Your No-Sweat Guide to Spring Cleaning
8 Cleaning Tasks That Basically Do Themselves
Give yourself a break this spring cleaning season, you deserve it.
Photo by Rocky Luten
It's here: Our game-changing guide to everyone's favorite room in the house. Your Do-Anything Kitchen gathers the smartest ideas and savviest tricks—from our community, test kitchen, and cooks we love—to help transform your space into its best self.
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8 Comments
foodfan
April 5, 2021
I used "Mold Control" to wipe the tucks and folds of the rubber gasket around the door of my front loading washer, then as an afterthought, ran an empty load with hot water and some more mold control. The washer smells great and so does the room it is in. I be my laundry will, too.
janet V.
March 31, 2021
Being a retired professional housekeeper, I was skeptical when I saw the title of your article. But, you nailed it! I realized, also, that I knew about or regularly do all of these things already. Thanks for the reminder that not all cleaning jobs are toilsome.
Coral C.
March 24, 2021
Costco sells bundles of white washcloths for cheap (50 cents each?) I put half in the bathroom and half in the kitchen. We use them for everything - napkins, cleaning, drying, scrubbing, dusting. I wash them in a hot bleach load in the washing machine and they come out like new, last forever, eventually go into the rag bag for the garage or the Ridwell Threads bag.
Caroline M.
March 31, 2021
I squirrel away old dish towels and cloth napkins for the same purpose! I might not want to display them in the kitchen anymore, but they sure work for cleaning.
Yeeny
March 18, 2021
A few years ago, scientists found that actually "disinfecting" sponges in the dishwasher or microwave actually made some of the worst pathogens on them stronger. According to the NYTimes in 2017, if you are trying to save money or not waste sponges, running "it through a laundry machine at the hottest setting using a powder detergent and bleach and then use it somewhere other than the kitchen that is less hygiene-sensitive, like the bathroom" is a safer option. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/04/science/sponges-bacteria-microwaving-cleaning.html
Smaug
March 19, 2021
I've never understood why people use sponges in the first place- buy a pile of rags and wash them regularly; it's cheaper, they do a better job on the dishes, and it's infinitely more hygeinic. Home water heaters should never be set above 120 deg. because of scalding danger, and they seldom are, so washing in hot water in itself won't do much disinfecting.
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