1 4lb 12oz box Borax (2.15 kg or 76 oz) found in the detergent aisle
1 4lb box Arm & Hammer Baking Soda
(1.81 kg) found in the cooking aisle
1 box Arm & Hammer Super Washing Soda 55oz (3 lb 7 oz) found in the detergent aisle
3 bars of Fels-naptha soap, found in the detergent aisle
2 small containers of OxyClean or store brand OxyClean (try to get about 3.5 lbs total (1.58 kg)) found in the detergent aisle (this is apparently optional, but I’m a big fan of OxyClean…)
I found all of this at WinCo Foods. My total for these items was around $16. I bought a cookie jar at WalMart for $5 and I used the scoop that came with my tub of generic OxyClean.
1 box Arm & Hammer Super Washing Soda 55oz (3 lb 7 oz) found in the detergent aisle
3 bars of Fels-naptha soap, found in the detergent aisle
2 small containers of OxyClean or store brand OxyClean (try to get about 3.5 lbs total (1.58 kg)) found in the detergent aisle (this is apparently optional, but I’m a big fan of OxyClean…)
I found all of this at WinCo Foods. My total for these items was around $16. I bought a cookie jar at WalMart for $5 and I used the scoop that came with my tub of generic OxyClean.
Although the recipe calls for 2 small containers of
OxyClean, I opted for a large tub of the generic brand. It was the same price as 2 tubs of Oxy and I
figured it would all get used eventually!
To figure out how much of this 6 lb. tub I actually needed for this
recipe, I browsed through that blog’s comments and found that I needed 32oz. (2
lb.) of OxyClean. Since my tub was 6lbs,
that meant I needed 1/3 of the tub – so I measured it all out and found I had
12 cups….1/3 of that is 4 cups and Ta-Da, thank you high school math! :P
So I mixed in all of the ingredients and my 4 cups of OxyClean and
grated my Fels-naptha soap with my handheld grater (I don’t have a food
processor, but apparently you can use that too.
The soap grated very easily – probably easier than cheddar!).
The soap looks just like cheese! This blinding picture is everything together...very white!
All done! The whole process took 15 minutes (this blog is taking longer...go figure!) and was very easy to do! I fit what I could in the cookie jar (which I will decorate later) and the rest in a ziplock baggie for storage. Going to use 1 scoop per load (the scoop was fairly big...supposed to be around 2 tablespoons per load) - this recipe should last me about 6 months according to the blog (hers lasted 9 months, but I have a feeling I'll be doing more laundry than she does!).
Laundry soap for less than $20 that lasts for 6-9 months...YES PLEASE!!!!
***UPDATE: I've been using this soap for a week and here are my thoughts - there has been NO RESIDUE on my clothes and the soap has dissolved just fine in my cold water (which, actually, has been a big complaint of mine with store-bought powder soap). I just washed a load which contained clothes that my littlest daughter was wearing when we had an explosive diaper. Sad to say, I did not wash it right away, but I thought it would be a good test of this soap to see how it got the dried on poo off...and it DID!!! Not a spot, not a smell!
As for the scent of this soap - it just smells clean. There is no "Caribbean Breeze" or "Spring Mist" scent, but neither do the clothes still smell dirty. They just smell clean. And after they're dried, they smell like the dryer sheet I put in there! All in all, no complaints or concerns yet!***
***UPDATE 3/25/12: I'm nearly out of this laundry soap. I'm hoping to squeeze one more week out of it...This means I went through my soap in 3 1/2 months (bummer, not the 6-9 months!). However, I need to keep in mind that there are 3 adults and 2 children here - both kids have accidents in their bed at least once if not twice a week - this means more laundry in washing bedding several times (including blankets). So, I'll try this soap again. It was easy to make and gets the laundry clean!****
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