Does Vinegar Kill Germs?

Yes. Acetic acid or white vinegar is a great disinfectant. It also acts as a deodorizer and cuts grease.

And you can tackle household bacteria like salmonella, E. coli and other “gram-negative” bacteria with vinegar. Gram-negative bacteria can cause infections including pneumonia, bloodstream infections, wound or surgical site infections, and meningitis.

In fact, Heinz has unveiled a stronger version of its white distilled vinegar. Instead of five per cent acetic acid, it has six, which boosts the strength by 20 per cent. They’re calling this new formula…wait for it…”cleaning” vinegar!

Five ways to clean with vinegar

  1. Fill the rinse-agent dispenser of your dishwasher with plain white vinegar.
  2. Combat pit stains on white T-shirts: soak clothing in about 60 millilitres of white vinegar and enough water to cover the stain. Leave overnight and then wash with eco-friendly laundry soap.
  3. Clean rusty tools: soak in a pail of white vinegar and brush to clean.
  4. Deodorize the toilet: pour 125 millilitres of white vinegar into the bowl. Let sit 15 minutes and then flush.
  5. Remove hard-water deposits on the tub and glass shower doors. Heat 250 millilitres of white vinegar in a pot. Then, spray warm vinegar onto surface, let sit 15 minutes and wipe clean. For shower heads, remove shower head and let sit in a bowl of vinegar. Works amazing!

 

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