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Hints & tips for around the house.

  • 18-04-2013 10:30am
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,709 ✭✭✭✭


    Banish cooking odours

    Is there a smell of fish, curry or something you've burnt? You can banish unwanted cooking smells from the kitchen by boiling a cup of distilled white vinegar and a couple of cloves in an uncovered saucepan for a few minutes.

    Get your saucepans sparkling

    Remove burnt-on stains from pans with cheap own-brand cola. Pour just enough into your pan to cover the burnt area. Boil, stir, then remove from the heat. Pour away the hot cola and the burnt residue should go with it. Finish off with a rinse and a quick wipe with a clean cloth.

    Descale a kettle

    Cut a lemon into large chunks and place in your kettle. Fill the kettle with water, allow to boil, and then leave the lemon and water mixture to stand overnight. Discard the fruit and water the next day and rinse thoroughly before using your limescale-free kettle to make a cup of tea.

    Clean a microwave

    Place a cup of boiling water mixed with half a cup of lemon juice in a bowl in your microwave and ‘cook' on high for 30 seconds. Remove the bowl carefully and wipe the inside of the microwave with a clean, damp cloth. All food deposits should come away easily.

    Degrease a glass oven door

    To get rid of burned-on grime on a glass oven door, mix a thick paste of bicarbonate of soda with a tiny amount of water. Lay some old newspaper on the floor underneath the oven door and, wearing rubber gloves, use a cloth to rub the paste on the inside of the door. Leave it for about 15 minutes and then wash it off. This magic paste should also remove the remains of burnt food from a hob.

    Remove stains from china

    Wipe stains from china with a dab of bicarbonate of soda and a wet cloth. If the stains are really persistent, dissolve a denture-cleaning tablet in a bowl of water and soak the china in it (avoid doing this with very expensive or highly decorated china, denture cleaner contains bleach which could damage patterns). Once the stains have gone – rinse well with clean water.

    Create a surface cleaner

    Mix together one part distilled white vinegar with two parts water and a good squeeze of lemon juice. Applied with a cloth this fluid will cut through grime on most surfaces, from bath to floor and kitchen cupboards. Try adding a couple of tablespoons of distilled white vinegar to soapy washing-up water, too, if you have a stack of dirty, greasy dishes to wash - it will cut through the grease like magic.

    Boost your freezer

    Scrunch up pieces of newspaper and pop them into any gaps between the packets and bags of food in your freezer. This stops the freezer cooling empty spaces and makes it much more efficient.

    Freshen a smelly fridge

    Halve a lemon and scoop out the flesh. Fill your empty lemon shell with salt and pop it in a back corner of the fridge for a cheap but effective natural deodoriser.

    Save on scourers

    Keep two of the net bags that lemons and oranges come in. Put one inside the other and scrunch up to make a very efficient scouring pad.
    Lemon has multiple uses for cleaning the house, including freshening a smelly fridge

    Lemon has multiple uses for cleaning the house, including freshening a smelly fridge

    Polish your chrome

    A dab of baby oil buffed over a chrome surface with a soft cloth will give a mirror-like shine.

    Unblock a sink...

    Cut a tennis ball in half. Put one half over the plug hole, dome up, and give it a good pump. The ball will act like a plunger.

    ...and flush away odours

    Pour half a cup of bicarbonate of soda down the plughole, followed by one or two cups of white wine vinegar. Leave for ten minutes, then rinse through with a kettle full of boiling water. The foam and froth will work its way down the pipes and flush out any trapped gunk and bad smells




    Hide dark-wood scratches

    Put a spoonful of instant coffee in an eggcup or similar small container, and pour in the tiniest amount of boiling water until the mixture looks like a very strong espresso. Once cooled, dip a clean cloth in the coffee and apply the liquid to scratches on dark wood. Once they've been camouflaged, buff with a clean, dry cloth.


    Refresh pot pourri

    Spruce up old pot pourri by decanting it into a sandwich bag with a generous sprinkling of salt. Give the bag a good shake, the salt will knock off all the dust. Transfer the pot pourri to a new bag - minus any loose salt - and shake again. Put the clean pot pourri into a bowl and revitalise with a few drops of essential oil.

    Give your wood a sheen

    The juice from half a lemon mixed with quarter of a cup of olive oil makes a great polish for wooden furniture. Apply a little to a duster and buff over the wood. The lemon cuts through grime and the oil leaves a lustrous sheen.

    Erase grubby marks

    Use an ordinary pencil eraser to get rid of fingerprints and marks on light switches. A rubber on the end of a pencil is a useful tool for cleaning remote control handsets, too.

    Wash your windows

    A drop of vinegar on a scrunched-up pad of old newspaper is brilliant for cleaning windows.

    Burnish your brass

    mix equal quantities of salt, flour and vinegar. Dab an old toothbrush into the paste and apply it thickly to dingy brass. Leave the mixture on for at least an hour – the longer you leave it on the shinier the final result. When you're ready to remove it, wipe the paste off with a damp cloth and then buff with a dry, soft cloth.

    Buff up that copper

    Pour lemon juice onto cloudy copper and sprinkle with salt. Rub the solution in with an old rag until the metal is gleaming again.

    Shine your silver

    Buy the cheapest toothpaste you can find and, using an old toothbrush, liberally coat tarnished silver with the paste. Gently work the paste over the surface of the silver with the brush and then rinse away and buff dry with a soft cloth. The tarnish will have vanished.

    Dust down those radiators

    Dust stops radiators from working efficiently, so cleaning them will save money long-term.
    Wipe radiators down with a damp cloth, and use a wire coat hanger for those hard-to-reach areas. Wrap a cloth around the hook of the hanger, bend the body of the hanger to the shape and length you need and work your way behind and between the radiator panels.

    Spruce up your carpet

    Have you got a drab carpet? Get out the bicarbonate of soda. Sprinkle it liberally over the carpet, leave for about 15 minutes, then vacuum away dust, dirt and any fustiness will evaporate, too.

    Clean limescale off taps

    Pour vinegar into sandwich bags, and attach a bag over each tap with duct tape or an elastic band, so that the limescale is submerged in the vinegar. Leave overnight. Remove the bags in the morning and wipe clean (this method is not suitable for brass or coloured fixtures).

    Whiten your grouting

    Thick bleach and an old toothbrush should get stained grouting clean. Dip the toothbrush in the bleach and use it to scrub the grout between the tiles. Wipe down the surface with a damp cloth.

    Get a loo as good as new

    Cheap cola also makes a very efficient toilet cleaner. Pour a litre into the toilet bowl. Leave for an hour or more, then scrub and flush for sparkling results.

    Unclog a shower head

    Unscrew a blocked shower head and place it in a bowl of vinegar to soak overnight. Rinse with warm water the following morning. It should be limescale-free and unclogged.

    Extracted from Superscrimpers by Eithne Farry,on sale 25 April.


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,018 ✭✭✭jkforde


    best method of removing the yellow grease stains on bedclothes? can you bleach modern-day fabrics because the recommended 40 wash ain't doing it.

    🌦️ 6.7kwp, 45°, SSW, mid-Galway 🌦️

    "Since I no longer expect anything from mankind except madness, meanness, and mendacity; egotism, cowardice, and self-delusion, I have stopped being a misanthrope." Irving Layton



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,372 ✭✭✭im invisible


    lemon, vinegar, baking soda, cures everything*



    *may not actually cure everything


  • Site Banned Posts: 256 ✭✭Dr Silly Bollox MD


    lemon, vinegar, baking soda, cures everything*



    *may not actually cure everything
    You used it on yourself to become invisible???:eek:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,821 ✭✭✭fussyonion


    Anyone have a tip for getting grease stains out from a top?
    I have a gilet-style jacket that's been washed and washed and can't remove the stain.


  • Registered Users Posts: 59 ✭✭GoOnYouDirt


    Home Made "Febreeze"!

    Pour some of your fabric softener into an empty spray bottle. You don't need too much maybe the same amound as you'd use for a wash, a little more. Then 2 tea spoons of baking soda, and fill with warm water. Smells gorgeous, and is cheap and cheerful!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 81,220 ✭✭✭✭biko


    White vinegar.
    Put some in with laundry to clear lime scale. Clothes won't smell.
    In dishwasher, fill a glass halfway and leave upright to descale dishwasher.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 649 ✭✭✭Cork selfbuild


    zerks wrote: »

    Dust down those radiators

    Dust stops radiators from working efficiently, so cleaning them will save money long-term.
    Wipe radiators down with a damp cloth, and use a wire coat hanger for those hard-to-reach areas. Wrap a cloth around the hook of the hanger, bend the body of the hanger to the shape and length you need and work your way behind and between the radiator panels.

    The same is true for the venting radiator thing on the back of the fridge, it reduces efficiency by upto 15% if dusty I read some where some time...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,939 ✭✭✭goat2


    when the key on your door gets sticky in the lock and the lock gets a bit stiff to open, dip the key in oil it can be lawnmower oil or chainsaw oil and stick it in the lock, do this a few times and you will find the lock will loosen up and be easy to open and close and the key will go in easier, each time you dip the key it take the oil in where it is needed in the movable parts, as spraying does not, and i would think everyone has some oil handy to do this, save buying a new barrel for lock,

    to save yourself trouble with getting rid of letters , bank statements and such like, i use an empty carton from milk and rinse it out i keep folding up these documents i want to get rid of and putting them in the mild carton until it is like a briquette, you would be surprised the amount of paper you get in carton, i stand on it to get it good and packed and keep filling it and standing on it, then i put it in my wood burning stove and it lasts ages in fire,

    when i need to get a screw in a wall and i cannot find the right raw-plug, i use a match stick or two to fill in the hole and then i put in the screw, makes a snug fit,


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,939 ✭✭✭goat2


    use microfibre cloths for everything, from washing windows, does the job brilliantly, cleaning bathroom, washing car, mirrors, stainless steel, washing up, leaves no streaks,


  • Registered Users Posts: 71 ✭✭banham


    Thanks OP


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  • Registered Users Posts: 71 ✭✭banham


    goat2 wrote: »
    when the key on your door gets sticky in the lock and the lock gets a bit stiff to open, dip the key in oil it can be lawnmower oil or chainsaw oil and stick it in the lock, do this a few times and you will find the lock will loosen up and be easy to open and close and the key will go in easier, each time you dip the key it take the oil in where it is needed in the movable parts, as spraying does not, and i would think everyone has some oil handy to do this, save buying a new barrel for lock,

    Dip your key in vaseline works aswell.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,007 ✭✭✭✭Spanish Eyes


    Cut Brillo pads in four. Or two, never use a full one. Wasted.

    Warm water and vinegar with a teeny splash of washing up liquid is great for windows and mirrors. Buff with newspaper. Sparkle or what!

    Fill fancy hand wash containers with cheaper stuff. Who will know?

    Same with tea bags. Aldis are the nicest I've ever had.

    When putting flowers in a vase....criss cross the wide top with Sellotape and put the cut flowers in the squares. Makes for a lovely arrangement.

    Use a trouser hanger to clip your cookbook on while cooking. Hang it on a press doorknob near your cooking surface.

    If you live alone, freeze your bread in portions of two. Lasts forever, and just chuck it into the toaster if in a hurry. No more green mould.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,456 ✭✭✭phelixoflaherty


    banham wrote: »
    goat2 wrote: »
    when the key on your door gets sticky in the lock and the lock gets a bit stiff to open, dip the key in oil it can be lawnmower oil or chainsaw oil and stick it in the lock, do this a few times and you will find the lock will loosen up and be easy to open and close and the key will go in easier, each time you dip the key it take the oil in where it is needed in the movable parts, as spraying does not, and i would think everyone has some oil handy to do this, save buying a new barrel for lock,

    Dip your key in vaseline works aswell.

    Silicone spray is cleaner. if you put your keys in your pocket


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,294 ✭✭✭thee glitz


    252.jpg


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