parts vinegar and water to problem areas.
    * Facial toner: Using vinegar as toner is a great and inexpensive alternative to using alpha hydroxyl-based products.
    * Athlete's foot (and other fungus): Apply full-strength vinegar to the affected area twice daily until symptoms abate.

Miscellaneous uses

    * Eliminate smoke odor: Simply put a bowl of vinegar in the offending room near the offending source. Smoke odors be gone.
    * Air freshener: If you would like to reduce icky smells but would like a nicer room smell than vinegar, add some fragrant spices (like cardamom) to your bowl of vinegar and leave it in a warm corner of the room.
    * Chrome polish: Use full-strength vinegar with a soft cloth to make that chrome shine.
    * Insect traps: Vinegar is an active ingredient used to various insect and pest traps.

Not enough reasons to stock up on vinegar? Paul described 254 uses: http://www.wisebread.com/254-uses-for-vinegar-and-counting

Offline Laughlinguy

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #1 on: Aug 26, 09, 05:07:58 PM »
30 household uses for vinegar
Posted Aug 26 2009, 07:28 AM by Karen Datko

All-purpose cleaners

Vinegar in general is a natural and inexpensive disinfectant. It can be used on almost anything except marble.

What's the deal with marble I wonder?

Offline Bob C

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #2 on: Aug 26, 09, 05:20:02 PM »
What's the deal with marble I wonder?

I never knew that either, so a quick Google search, reveals that apparently, the acidic vinegar etches the marble (and any protective coating on it).


Offline Selah

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #3 on: Aug 26, 09, 06:59:27 PM »
awesome!

just want to confirm that an after-shower vinegar rinse works great on my hair with this hard water (1TBS vinegar: 2 cups distilled water).  Been doing this for a few months now.  Hair is soft, and not falling out! ;D  Couldn't do without it!

Offline Stitches

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #4 on: Aug 26, 09, 07:37:35 PM »
LOL   Vinegar for the hair?  Reminds me of the 'bald' treatment that Lucy Ricardo gave to Ricky.    She put eggs and mustard on his head and then oil to lubricate his scalp and vinegar to marinade his scalp.   He said, 'oil, vinegar, egg, mustard?  Why don't you throw in some anchovies and make a caesar salad.  LOL


Offline Laughlinguy

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #5 on: Aug 27, 09, 04:01:42 PM »
Thanks Bob!

Offline Selah

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #6 on: Aug 27, 09, 08:34:59 PM »
LOL   Vinegar for the hair?  Reminds me of the 'bald' treatment that Lucy Ricardo gave to Ricky.    She put eggs and mustard on his head and then oil to lubricate his scalp and vinegar to marinade his scalp.   He said, 'oil, vinegar, egg, mustard?  Why don't you throw in some anchovies and make a caesar salad.  LOL


LOL

yup!  Apparently, minerals in the water, after the hair dries, cause the scales on the follicle to stand out; hence, the hair is quite tangly.  Vinegar relaxes the scales on the cuticle so they lie back down, if I'm correct, due to it's acidity.

and, although my husband mentions he's hungry for salad, the smell is completely gone after the hair dries.:)

Offline Stitches

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #7 on: Aug 27, 09, 09:48:59 PM »

Well, that's nice to know you don't smell like vinegar afterwards.  Of course 2 Tblspns to 2 cups of water is pretty dilute.


Offline Selah

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #8 on: Aug 28, 09, 02:38:30 AM »
LOL, nice picture. ;D

wwpt

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #9 on: Aug 28, 09, 11:05:24 AM »
 
   I read on www.recipes.com about using 1/4 vinegar & 1/4 parts oil (Olive I prefer...but cooking oil) along with your favorite taste of marinade  for red meats and tried it and was very satisfied with the results, even though initially I thought I was about to ruin a good steak. 

   Seems the vinegar helps break down the red meat and makes it easier to digest, so you don't get that heavy, stuffed  feeling after you eat. It also enhances the flavors to work their way into the meat.

Offline Mrs. Hillbilly

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #10 on: Sep 11, 09, 12:43:23 AM »
Mix it 50/50 with H2o and it does wonders on hard water stains on boats.

Fill your plugged sink with water, add about a half gallon of vinegar and put your live lobster in before cooking.  The Lobster dies pretty fast.

Offline lagomorphmom

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar: LAUNDRY
« Reply #11 on: Apr 04, 11, 03:43:26 PM »
I came across a tip to use 1/4C vinegar in the washer rinse cycle to soften clothes and tried it this weekend.

IT WORKS GREAT!!!   :wave:

Forgot to try it on the first load which would have been the best test (terry towels), but jeans were soft as were cotton shirts. NO eau-d'vinegar smell.

Now that I revived this thread (thanks Bob), I think I'll put 1/4C in both wash & rinse. The above calls for 1/2C, but we have an H.E. front loader, so I think the 1/4C is enough.

As for the hair rinse in the original article above, this is an old, old recipe from great-great grannies. Now that I'm reminded, I'm trying that next!

luvroses

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #12 on: Apr 04, 11, 05:49:03 PM »
I've kept a spray bottle with a 50% vinegar solution under my sink for as long as I've lived here in "hard-water country"! It's a great all-purpose cleaner/disinfectant/de-calcifier.

Another application that I discovered is removing tarnish from copper-bottom cooking pans. I just spray vinegar on the copper, shake a layer of salt over it, and let the mixture sit for a couple of minutes. Then, I scrub the tarnish off. If your Revere-Ware pans get as blackened as mine do, you may have to repeat the process a couple of times, and put a little "elbow grease" into the process -- but you'll love the results. I hate using the commercial copper polish solutions. Most of them have really nasty chemical smells!  :P

luvroses

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #13 on: Apr 04, 11, 05:52:57 PM »

Fill your plugged sink with water, add about a half gallon of vinegar and put your live lobster in before cooking.  The Lobster dies pretty fast.

OK PacFan, I know I'm probably going to regret asking this, but why would this method be better (more humane) than just plunging the lobster head first into a pot of boiling water?  ;) :o

Offline dreamcatcher

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #14 on: Apr 04, 11, 07:41:03 PM »
What a coincidence to see this thread about vinegar.  I just took a break from cleaning my knotty pine wood paneling with vinegar...spray it on the paneling and wipe if off with a micro fiber rag.

Offline Nolena

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #15 on: Apr 09, 11, 02:20:48 PM »
Alrighty then! I'm going to break down and try the vinegar hair rinse. I'll report back (if I survive).

MMB

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #16 on: Apr 09, 11, 02:29:31 PM »

How to Make Vinegar Hair Rinse
 
By an eHow Contributor   :o
 
It is simple to give your hair a beautiful natural shine; just make a vinegar hair rinse. This hair rinse will remove all the residue and scaly buildup that accumulates on your hair shafts from using commercial hair products. The vinegar hair rinse also closes the hair cuticles and makes hair smoother and less apt to tangle. Adding your favorite essential oils or herbs customizes the rinse just for you.
 Difficulty: Easy
Instructions

things you'll need:
 Measuring spoons
 
Preparing the vinegar hair rinse
 1

Measure two cups of apple cider vinegar and put it into a glass bottle or jar that has a cover.

 2

Add the essential oils of your choice.

 3

Mix the vinegar and the essential oils together.

 4

Cover the glass jar and allow the mixture to blend for one or two days. This mixture can be stored in the covered glass container until you have used it all.

 
Using the vinegar hair rinse
 1

Mix one half tablespoon of the vinegar mixture with one cup of water. This measurement gives you one vinegar hair rinse application.

 2

Rinse your hair with the mixture. Pour it through your wet hair right after shampooing.

 3

Wrap your hair in a towel to dry for extra conditioning.


Read more: How to Make Vinegar Hair Rinse | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_2085173_make-vinegar-hair-rinse.html#ixzz1J2Ikz600

(Let us know if it worked Nolena!)  I've got beanies for you if it didn't.   ;)

Offline Mrs. Hillbilly

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #17 on: Apr 09, 11, 03:43:40 PM »
OK PacFan, I know I'm probably going to regret asking this, but why would this method be better (more humane) than just plunging the lobster head first into a pot of boiling water?  ;) :o
I don't know if it is more humane or not.  I worked with a chef from France who did this.  He told me they go to sleep.  I am guessing the vinegar robs them of O2 and they suffocate to death. No matter how you spin it, the lobster is screwed... ;)

MMB

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #18 on: Apr 09, 11, 03:56:44 PM »

Offline Jirka

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Re: 30 Household Uses For Vinegar
« Reply #19 on: Apr 09, 11, 03:59:41 PM »