Monday, November 14, 2011

Homemade Laundry Soap

A couple of months ago a friend posted a blog that had a recipe for homemade laundry soap. I I thought that was fascinating since I'm a) all about saving money; b) love the Proverbs 31 Woman aspect of anything that will serve my family and refer to (a); and c) teach me to lessen dependence on most expensive commercial products. Our economy is changing every aspect of our lives and no longer can we just toss money down the drain. I am NOT anti-capitalist. I'm anti-stupidity. We have long washed our clothes with Purex Laundry Detergent, but at nearly $4 a box, at two boxes a month, there had to be a better alternative. The REALLY interesting part to me was that the author of this blog uses only 1/8 of a cup per wash. In theory, you are supposed to get by an entire year of laundry for the average family on just the mixture below.
Based on what I was spending on laundry detergent alone per year, the total came to $96 and that was two boxes of Purex Laundry Detergent a month, not including a bottle of Downey at $10 for ABOUT a month. That's another $120 a year. I know many that use MUCH more expensive laundry detergent--large bottles of Tide can run up to $16 a bottle. That can come out to $32 a month, depending on use, or $384 a year. So today Ali and I made the trip to Fred Meyer for the supplies. They are:
16 Cups of Baking Soda
12 Cups of Borax
8 Cups of castile soap
3 tbsp. of lavender essential oil
I decided to forego the essential oil since I don't know much about them or using them and frankly, I like the Purex Crystals for fabric softening and scent. My one nod to anything commercial in this.
The breakdown is:
4 lb. box baking soda, $2.99
1.5 boxes Borax, $3.99/box
3 bar pack of castile soap @$3.99 (makes 4 cups of flakes when grated)
1 bottle of Purex Crystals, $4.99
Total: $15.96
As I was just trying out the recipe, I cut it in half. That way if I'm not happy with it, I'm not out a ton of money.
8 Cups of Baking Soda
6 Cups of Borax
4 Cups of castile soap, grated
2 Cups of Purex crystals
Mix well in a large bowl.
I put it in an air-tight container next to the washing machine. I noticed it's HEAVIER that a full box of Purex Laundry Soap. Baking soda is heavy. It's dense. That is the deoderizer in this recipe. Borax is HEAVY. It's an all-around good cleaner for anything in the house, but it's a solid laundry cleaner. The castile soap is a great, nice smelling addition to the recipe and softens the cleaning process so your clothes aren't getting battered by the baking soda and Borax combination. The Purex Crystals just make everything smell good and since I only used 2 cups of it, I still have about 3/4 of a bottle left over for the next batch. I like Downey as much as the next person, but at $10 a bottle (even at Walmart), I'm not spending the money on it.
Years ago I learned to make bars of soap. One of the things you learn is that you don't get lots and lots of bubbles and lathers with it. If you buy a bar of Dial and lather up, that's what you get, a ton of lather and bubbles. That's the detergent in the product. Legally, Dial can't call itself soap. It's a body bar. True soap doesn't lather up like that. Aside from the Purex Crystals I'm removing a lot of the detergents in cleaning our clothes. When I dumped in the 1/8 cup mixture into the water, there weren't bubbles. I won't get bubbles because the detergents aren't there. I pulled the first load out of the washing machine and put them into the dryer. They smelled CLEAN, and the laundry room smelled CLEAN. Not heavy, and the clothes don't feel like they have a film on them. Out of the dryer, the clothes feel like fabric, not like there's a film on them. They smell clean, not covered up.
This has passed by far the most difficult nose of all--my husband's. He LOVES how clean his clothes smell and gave me a big thumbs up. Winner!

No comments:

Post a Comment