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Six Places You Shouldn’t Use Vinegar

By April 7, 2015No Comments

No VinegarVinegar is great at lifting stains, freshening laundry, cleaning windows and much more. Plus, it’s inexpensive and all-natural. But vinegar is also acidic, which means that you can’t quite use it everywhere. Here’s why.

  1. Granite and Marble Countertops
  2. “The acid in vinegar can etch natural stone,” says Carolyn Forte, director of the Home Appliances and Cleaning Products lab at the Good Housekeeping Research Institute. Use a mild liquid dish detergent and warm water instead.

  3. Stone Floor Tiles
    Just like countertops, the natural stone in your bathroom doesn’t take kindly to acidic cleaners (like vinegar and lemon). Avoid ammonia, too, and stick to cleaning with special stone soap, or dish detergent and water.
  4. An egg Stain or Spill
    If you drop an egg on the floor, don’t reach for the vinegar to help clean it up. Just like when you poach an egg, the acidity can cause it to coagulate, making the egg more difficult to remove.
  5. Your Iron
    “Vinegar can damage the internal parts of an iron,” says Forte. “So don’t pour it through to freshen and clean it out. To keep irons from clogging, empty them completely after use, and follow the manufacturer’s cleaning instructions.”
  6. Hardwood Floors
    The jury’s still out on this one: Some homeowners find that vinegar solutions clean their sealed hardwoods beautifully, but others report that it damages the finish. The advice? Use a cleaner specifically formulated for hardwood.
  7. Certain Stubborn Stains
    Blot, sponge, and try as you might, grass stains, ink, ice cream, and blood won’t come out with vinegar alone, says Forte. They tend to set into the fabric quickly or just don’t respond to acid, so treat them with a prewash stain remover like Shout Advanced Gel, and launder with a detergent with enzymes (check the package — most stain-fighting detergents have them).

Source: Bona

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