Naturally Cleaning with Lemon
From sanitizing the microwave to scrubbing the shower,
this citrus fruit is a household cleaning all-star
Forget the cleaning products under your sink. You probably have a very powerful one right in your fridge: Lemon, which adds such welcome zest to food and cocktails, is also a mild but highly effective cleaning agent. What makes lemon such a powerful cleanser? Its high acid content, which enables the fruit to work as a powerful antibacterial sanitizer that combats common household bacteria, says Julie Edelman, author of The Accidental Housewife: How to Overcome Housekeeping Hysteria One Task at a Time. Here’s how to put it to work degreasing, deodorizing and more. |
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Freshen Up the Stinky Garbage Disposal
“Lemon rinds ground in the disposal will deodorize your
sink’s drain
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Put a Shine on Metal
When it comes to copper, brass and chrome, nix harsh
chemical polishes and instead put some elbow grease behind half a lemon.
“Lemons are highly acidic, which enables them to cut through and loosen
mineral deposits, making them easier to wipe away,” says Edelman. For extra
oomph, before scrubbing, dip the fruit half in salt—it will help exfoliate
the surface for added shine.
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Sanitize the Microwave
The lingering smell of popcorn, pizza and whatever you
might have heated up recently can overwhelm a microwave. Edelman’s advice is
to cut a whole lemon into super-thin slices and put the pieces in a
microwavable bowl. Fill the bowl with hot water, place in the microwave and
cook on high for one minute. The citric acid’s antibacterial properties will
kill bacteria while the heat works like a humidifier to loosen icky, caked-on
food. Afterward, wipe the oven with a damp cloth.
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Nix Soap Scum in the Shower
Instead of tending to the shower tiles, doors and fixtures
with an abrasive chemical treatment, use this homemade natural remedy: Juice
six lemons and pour the contents into a spray bottle. “The citric acid will
break down hard water deposits and dissolve filmy soap scum,” says Edelman.
“Also, the antibacterial and antiseptic properties will sanitize the space.”
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Hand-Wash Dishes
When you run out of dish soap, slice a lemon in half and
sprinkle baking soda on top, working the lemon half like you would a Brillo
pad. Watch as the citric acid cuts, loosens and then dissolves grease, giving
your pots and pans a shiny glow. Oh, and your dishpan hands will smell sweet!
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Deodorize the Laundry
It doesn’t take much to combat the odors of work, the gym
and the everyday grind. Adding just one teaspoon of lemon juice to the
laundry along with detergent will provide a fresh, clean scent to socks,
undergarments and other clothing.
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Wash the Windows
Four tablespoons of lemon juice (either fresh or out of
the bottle) mixed with a half-gallon of water makes an effective window
cleaner—sans chemicals and streaking. The powerful citric acid dissolves
dirt, grime and water stains, leaving your windows sparkling.
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Sanitize a Cutting Board
Spruce up that kitchen workhorse—the cutting board—by squeezing
a lemon half over the top and letting the juice absorb for 10 minutes. (It
soaks into wood especially well, but this also works on plastic cutting
boards.) This will loosen stains. Next, kill bacteria by using the fruit to
scrub the board.
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Clean Hard-to-Reach Places
Make a paste of lemon juice and borax. With a toothbrush,
use the fresh-smelling cleanser to scrub tiles and around drains. This
mixture is also ideal for all those evil nooks and crannies!
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