by April Anderson Just Another Natural Nut Have you every taken off the knobs on your stove to clean behind them? All you need
Easiest way to clean the knobs is to let them soak in the soapy water while you are cleaning the 'dashboard' of your stove. Soak one of your cloths in the soapy water, wring out and wipe all along the 'dashboard'. Grab your toothbrush and dip into soapy water and use on areas that are built-up and lightly scrub Re-soak your cloth in soapy water and wipe down again to remove all build-up If this does not remove any grease build-up this is where your baking soda come in (It should be stored in a large mouth jar for easy access). Dip your damp cloth into the baking soda, give it a little shake and then with a circular motion, use your the area of cloth with baking soda, to remove the grease build-up. If it is in an area where the cloth can't get at, dip your damp toothbrush into the baking soda, give a little shake and gently scrub the area. Repeat if necessary. Re-soak your cloth in soapy water, fully removing the baking soda and return to the 'dashboard' to wipe down and remove the baking soda residue. With your clean dry cloth, use your glass and hard surface cleaner or spray bottle of water to polish. When you stove 'dashboard' is clean and polished, reach in to your sink or bucket to retrieve your well-soaked knobs, one at at time and using your wet cloth, wipe away any debris or build-up, polish dry and put back into place on the 'dashboard'. Repeat with each knob.
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by April Anderson
Just Another Natural Nut There is an area that generally gets missed when you have an undermount sink in the kitchen and bathroom. This is where your toothbrush and hot soapy water comes in. Dip your toothbrush into your small bucket of hot soapy water and scrub under the lip where the basin meets the counter. Wipe away with a clean damp cloth. Repeat if necessary. by April Anderson
Just Another Natural Nut I am going to be honest with you, maintaining stainless appliances for aesthetic purposes is hard work. As a business who uses only natural products, maintaining stainless appliances for aesthetic purposes when clients use or have used a conventional product to 'shine it up' is frustratingly time consuming. Every time you use a conventional product dedicated to stainless, you are leaving a waxy residue that, overtime, builds-up. For companies who create these products this is awesome as the longer you use their products the more you have to use each time and the more you have to buy. I will let you in on a little secret....you don't need those expensive products to maintain the aesthetics of your stainless appliances (the above pic has only been cleaned and polished with Just Shine) The trick is to make sure you are using a product that does not have wax or silicone as an ingredient (most conventional glass cleaners and some 'green' ones do). Water alone can work as long as you don't have to deal with a lot of sticky smudges. You can check out my video on how to make your stainless shine if you have never used a conventional stainless polishing product here How do you know if you have a build-up on your stainless appliances...do the water test. Put tap water into a spray bottle, place the nozzle on spray, not stream and spray the front of your appliance. If the water starts to run down towards the floor, you have a build-up. If the water stays in one spot with no running vertically towards the floor you have no residue build-up (for this to work you have to spray on vertical surfaces) You will need
If you have been using a conventional polisher for your stainless you need to add another step. I use the Just Polish because the one of the ingredients work to remove all of the residue build-up over time but chances are, you have something in your home right now that will work with the product build-up already on there - olive oil. Click here to see my video using olive oil to polish your stainless You will need
by April Anderson Just Another Natural Nut Are you finding your vacuum isn't working like it should, leaving behind stuff on your carpet. Maybe it is time to check the roller brush. When your roller brush has that much hair string and other things attached to it, it cannot function the way it needs to so go grab a pair of scissors and a bag to dispose of the debris (I put mine in a compost pile so I use a container). You will also need tweezers (you can use your fingers to pull) and patience Just keep cutting a little at at time and pulling what you have cut. Keep repeating until your roller brush is cleared of all attached debris. Use your tweezers to get in the bristle to remove the tiny pieces of debris and wipe down with a damp cloth. If really dirty use soapy water to clean but make sure you wring out your cloth well before using Once done, you should notice a big improvement on the performance of your vacuum.
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Simple Livinglong before it was cool to be a minimalist, live a sustainable life, become a zero waste warrior we just called it simple living or what some could not resist calling us....'those damn hippies....not much has changed in the years since except the wording...now some can not resist calling us.... 'those damn natural nuts'...hence the name Just Another Natural Nut! Archives
November 2021
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