Please advise me: Can this dishwasher detergent be used for dish washing by HAND? I need a DIY powdered dish washing (by hand) detergent. Any help you can give me is very much appreciated. Thanking you in advance.
Hi there! I don’t think this recipe can or should be used for hand washing. Looking into it, I’ve not found a powder recipe though :/ The closest I’ve seen is a dishwashing paste. OTHER COMMENTERS: Have you ever seen a powdered dish soap recipe?
Seeing your update. My recipe is equal parts of everything 1 cup baking soda 1 cup washing soda 1 cup kosher salt 1 cup citric acid -I was getting cloudy dishes when I used my old recipe that had half the citric acid -once I used equal citric acid I stoped having the cloudiness 🤷🏼♀️ We also have hard water! I use two tbsp
@@recipeswithrae you could always make a really small bath of different ratios until you get one right! I did that I stated off using 1/4 cup of everything to try a few times now I make in huge batches and sell them to my friends and make my mom a ton! They love it
That's the most thorough explanation I could find on UA-cam. Thank you for your video, as soon as my dishwasher soap starts running low I'll try that out
You’re welcome! And if one recipe doesn’t work for you, I encourage you to try different recipes. As you may see in other comments, different waters and different machines can affect how well a detergent works
DIY washing soda (A.K.A. soda ash): put as much baking soda as you want to end up as soda ash into a pan, and set it onto a burner on high. It may seem strange to heat dry powder over high heat, but don't worry - it won't burn. heat and stir until it stops bubbling. The bubbles are just carbon dioxide and water - no toxic vapors. when it stops bubbling, take it off the heat and let cool. Your baking soda has been converted.
@recipeswithrae thank you for your kind reply. After some trial and error eventually i found the right formula for myself. I live on a small Greek island and we have very hard water here. But eventually after watching so many videos i figured it out. Your video was a great help. Thank you ❤️
I use the powder home or store and a little bit of dawn and a tiny bit (maybe five drops) of Shaklee Basic H2 which is natural (you could eat it) and it makes water 80 percent wetter and the same ph has human skin so it will not conflict with the other materials.
many of the results will be affected by your water quality. I just moved from one farm to another. I've been spoiled with beautiful soft water for over a decade. I could use almost anything with great success. Now I'm on hard rusty water. I'm slowly trying out different things. First was to put hydrogen peroxide and citric acid instead of jet dry. That got the white film(from the calcium in the water). Next up if figuring out a good recipe that will work with this water for the wash cycle. The store bought powder isn't doing a good job so I have nothing to lose trying out my own recipe. Thanks for your video, it's nice to find someone that already did the research on what each component in the recipe does.
Thank you for watching! I think this is such a good point to remember- your water will affect how well detergents clean. Not every detergent or recipe will work the same for everyone
استخدم نفس الوصفه ولكن اجعل نسبه ملح الطعام وملح الليمون اقل بحيث تكون واحد كوب صودا الغسيل واحد كوب صودا الخبز نصف كوب ملح واخيرا نصف كوب حمض الليمون وشكرا لك استمتعت كثيرا 🌸❤️
Use white vinegar into the rinse aide part of the dishwasher. Do not use the oil, put the citric acid in the bottom of the washer and white vinegar into the rinse.
All the reasons you mentioned for making my own dishwasher detergent are definitely at least factors. But honestly the single, solitary biggest reason i do it is because of the smell. I just cannot take choking on the smell of the store bought detergent and tabs anymore. I choke when I open the container to get one out, I choke when I open my dishwasher after it's done washing, and I can still smell it on my dishes when I pull them out of the cupboard to use them. It's horrendous. I love my DIY dishwasher detergent.
That’s a good point. The smell of store-bought is usually so strong, and I don’t want that smell to stay on my dishes either. Would you mind sharing your detergent recipe? I’m curious to see the difference ratios (or ingredients), work for other people
@@recipeswithrae I don't mind at all. I started with borax, washing soda, citric acid, and Epsom salt because of its coarseness. It did pretty well but then I tried a recipe very similar to yours but I found that it clumped in the dishwasher before it even dispersed. I'm not sure but I believe this is due to the baking soda. Anyway I went back to my original recipe and slightly modified it to increase the citric acid and the Epsom salt. I make it in smaller batches and put it in a quart jar with a couple of oversized silica gel packets. My packets are like 100 grams each and I got them off Amazon. My recipe is: ½ cup each of borax washing soda citric acid Epsom salt It works pretty great. Of course, nothing will be 110% except maybe Cascade Platinum, which is what I used to use. But honestly I'll take the occasional fleck of food on a burnt-on baking dish over that nasty smell any day lol.
@@recipeswithrae I just wanted to add that this morning I ran a dishwasher load and this time I used 2 tablespoons instead of the usual 1 (per one of the replies on your video). EVERYTHING came clean. Even crusted pancake turners on the third shelf where there's no spinning arm/jets directly underneath. I can't believe it, I'm overjoyed. The only thing I noticed is that once I added the extra Epsom salt it seemed to try to clump a little bit in the jar, but I also had taken out one of the two oversized silica gel packs. But it's in a super cute jar so I just leave it on the counter top so that I will see it and remember to rotate it once a day.
When I was a child there were only powders, they where different than the ones we have now. They could be very strong, harsher on some enamels and decor than the current products. Some had a typical chlorine bleach smell, others not. In those days the machines had not yet the soft water salt function they have now. At some point the enzymes improved a bit. Another isuse is European dishwasher then to take in cold water and heat it up in the machine. US made machine tend to take in hot water, it makes a difference. Some ingredients do much better in machines that heat up the water gradually (enzymes). Washing soda on its own will leave a whitish dust unless you find some ingredient to counter act it, I noticed you use a lot of citric acid. Most powders use sodium percarbonate which is the main ingredient in oxybleach. With some ingredients you depend on your machine models ability to rinse thoroughly. I don`t think the commercial powders and detergents use a lot of citric acid, just enough to adjust ph. For hard water areas I think they use zeolite to make the detergent rinse off more easily, and is the ingredient that "makes the dishes dry faster" mentioned in some commercial. Rinse aids absolutely a must in machines, citric acid might work a bit different than vinegar. You can always test up against the commercial formulas since they use more ingredients. When the commercial brands do their job they should be able to make better products and reasonable prices. The challenges they have are issues like water differs from are to area, machine producers may have slightly different cleaning cycles and abilities. They need to make something that works for any condition. Enzymes seems to be a must for lower temperatures and quick cycles. I trust the test laboratories of the large makers along with independent consumer tests. I have not yet figured out what "ionic and non-ionic" surfactant are, but I think they the are similar to lauryl sulphates in liquid hand soaps.
Please advise me: Can this dishwasher detergent be used for dish washing by HAND? I need a DIY powdered dish washing (by hand) detergent. Any help you can give me is very much appreciated. Thanking you in advance.
Hi there! I don’t think this recipe can or should be used for hand washing. Looking into it, I’ve not found a powder recipe though :/ The closest I’ve seen is a dishwashing paste.
OTHER COMMENTERS: Have you ever seen a powdered dish soap recipe?
Seeing your update. My recipe is equal parts of everything
1 cup baking soda
1 cup washing soda
1 cup kosher salt
1 cup citric acid
-I was getting cloudy dishes when I used my old recipe that had half the citric acid
-once I used equal citric acid I stoped having the cloudiness 🤷🏼♀️
We also have hard water! I use two tbsp
@@recipeswithrae you could always make a really small bath of different ratios until you get one right! I did that I stated off using 1/4 cup of everything to try a few times now I make in huge batches and sell them to my friends and make my mom a ton! They love it
That's the most thorough explanation I could find on UA-cam. Thank you for your video, as soon as my dishwasher soap starts running low I'll try that out
You’re welcome! And if one recipe doesn’t work for you, I encourage you to try different recipes. As you may see in other comments, different waters and different machines can affect how well a detergent works
DIY washing soda (A.K.A. soda ash): put as much baking soda as you want to end up as soda ash into a pan, and set it onto a burner on high. It may seem strange to heat dry powder over high heat, but don't worry - it won't burn. heat and stir until it stops bubbling. The bubbles are just carbon dioxide and water - no toxic vapors. when it stops bubbling, take it off the heat and let cool. Your baking soda has been converted.
I've been trying to look into a more natural way of living and this is super helpful and well made, thank you for your work!
the most informative (so so effective) video i’ve ever seen, thank you so much 🎉
I'll definitely make this recipe. Thank you so much for all this information. Really Really helpful 🙏❤️
@recipeswithrae thank you for your kind reply. After some trial and error eventually i found the right formula for myself. I live on a small Greek island and we have very hard water here. But eventually after watching so many videos i figured it out. Your video was a great help. Thank you ❤️
I use the powder home or store and a little bit of dawn and a tiny bit (maybe five drops) of Shaklee Basic H2 which is natural (you could eat it) and it makes water 80 percent wetter and the same ph has human skin so it will not conflict with the other materials.
many of the results will be affected by your water quality. I just moved from one farm to another. I've been spoiled with beautiful soft water for over a decade. I could use almost anything with great success. Now I'm on hard rusty water. I'm slowly trying out different things. First was to put hydrogen peroxide and citric acid instead of jet dry. That got the white film(from the calcium in the water). Next up if figuring out a good recipe that will work with this water for the wash cycle. The store bought powder isn't doing a good job so I have nothing to lose trying out my own recipe. Thanks for your video, it's nice to find someone that already did the research on what each component in the recipe does.
Thank you for watching! I think this is such a good point to remember- your water will affect how well detergents clean. Not every detergent or recipe will work the same for everyone
Someone else in the comment sections said they have hard water and their dishes got clean using equal parts of everything, including citric acid.
استخدم نفس الوصفه ولكن اجعل نسبه ملح الطعام وملح الليمون اقل بحيث تكون واحد كوب صودا الغسيل واحد كوب صودا الخبز نصف كوب ملح واخيرا نصف كوب حمض الليمون وشكرا لك استمتعت كثيرا 🌸❤️
Very interesting video thank you Rae for your information 🤙🤙
Use white vinegar into the rinse aide part of the dishwasher. Do not use the oil, put the citric acid in the bottom of the washer and white vinegar into the rinse.
All the reasons you mentioned for making my own dishwasher detergent are definitely at least factors.
But honestly the single, solitary biggest reason i do it is because of the smell. I just cannot take choking on the smell of the store bought detergent and tabs anymore. I choke when I open the container to get one out, I choke when I open my dishwasher after it's done washing, and I can still smell it on my dishes when I pull them out of the cupboard to use them. It's horrendous.
I love my DIY dishwasher detergent.
That’s a good point. The smell of store-bought is usually so strong, and I don’t want that smell to stay on my dishes either. Would you mind sharing your detergent recipe? I’m curious to see the difference ratios (or ingredients), work for other people
@@recipeswithrae I don't mind at all.
I started with borax, washing soda, citric acid, and Epsom salt because of its coarseness.
It did pretty well but then I tried a recipe very similar to yours but I found that it clumped in the dishwasher before it even dispersed. I'm not sure but I believe this is due to the baking soda.
Anyway I went back to my original recipe and slightly modified it to increase the citric acid and the Epsom salt.
I make it in smaller batches and put it in a quart jar with a couple of oversized silica gel packets. My packets are like 100 grams each and I got them off Amazon.
My recipe is:
½ cup each of
borax
washing soda
citric acid
Epsom salt
It works pretty great. Of course, nothing will be 110% except maybe Cascade Platinum, which is what I used to use.
But honestly I'll take the occasional fleck of food on a burnt-on baking dish over that nasty smell any day lol.
@@recipeswithrae I just wanted to add that this morning I ran a dishwasher load and this time I used 2 tablespoons instead of the usual 1 (per one of the replies on your video).
EVERYTHING came clean. Even crusted pancake turners on the third shelf where there's no spinning arm/jets directly underneath. I can't believe it, I'm overjoyed.
The only thing I noticed is that once I added the extra Epsom salt it seemed to try to clump a little bit in the jar, but I also had taken out one of the two oversized silica gel packs.
But it's in a super cute jar so I just leave it on the counter top so that I will see it and remember to rotate it once a day.
Very interesting! Have you made solid dish soap for hand washing dishes?
Bicarb soda can be heated in the oven to become washing soda.
@@recipeswithrae yes baked at 400f or 240c for 1 hour.
I will be waiting for patiently for the laundry detergent version of this video
For your coffee mug, it’s just a stain. Take a damp paper towel and baking soda and wipe inside of it to get it off. It should come right off.
@@margaretward1180 perfect. Thanks!
I enjoyed your video. Thank you very much. Very thorough and informative
You’re welcome. Thank you for watching :)
It's clumping bc the salt is drawing out the moisture from the other ingredients like the water in your washing soda.
When I was a child there were only powders, they where different than the ones we have now. They could be very strong, harsher on some enamels and decor than the current products. Some had a typical chlorine bleach smell, others not. In those days the machines had not yet the soft water salt function they have now. At some point the enzymes improved a bit. Another isuse is European dishwasher then to take in cold water and heat it up in the machine. US made machine tend to take in hot water, it makes a difference. Some ingredients do much better in machines that heat up the water gradually (enzymes).
Washing soda on its own will leave a whitish dust unless you find some ingredient to counter act it, I noticed you use a lot of citric acid. Most powders use sodium percarbonate which is the main ingredient in oxybleach. With some ingredients you depend on your machine models ability to rinse thoroughly. I don`t think the commercial powders and detergents use a lot of citric acid, just enough to adjust ph. For hard water areas I think they use zeolite to make the detergent rinse off more easily, and is the ingredient that "makes the dishes dry faster" mentioned in some commercial.
Rinse aids absolutely a must in machines, citric acid might work a bit different than vinegar. You can always test up against the commercial formulas since they use more ingredients.
When the commercial brands do their job they should be able to make better products and reasonable prices. The challenges they have are issues like water differs from are to area, machine producers may have slightly different cleaning cycles and abilities. They need to make something that works for any condition. Enzymes seems to be a must for lower temperatures and quick cycles. I trust the test laboratories of the large makers along with independent consumer tests.
I have not yet figured out what "ionic and non-ionic" surfactant are, but I think they the are similar to lauryl sulphates in liquid hand soaps.
I’ve Tried soooo many recipes. They just don’t seem to get my dishes clean 🤦🏼♀️ not sure what to do next. Do not want to use chemicals though
So scientific and smart! Haha it’s like your an engineer. 😂
@@recipeswithrae our chemistry teacher would be proud!
Hi mam this is pammy from India, I want to make premium range detergent powder can u tell me formula
Thank you!
Seems impossible to know exactly what is in “jet dry” which makes me think it’s dirt cheap to make yourself if we knew how.
I know. I think that’s how most cleaning products are
Whenever I used washing soda in dishwasher its was nightmare for me. I always skip washing soda.
Ah! Do you know why the washing soda doesn't work for you? Maybe the water you have?
Where would one find the citric acid?
Grocery stores have it.
Saw at Walmart
Use essential oils if you want to make the recipe WAY more expensive. Lol
They can be pricey! Maybe if you only need a few drops, a friend might be generous and let you have a few out of their stash