If you want to DIY a stain buster, mix 1/4 cup baking soda with 1/4 cup Seventh Generation dish soap and 1/2 cup food grade hydrogen
peroxide in a spray bottle, secure the lid tightly and shake it up.
Simply put any ol' grocery store hydrogen
peroxide in a spray bottle and wipe away for a streak - free clean (and in case your kids like drawing pictures in soap and toothpaste on the mirrors, yes, it works for that too).
Not exact matches
Shake these up
in a
spray bottle (opaque is best — think about the dark brown
bottle that hydrogen
peroxide typically comes
in) and apply to countertops, doorknobs, wherever hands visit often.
I've also tried a hydrogen
peroxide and water
spray, and this seems to work for softer skin fruits and veggies like peaches or grapes or berries (1/2 cup hydrogen
peroxide in 2 cups of water — stored
in a dark
bottle!).
Moldy Grout Stains - For mold on grout make a mixture of 1 part Hydrogen
Peroxide (3 %) and 1 part water
in a
spray bottle.
Susan Sumner, a food scientist at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, developed a cleaning and sanitizing combination consisting of 3 % hydrogen
peroxide (available at the drug store), and white vinegar; each was placed
in separate
spray bottles.
Mix 4 cups of Hydrogen
Peroxide with 1/3 cup of Baking Soda and a squirt of Dish Soap
in a
spray bottle.
IMPORTANT NOTE: Don't mix the vinegar and hydrogen
peroxide together
in the same
bottle, as it's the chemical reaction that occurs when they come together that is responsible for killing bacteria and you don't want that happening
in the
spray bottle.