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Clarín Issues Step‑by‑Step Baking Soda Cleaning Recipes

The guides give exact measurements, recommended dwell times, explicit surface warnings, and basic safety steps so readers can use low‑cost household mixtures instead of stronger chemical cleaners.

Overview

  • Clarín published practical how‑to guides on Thursday and Friday that outline three baking‑soda combinations — with vinegar and lemon, with liquid dish detergent, and with hydrogen peroxide — and give specific recipes and uses.
  • The report for the vinegar‑lemon mix recommends a small, slow addition (example: about 1 tsp baking soda, 2 tsp white vinegar, 1 tbsp lemon juice) to produce an effervescent degreaser and odor neutralizer for drains and sinks.
  • The detergent paste is presented as an equal‑parts baking soda and liquid dish soap formula that forms a thick, mildly abrasive paste to remove grease when left 10–20 minutes before scrubbing.
  • The hydrogen peroxide paste is described as a three‑to‑one ratio of baking soda to 10‑volume peroxide for whitening, stain removal and grout cleaning, with advice to dilute for delicate items and use an old brush for scrubbing.
  • All pieces stress safety and limits: do not mix reactive blends in closed containers, avoid contact with eyes and mucous membranes, keep mixtures away from children and pets, and test first on surfaces like nonstick coatings, anodized aluminum, sealed wood and marble to prevent damage.