Whether you're worried about the chemicals you're using, wanting to save money, or hoping to save yourself from all those horrible added dyes and fragrances - these recipes are for you!
Step 1: Ingredients Used In These Recipes
The recipes use very few ingredients, most of which you should have around the house!
- water
- baking soda
- rubbing alcohol or vodka
- castile soap
- white vinegar
- essential oils
- unflavored gelatin
- salt
Step 2: All Purpose Cleaner
What you'll need:
- a large spray bottle
- 24 oz (3 cups) water
- 1/8 to 1/4 C liquid castile soap
- 2 T white vinegar
- essential oils, like lemon, lavender or tea tree
Now you'll add the essential oils. I like adding 10 drops of lemon and 10 of tea tree!
I use this in my kitchen and my bathroom with great success! It's amazing at getting the stove top clean, and I love how clean it gets my counters and tabletops. Also great for cleaning the fridge.
I recently started scaling down the soap and adding more vinegar. I like it a lot. I'm using closer to 1/8 cup of castile soap now. :) The extra vinegar cuts down on soap scum/residue, and using less soap has been just as effective, but with less bubbles to clean up.
Step 3: Ghetto Febreze
What you'll need:
- a small spray bottle
- 1/2 cup rubbing alcohol or vodka
- essential oil
- 1 cup water
You'll now add the essential oils - I typically start with 30 drops and then work my way up. You can also mix oils to create custom scents. I also like using The Body Shop home fragrance oils in this mix and I've had no problems with them.
Note that you will be able to smell the alcohol, but only for a minute or so... after that things will just smell lovely. Rubbing alcohol has a stronger smell than vodka! :)
I use this on my couch, bed, curtains, dog bed, towels, etc. and the smell lingers for quite a while - for example, I sprayed my couch while cleaning yesterday and it still smells nice.
Step 4: Gel Air Freshener
Very simple to make and very, very cheap! Perfect for bathrooms or closets. Will last around a month.
The instructions for this will depend on the type of gelatin or pectin you use.
What you'll need:
- plain, unflavored gelatin or pectin
- water for preparing gelatin
- food coloring (optional, just for added flair)
- essential oils
- small glass jars or bowls (I filled three with 2 cups of finished gelatin)
- 1 tablespoon salt (prevents mold)
Check the strength of the smell at this time and add more oil if necessary.
This will firm up at room temperature, but if you want it to set quicker you can place it in the fridge.
I've got two of these in my closet right now, as well as one in the bathroom.
You can cover these with thin cloth or perforated paper if you like, but I keep mine up high enough that anything that sticks to the surface is out of sight. :)
Step 5: Window and Gloss Surface Cleaner
This one is easy, though a little smelly - but don't worry, the smell goes away pretty quickly and you'll have nice clean windows!
What you'll need:
- small spray bottle
- 1 cup water
- 1 cup vinegar
- squirt of castile soap (this is optional, but helps reduce streaks)
Many people recommend using newspaper to clean your windows, but as I don't get it delivered, I use flour sack towels or old cut up tshirts. This solution takes a little longer to dry than your typical glass cleaner, but don't worry! It'll look very nice when totally dry.
You can also use this solution to clean appliances and countertops. :)
Step 6: Drain Cleaner
This is very simple - just baking soda and white vinegar. You can also use lemon juice if you have that on hand! This works best on drains that are running very slow, but not those with standing water. If your problem is soap scum or other build up, this will break it up and get things moving again. It also works as a good deodorizer for kitchen drains.
Shake a bit of baking soda over the drain - I'd say a 1/4 of a cup or so. Push it into and around the drain, and then pour a bit of vinegar over it until you get a good bit of bubbling and the vinegar begins to pool in the sink.
Let this drain and set for 15-20 minutes and then flush with hot water.
And as a bonus, you can also clean your sink with the little bit of mixture that'll be left at the top of the drain. :D
Step 7: Extra Cleaning for Pots and Pans
Add about 1/4 cup baking soda to a couple of cups of water in your pan and bring to a boil on the stove for 5-10 minutes. While this is going, it helps to scrape the bottom of the pan with a wooden spoon.
After you take it off the heat, give it a good scrub. You should have a nice clean pan! If not, rinse and repeat with a little more baking soda. This will also help remove stains for things like tomato sauces.
Step 8: Additional Green Cleaning Tips
Once you've used them a few times (or for a really gross mess) they're easily thrown in the washer. :)
Also, here are some other uses for the ingredients used to make the cleaners in this instructable:
- use water and baking soda to make a paste to clean especially nasty messes - a greasy stove top, a spill in the oven, your toilet bowl.
- vinegar and baking soda can be left overnight in the toilet bowl and then scrubbed in the morning - gets rid of stains and odors.
- baking soda sprinkled in littler boxes and mixed in helps control all those urine odors... I've been doing this for years with both plant based and clay litter.
- straight vinegar is awesome at getting rid of hard water stains in showers... simply put it in a spray bottle, spray down the walls and let them soak for a few minutes, and then grab a brush and get scrubbing! I cleaned my mom's shower this way - it was all orange streaks before and the normal cream color after! It takes a little elbow grease, but it so worth it to avoid something like CLR.
- you can use castile soap as a cheap but effective hand wash - just fill an old soap dispenser with half water and half soap. It might not suds up as much, but rest assured - it's still doing the job.
Anyone else have great homemade cleaning products? Tell us about them in the comments! :D





















































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( actually, this ible was made when I was still living in Louisville, KY :D )
Tried this out for the first time but had a slight problem, I used a lemon oil but it just rose to the surface. Any ideas?
If you let it cool and start to congeal a bit, it works better, I think!
It's honestly I little hit and miss. I think sometimes the gelatin just doesn't want to play nice. :)
Mix the dissolved soap and borax/soda mixture together and let it sit for 12 hours.
Laundry soap for about 1 dollar.
Thanks
You don't need the kinda Vodka you'd buy to enjoy drinking, that nasty bottom shelf swill will work just fine for this.
Should I just use the all-purpose cleaner? The flooring looks pretty sturdy, not linoleum (sp?)
1st vacuum - most of the yuck is hair - people moult just like animals- it'll be way quicker to vac or sweep if u prefer.
I go around & clean the edges & corners of the room just spray around the edges wait a few minutes for the yuck to break down then mop - that's the worst area done! .
Then do the remaining area- spraying & mopping & rinsing the mop now & then. When finished make sure u wash the mop in clean water & cleaner, rinse & stand it mop up- outside if possible or in the tub until it's dry & it'll last ages not like those germy sponge mops, don't like them either : ).
A mix of vinegar and water with a little soap can work on most floors too, and especially in kitchens where things can get greasy and nasty.
For what comes to cleaning the drain, it is the same method I use myself, but I tend to fill the soda and then pour the vinegar and the boiling water at the same time.
In fact I create a super heated bubbling foam that falls down the pipes. The pressure it creates is enough to unclog the plumbings and push the grim out, ready to fall in again.
I will try with your 15/20 minutes resting time next time :)
Thanks so much. Great job.
You can just cut a lemon in half and rub them on the spots, or spray lemon juice on them. For the toilet, a lemon half dipped in baking soda should help. You can also do half and half borax and lemon juice and let it sit a bit before scrubbing.
If nothing else works, I'd try the pumice stone that rpatzman recommended. :P
I also did a little googling and there were a lot of people recommending making a paste out of hydrogen peroxide and baking soda, but I've not tried that one.
2 liter plastic bottle
100 grams of brown sugar
1 liter of water
300 grams (total) of lemon and orange scraps
Sharpie because you have to put a date on it and let it ferment for 3 months.
And I worry about it exploding as well, you need to loosen the lid ever so often, so not real sure about trying it yet. lol
Sheryll & Critters.
I think I'd like to give this a go. Next time I get a bottle big enough to make it in, I think I'll try. :)