How to clean with Strong White Vinegar: 10 Non-tox Swaps

February 24, 2023 5 min read

How to clean with strong white vinegar for a non-tox home

10 Non-tox Vinegar Swaps to Ditch Nasties from Your Home

White vinegar for cleaning is a darling in natural home keeping circles – and for good reason. It’s versatile and safe! Figgy & Co. strong white vinegar is 9.9% acetic acid which is double the strength of typical supermarket vinegar at 4%.

You can safely use it as a natural sanitizer all around the home, especially in the kitchen and bathroom. It can be used neat or diluted with water - which is perfect for having one product help out with multiple jobs.

 

Just how long have we been using vinegar?

Vinegar & people have such a long history. It can claim an astonishing 7000 years of human use and counting! In a time of not knowing if a modern cleaning agent is safe to use or not, vinegar well and truly stands out of the crowd as tried and trusted.

Records of its use stretch back pre-Babylonian times, when Ancient Sumerian people discovered that ‘soured’ or off alcohol, like wine that had been exposed to air, gave a new and very useful tool, vinegar. They found vinegar could stop food from spoiling, which in a time before refrigerators was lifesaving.

From this beginning spans an amazing history of vinegar being used for preserving food, as a health giving medicine and, as a cleaner.

 


How to use white vinegar in your home cleaning routine:

Continuing to use vinegar today as a cleaner makes more sense than ever – hands down safe and effective, newly synthesized chemicals will never have the same safety record. Vinegar is hypoallergenic and free from irritants like preservatives, dyes and fragrances.

Check out our list of 10 simple ways to incorporate vinegar in your natural cleaning routine. You can easily ditch several toxic cleaners with just this one product!

 

10 Non-tox Cleaning Swaps with Cleaning Vinegar

1.Shining glass, windows and mirrors

Dilute Figgy & Co. Strong white vinegar, 1/3 vinegar with 2/3 water and store in a trigger bottle. Spray then buff glass with a lint free cloth. 

2. Shining stainless steel

Dilute Figgy & Co. Strong white vinegar, 1/3 vinegar with 2/3 water and store in a trigger bottle. Spray then wipe benches and appliances in the same direction as the metal grain. A Eco cleaning cloth give a streak free finish and works well for this

3. Dishwasher rinse aid

Dilute Figgy & Co. Strong white vinegar with equal parts water, use this in the rinse aid reservoir. 

4. Water spots on shower glass

Spray clean glass with undiluted vinegar and leave for 30minutes. Give the glass a scrub with a stiff brush or non-scratch glass cleaning pad (3M or Scotchbrite) 

5. Odour eater for washing

vinegar works well because it kills bacteria that cause odour. Add washed items to a bucket of hot water with ¼ cup strong white vinegar. The is best for robust textiles only 

6. Compost bucket

If your inside collection bucket is getting a bit whiffy, spray with diluted vinegar. 

7. Fabric softener

Vinegar as a fabric softener has been used for as long as soap has been used in the laundry. Soap can to bind with water minerals in the wash in areas with higher water mineral content, this can make clothes feel stiff. Adding white vinegar to the rinse breaks this down and rinses the minerals away. Read our blog on Vinegar Vs Fabric softener

8. Wool washing

Wool fibres are a protein based textile that respond to different pH levels. Washing with soap which is an alkaline cleaner will leave the woollens clean, but sometimes scratchy as the fibres have been fluffed up. A final rinse with vinegar balances the pH and settles and smooths the fibres. For hand washing, add a few tablespoons to the rinse water. Read our washing woollen blankets blog

9. As a Sanitiser in the kitchen

Vinegar kills bacteria that are found in food prep areas and can cause food borne illness. Harness this power in your kitchen by using vinegar to manage and reduce microbes in germy hotspots. Use at least 5% acetic acid and ensure you have adequate contact time of several minutes. You can also soak your vinegar with citrus peels for a few weeks then use the citrus infused vinegar to make up your kitchen spray - this citrus blend smells divine!

10. As a Sanitiser in the bathroom

Dilute down to either half water, half vinegar or 2/3 vinegar and 1/3 water for more oomph. Store in a spray bottle and use in the shower or on the loo. Spray in the shower to keep mould growth at bay in winter and to wipe up toilet training messes and freshen up under your loo seat and floor between deeper cleans.

 

Avoid these 4 Mistakes When Cleaning with White Vinegar

1.Electronic screens

Instead use a small amount of soapy water on a well wrung out sponge and a lint free cloth to buff. 

2. Surfaces that react with acid

This includes grout and natural stone bench tops. Over time acid based cleaners will cause micro-pitting on stone bench tops causing dulling. 

3.Mixed with baking soda

We often see DIY recipes calling for baking soda and vinegar in the same recipe, to be mixed and stored for later use. mixing these ingredients has an immediate reaction, they fizz and neutralise each other. This has cancelled the cleaning ability of both the backing soda and the vinegar. Best to use these separately or mix like this when it is the fizzing action you are wanting to use. For example as a drain refresher for the kitchen sink! 

4.Mixed with soap

Soap and vinegar are opposites on the pH scale, when used together vinegar destabilizes the soap by dropping its pH, and it reverts back to an oily sludge - no longer a cleaning powerhouse. Stick to using them separately and keep in mind the old rule, washing with alkali (soap) and rinse with acid (vinegar).

 

Figgy & Co. Strong White Vinegar is ideal to have in your cleaning cupboard

 

It's Strong White Vinegar because it's Double strength

This means you can choose to use it diluted down to regular strength or undiluted for jobs that need a bit more oomph without the burden of harsh chemicals. Regular supermarket white vinegar is 4% acetic acid, Figgy strong white vinegar is 9.9% acetic acid, this is also known as pickling strength. To dilute our vinegar down to regular strength simple add 1.48L of water to 1L of strong white vinegar 

 

New Zealand made and naturally brewed

Vinegar making happens two ways these day - the traditional way and the new industrial way using petrochemicals as inputs. Naturally brewed means making vinegar using the traditional way thousands of years old. The natural process is where firstly a sweet liquid is brewed to make alcohol (like grape juice to wine), then the alcohol is fermented with oxygen and vinegar making bacteria (like when wine is left open to the air and it goes 'off'). Simply put sugar to alcohol, alcohol to vinegar 

 

Versatile all around your home

With the option of diluting or not, you will find a use for our white vinegar all around your home. Why not keep some neat in the laundry or under the kitchen sink and dilute the rest to have a handy spray cleaner on hand for windows, mirrors, grimy spots and rinse aid.

 

"I just love using this product for my windows and tap wear, it’s also great for disinfecting my benches"

Monique, product review 2022

 


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