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I'd forgotten how useful soda crystals are!

(20 Posts)
Agus Thu 10-Jul-14 16:36:21

Hope you got a good supply in Marelli. A girl needs a clean u bend. grin

Marelli Thu 10-Jul-14 14:00:53

Oh! Just seen that I'd posted twice, Agus! grin So much for boasting about being 'clean round the u-bend' - I looked under the sink and discovered I have no soda crystals left shock - must dash out and get more!

Agus Wed 09-Jul-14 23:51:32

Three main ingredients I use Phoenix are, Soda Bic, White Vinegar and Soda Crystals. There are so many ways you can use these three which makes it unnecessary to buy a selection of cans and sprays.

Anne58 Wed 09-Jul-14 23:35:44

I wouldn't be surprised that if we looked at the ingredients in a fair few of the household cleaners we use (i.e. kitchen spray, bathroom spray etc etc) the active ingredients were something akin soda stuff and white vinegar under another name!

At the risk of sounding like a cave woman/world war housewife, there are probably many products that we could use like they were in "the old days" , but we somehow get conned into using a "modern" alternative.

Todays "experiment" has certainly got me thinking. The rather severe financial episode last year had already got me buying cheap general all purpose cleaner and filling old spray bottles with it in a diluted form.

Actually, those spray things rather bug me. We should be able to buy refills for ALL OF them, rather than chucking the hole thing away. Some companies are sort of trying to do this, for example pouches of instant coffee rather jars, although I have noticed that sometimes these work out more expensive confused

merlotgran Wed 09-Jul-14 23:20:05

I buy mine from Wilkinsons. I use them in the washing machine and down the plugholes but having read the OP I'm going to try them on the kitchen and bathroom tiles as well.

Nanabelle Wed 09-Jul-14 23:18:56

Yes, I wish they were still crystals as they took longer to dissolve down the plug hole. Today's powdery stuff goes down too quickly.
I also use household bicarbonate of soda a lot. 1 or 2 teaspoons in a teapot, fill with boiling water and leave for an hour or two. All the brown stains come off really easily. Or rub directly on - good fot tea cups/ mugs if you don't have a dishwasher.

annodomini Wed 09-Jul-14 23:18:34

A piece of aluminium foil with soda crystals dissolved in hot water will take the tarnish off silver in no time. Might remove silver plating though!

Anne58 Wed 09-Jul-14 22:55:09

I buy mine from either the village shop or a supermarket. I don't buy dishwasher tablets, as I don't have a dishwasher!

When I first used to buy them years ago, they came in a box and were actual crystals, these days they seem to come in a polythene bag.

Still work just as well.

Grannyknot Wed 09-Jul-14 22:44:14

Where do you buy soda crystals and what are they?

For burnt on pots or pans, I add hot water and a cheap dishwasher tablet that I buy from the Pound Shop and bring to the boil for 5 to 10 mins, problem solved.

Agus Wed 09-Jul-14 22:05:47

Very thorough Marelli. grin

Marelli Wed 09-Jul-14 20:38:19

I put it down the plug-hole in the bathroom basin and then pour boiling water down. It clears any soap or grease build up that causes the sink to empty slowly.

Marelli Wed 09-Jul-14 20:38:09

I put it down the plug-hole in the bathroom basin and then pour boiling water down. It clears any soap or grease build up that causes the sink to empty slowly.

Notso Wed 09-Jul-14 18:32:24

It's great for soaking baked on scrambled egg saucepans.

Anne58 Wed 09-Jul-14 17:57:13

tanith I do remember to put some down the sink and leave overnight from time to time, seems to work fine! Don't even need a plunger.

tanith Wed 09-Jul-14 16:01:09

I used it yesterday to unblock my walk in shower, which gets bunged up with soap and hair every couple of months, OH has been buying one of those unblocker things at £5 a go but I thought I would try with the soda crystals and plunger, it worked perfectly and only cost a few pence. OH wasn't impressed and reckons it will block again in a few days . He of little faith haha

Agus Wed 09-Jul-14 15:49:23

It leaves glass very sparkly too Phoenix

janerowena Wed 09-Jul-14 15:44:52

Storing it can be a pain, I use big old yellow plastic dishwasher powder containers but it can be very thick and gloopy so very difficult to pour. You need to stir it occasionally to stop it from separating. Ideally you need a large container that a long-handled spoon could go into. I am going to start saving 1 litre plastic paint pots, I think.

frugaldom.blogspot.co.uk/2011/01/saving-on-annual-costs-of-laundry.html

It comes out very thick, I use far more water than it says on here, I play it by ear so can't give you an exact amount. She says she makes hers up to 7 litres, I probably go to 10. But I don't want it clogging my machine, so I would rather dilute it more and add more. Reading it again, she does say to do the odd hot wash to clear the pipes.

Anne58 Wed 09-Jul-14 15:32:04

janerowena how do you make it? (And store it)

janerowena Wed 09-Jul-14 15:29:43

I make washing liquid with mine. Half a pack with a bar of cheap soap makes enough to last me a year. As long as you put it straight onto the dirtiest areas first and leave it to soak in for 5 minutes, it's fine.

Anne58 Wed 09-Jul-14 15:16:44

Afternoon all,

Just thinking back to the tip posted about cleaning silver with some tin foil in the bottom of the sink with hot water and soda crystals (sorry, I've forgotten who posted it, but have not forgotten how awful the smell is, although it does work a treat!)

I always have a packet of them in the cupboard and found them very good for soaking greasy pans etc. I thought I would try mixing some up in hot water with a splosh of general purpose cleaner.

The kitchen tiles are now gleaming, as are the cupboard doors, cooker front, cooker hood (ok, I got a bit carried away, I was really only going to do the tiles). All cleaned with absolute minimum effort, which is always a plus. Anyway, on the pack it said you can use them to clean and freshen the washing machine, so that's next on the list!

I also found some really good ideas here www.dri-pak.co.uk/tip-videos.html#.U71MIpRdWT0 (there's a bit about fluffing towels and I'm sure someone was asking about that recently)

I'm very far from being over fond of domestic duties, but thought I'd share as not only do they do a lot of things, but they are also very cheap!