Why this is a good idea:
1. Cost Effective - In fact, if you have all the stuff from Making Your Own Laundry Detergent, then you only have to buy table salt, white vinegar, and lemon juice! (About $1.00 each, but you should have them already, because they are staples.)
2. Health Conscious - Think of all the dish soap you've consumed over the years. Companies fill soaps and detergents with supposed filler "inert ingredients" that doctors and scientists are constantly finding cause cancer and crap like that. With this recipe, the only ingredients you are accidentally ingesting are salts, vinegar, and lemon juice.
3. Really Works! - It does. Basically, you make two mixtures: a powder one and a liquid one.
Let's get started.
The Powder - Use equal parts Borax, Baking Soda, and Table Salt. You also need a small container to mix them in. I use a little fruit snack cup I got from Chick-fila one time.
(Some people on other websites combine all the ingredients and store them like that, but I have read a bunch of accounts that these ingredients harden together when left to their own devices.
Mixing them each time isn't hard, so I do it. Do as the Spirit leads.)
**UPDATE** Since posting this, I have been using this detergent for a few months now, and have combined all three ingredients into one storage box. I haven't had them congeal yet, and I'm not sure why people have ever had this problem. Anyways, combining them is way easier than making this mixture every time.
**UPDATE** Since posting this, I have been using this detergent for a few months now, and have combined all three ingredients into one storage box. I haven't had them congeal yet, and I'm not sure why people have ever had this problem. Anyways, combining them is way easier than making this mixture every time.
The Liquid - Some bloggers claim that the powder mixture is enough to clean their dishes, but most sites have commentators freaking out because of this film all over their dishes. To alleviate the film issue, you need only two more ingredients: white vinegar and citric acid. Pour them in equal amounts into the rinse well of your machine. (One lady on one website used lemonade packets for the citric acid, but many readers complained that the lemonade turned everything yellow.
Just use lemon juice, people!!!)
You can store these two liquids in one bottle and keep that bottle under the sink.
Your two mixtures go into your machine as follows:
The end. Your dishes come out like this:
I don't rinse my dishes particularly well or anything and have had just as much success, if not more, as I used to with Cascade.
So there, "The Man"!!!
Costs of Things and Where to Buy Them:
1. Borax - $4.00 - Dollar General
2. Baking Soda - $0.50 - Aldi or Dollar General
3. Table Salt - $1.00ish - Aldi
4. White Vinegar - $1.00ish - Aldi
5. Lemon Juice - $1.00ish - Aldi
6. Small Container - Free - Chick-fila
Total: $7.50ish for months of detergent.
Not swallowing harmful chemicals: Priceless.
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