Set out to test a method I saw on the Internet for cleaning my burner pans and rings easily. For the most part it would have worked perfectly, IF ...
Set out to test a method I saw on the Internet for cleaning my burner pans and rings easily. For the most part it would have worked perfectly, IF ...

How do you get tea stains out a a hand-crocheted doily without harming it?
How do you get tough stains, etc. off of a fiberglass laundry tub?
How do you get tough stains and splatters off of the drip pans on a stove?
For the tea stains put salt on the stain and squeeze juice from a lemon on it and sit it in the sun then wash. If stain really bad may have to do a couple of times. With the laundry tub try baking soda and make a paste and leave on tub for a while.
Call me overly optimistic, but I always believe I’m going to get my full security deposit back when I move out of an apartment.
Why? Because I put my notice in on time, pay my last month’s rent, and leave the place clean and damage-free. And after I move out, I skip to the mailbox every day, fully expecting to see a big fat check from my old landlord – and then it happens. I open the envelope one day to find a slightly less than big fat check, with a laundry list of tiny charges that “exceeded normal wear and tear.” And I’m furious and vow that next time, things will be different. Next time, I’m going to beat normal wear and tear.
But there’s the rub. What’s normal wear and tear to a tenant isn’t
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Organic housekeeping, in which the Nontoxic Avenger shows you how to improve your health and that of your family while you save time, money, and, perhaps your sanity Clean greasy stove rings and drip pans by putting them in a large stock pot and submerging them in a solution of half a cup baking soda per gallon of water. Put the lid on the pot, bring the water to a rolling boil, then turn off the ... |
Stove Burner Drip Pan Black