The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Vinegar to the rescue again

- Write to Heloise at P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5000; Fax 210-HELOISE; or email Heloise@heloise. com.

DEAR HELOISE >> I recently moved into an apartment that had been vacant for several months.

The one bathroom that I am not using has a tub that had a bunch of little fruit flies, and later, small flies. I later learned that they were sewer flies. I filled the tub with water a couple of times and used a container for the fruit flies that I got from the hardware store. It did not work.

My son-in-law suggested I try vinegar. So I filled the tub and adjoining sink with water, then when it drained, I poured about 1 to 2 cups of vinegar down each drain. I’ve done this a couple of times. It’s been a couple of weeks now, and no bugs! Again, vinegar to the rescue.

— Peg Keenan, Omaha,

Nebraska

DEAR PEG >> Vinegar is such an indispensa­ble and safe household product that can be used for cleaning, deodorizin­g and cooking, as you have discovered. Find more uses in my pamphlet on vinegar. Get a copy by visiting Heloise. com or by sending $5 and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Heloise/ Vinegar, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001. FYI: Rinse your hair with 1 tablespoon of white vinegar added to 1 cup of tap water. This removes soap film and leaves your hair shiny and clean.

DEAR HELOISE >> Regarding the question on how to air-dry diapers, the volume is more important than heat in quickly drying something. I have a pull-out drying rack attached to the wall next to the washer and a tabletop fan sitting on the washer. The fan has a frame that allows me to aim the air directly at the items being dried. I can air-dry heavy compressio­n socks in about 45 minutes.

If I needed to use the shower curtain rod, I would use an oscillatin­g pedestal fan that would be placed closer to the rod. And you can invest in pants hangers with clips so that there would only be a single layer of fabric to dry.

— A reader

DEAR HELOISE >> I read your column about shining up stainless steel with vinegar or ammonia. I have found that using plain baking soda on my stainless steel polishes it very well. I simply dip my damp fingers into the baking soda and rub each utensil with the paste on my fingers. Then just rinse and dry. I use this technique on all stainless-steel items and glassware. It’s gentle yet effective. It makes it shine nicely. I love your column and read your mom’s for decades.

— Wanda G.

DEAR HELOISE >> One of your readers wrote that she used a coffee filter to cover food to prevent a mess in her microwave. Great idea! Here’s another: We use the glass lid of a Pyrex dish to heat our food. No muss, no fuss!

— Denis Richter, San

Antonio, Texas

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