I have been using the soap for week and have come to the same conclusion!! I love it!!!! So now . . . I am passing it on to all of you quilty friends in case you could use a little laundry savings as well :) You can read it below or on Char's post, or on the Original post :) You take your pick :)
Here is what you will need :
(Most of this can be found in the detergent aisle, with the exception of the Baking Soda and the Zote Soap)
1 (4 lb 12 oz) Box of Borax
1 (3 lb 7 oz) Box of Super Washing Soda (Arm & Hammer)
1 (3 lb) Container of OxyClean
2 (14.1 oz) Bars of Zote Soap (I found this at our local Latino market. If you can't find it, you can use an equal amount of Fels Naptha, but those bars are smaller, so be sure you get 28 ounces, not just two bars)
1 (4 lb) Boxes of Baking Soda (Arm & Hammer)
1 (55 ox) Bottle of Purex Crystals Fabric Softener (optional--but it smells nice, makes the detergent look pretty, softens the fabric, AND provides a bottle for you to store your soap in so that you don't have to have a giant bucket of soap cluttering up your laundry room)
We were doing a double batch here :) |
Grate the bar soap-- A food processor will save you a whole lot of time here ;) If you want smaller bits of soap, you can do it by hand, using the smaller holes on the grater but your wrist might be a little sore :)
It's looks like pink shredded gum from the 80's :) But don't confuse it with gum, that would be nasty :)
Next, get a five-gallon bucket, and start mixing everything together. Charlotte recommended us to have a layer approach to this--i.e. dump about 1/4th of each ingredient into the bucket, then stir them all together (I use a wooden spoon). Then repeat three more times. This will totally save your arms ;)
Then just use a measuring cup to pour your soap into your bottle and the remainder store in your bucket, I just put the lid on and set it in the garage :)
Now you're done! To use the soap, just put in 1-2 Tablespoons in with each load of laundry. You'll think you need more, but really you don't. I marked my lid at the 2 TBSP so that it is easy to see. Charlotte says and I have found as well that when washing the water doesn't have the suds that you're used to. That's okay, your clothes will still get clean.
So there you have it :) Homemade Laundry detergent. To make one batch it cost $31.00, and at 2 TBSP a load and about 2 1/2 gallons of soap, I figure it will last about 1 1/2 to 2 years :) It actually makes me smile to throw a load in the wash now, just a little triumph of savings each time ;)
So that's it for today. Yup, a little off topic from our normal quilting but hopefully still helpful ;) Have a Happy Quilting Weekend, and maybe fill it with a little laundry as well :)