The Commercial Appeal

Making your own home-cleaning products? Some pro tips

Be mindful of safety while saving money Lauterbach’s ‘Bluff City’ looks at strange legacy of Ernest Withers

- Katherine Roth | ASSOCIATED PRESS Peggy Burch

To reduce waste and avoid unnecessar­y plastic bottles and chemicals – and to save money – many people are opting to make cleaning products from scratch at home. You can find an abundance of recipes for household cleaning products online, along with reusable glass spray bottles designed to hold them. But not all homemade cleaning products are created equal, and some simple concoction­s can be downright dangerous.

“To have an unlabeled cleaning product in a Mason jar with kids around can be a dangerous thing,” warns Carolyn Forte, director of the home appliances and cleaning products lab at Good Housekeepi­ng. “And be careful never to mix bleach with anything but water. Certain combinatio­ns can be toxic.”

Baking soda and vinegar also should not be combined. Mixed together they are ineffectiv­e at cleaning and, if contained in a jar, likely to explode, she warns.

So when making your own cleaning mixtures at home:

Do know the basics

Baking soda is a great deodorizer and is useful as a mild abrasive. Lemon juice with some salt can remove rust stains.

Memphis is a place of “dangerous politeness and sticky charisma,” Preston Lauterbach writes in “Bluff City,” a title that describes both the city’s site above the Mississipp­i River and the posturing of its inhabitant­s.

“Bluff City’s” subject is Ernest Withers, the polite and charismati­c Memphis photograph­er who covered crucial moments of the civil rights era while also acting as a spy for the FBI.

Don’t make big mistakes

Never combine bleach with anything but water. And remember that baking soda and vinegar, while trusted standbys individual­ly, are ineffectiv­e for cleaning if combined – and will bubble up explosivel­y.

Vinegar cuts grease, removes mineral deposits and has disinfecta­nt qualities.

Don’t use lemon on wood, since it can destroy protective finishes, says Stephanie Sisco, home editor at Real Simple magazine.

Don’t overdo it with vinegar, which can dull surfaces, Sisco says. There’s a reason that cleaning-product recipes call for adding water.

Recipes

With the above basics in mind, here are a few recipes recommende­d by the pros. Window cleaner: For clean, streak-free windows, Katy Kiick Condon, senior editor for home design at Better Homes & Gardens magazine, swears by the combinatio­n of 2 cups hot water, 1 tablespoon corn starch, cup white vinegar and cup rubbing alcohol. “I tested a bunch of recipes, and this one is hands-down the best for mirrors and windows,” she says. All-purpose cleaner: Stephanie Sisco, home editor at Real Simple magazine, recommends combining 2 tablespoon­s lemon juice, 2 cups of water and 1⁄2 teaspoon of castille soap, such as Dr. Bonner’s. For a stronger cleaner, she recommends mixing 1⁄2 cup vinegar, 1⁄2 cup vodka, 10 to 20 drops of essential oil and 11⁄2 cups water. Carpet cleaner: Sisco recommends blotting the stain then saturating it with club soda. “The bubbles will work the stain to the surface,” she says. Then coat it with a hefty dose of table salt, which will absorb the stain, she says. “Then just vacuum it up once it’s dry, maybe 12 hours later. It’s a good overnight cleaning solution, and great for wine and other stains. The key is to blot all excess stain before starting with club soda and salt.”

❚ Double check the safety of the combinatio­n you choose;

❚ Keep all products out of reach of children or pets;

❚ And list all ingredient­s clearly on the jar or spray bottle.

Test your cleaning mixture before using it. “Making your own window cleaner may be OK, but years of chemistry and safety research have gone into products like laundry and dishwasher detergents and furniture polishes, and you don’t want to risk accidental­ly damaging something that’s precious to you,” Forte says.

Even so, it can be useful to know what to use in a pinch when you don’t have time to rush to the store, says Stephanie Sisco, home editor at Real Simple magazine.

And many homemade cleaning combinatio­ns do work, with far fewer chemicals than in many store-bought brands.

To help people make gentle cleaning products at home, Mike and Martha Robinson founded Cleaning Essentials, which sells sturdy glass bottles in various colors and sizes, labeled with recipes for solutions that can be made using mostly vinegar, water and essential oils.

“Sixty years ago our grandparen­ts wouldn’t have gone to the store for cleaners. They would have used vinegar, baking soda, some elbow grease, and been healthier for it,” says Mike Robinson.

Katy Kiick Condon, senior editor for home design at Better Homes & Gardens magazine, agrees: “Just steam, hot water and some elbow grease can accomplish a lot.”

 ?? | CHAPTER16.ORG ?? Ernest Withers PENNY WOLFE/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
| CHAPTER16.ORG Ernest Withers PENNY WOLFE/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
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Cleaning Essentials sells reusable glass cleaning bottles available online and in stores.
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