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 »  Home  »  home  »  24 handy lemon tips
24 handy lemon tips
By Green Living Tips | Published  08/10/2007 | home , family , clothing , cleaning
Lemons - the versatile fruit

Lemons - a fruit with a wonderful fragrance, great in food and beverages, but also very handy for multiple purposes around the home!

Lemons have been cultivated by humans for over a thousand years. The fruit in mentioned in tenth century Arabic literature, but was probably first grown in Assam, India.

Lemons are high in vitamin C, have an anti-bacterial effect and are thought to posess antioxidant and anti-carcinogenic properties. The juice consists of about 5% acid, which  also makes them useful for a variety of household purposes.

Selecting and storing lemons

The best lemons are those that have smooth, oily skins and are heavy for their size. They should be bright yellow with no green tinges. Lemons will keep for up to a week at room temperature, two to three weeks refrigerated. Lemon zest (peel) can be frozen for months.

Juicing lemons

To get the most juice from a lemon, it should be allowed to reach room temperature, or microwaved for a few seconds prior to juicing. Using your palm to roll the lemon on a hard surface can also help improve juice yields. If you only need a little juice, some people pierce the end with a fork, squeeze the amount needed, cover the holes with tape and then store in the fridge.

There's so much more to lemons than just using them in cooking and making lemonade! Here's a selection of handy tips. Remember to test in inconspicuous areas first.

Ant deterrent

Pouring lemon juice around areas that ants frequent is said to repel them.

Air freshener

An equal amount of lemon juice and water added to an atomizer will create a wonderful synthetic chemical-free green air freshener for your home.

All purpose cleaner

Again, an equal amount of lemon juice and water added to a spray bottle is an effective kitchen and bathroom cleaner and can also be used on walls (spot test first).

A small amount of lemon juice can also be added to vinegar based cleaning solutions to help neutralize the smell of the vinegar.

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Microwave

Heat a bowl of water and lemon slices in your microwave for 30 seconds to a minute; then wipe out the oven. Stains will be easier to remove and old food odors neutralized. 

Fridge

Half a lemon stored in your fridge will help control and eliminate unpleasant smells.

Chrome/copper/brass

Rub a lemon juice and baking soda paste onto chrome or copper, rinse and then wipe/buff with a soft cloth or paper towel.

Toilet

Mix 1/2 cup borax and a cup of lemon juice for a powerful toilet cleaner that will leave it smelling extra clean!

Lime scale

Use a half lemon to clean the lime scale off a sink or taps/faucets; rinse well.

Laundry

For bleaching purposes, add 1/2 cup of lemon juice to the rinse cycle and hang clothes outside to dry.

A teaspoon of lemon juice thrown into your wash can also help your clothes to smell fresher.

Dishes

A teaspoon of lemon juice added to your dishwashing detergent can help boost grease cutting power

Drains

Hot lemon juice and baking soda is a good drain cleaner that is safe to use in septic systems.

If you have a garbage disposal unit, throw in some lemon peel from time to time while it's working in order to keep it smelling fresh.

Chopping boards

Rub lemon juice into your wooden chopping board, leave overnight and then rinse. Wood chopping boards appear to have anti-bacterial properties anyway, but the lemon will help kill off any remaining nasties and neutralize odors.

Glass and mirrors

4 tablespoons of lemon juice mixed with half a gallon of water makes an effective window cleaner

Degreaser 

Straight lemon juice can be used as a general degreaser

Furniture

2 parts olive oil or cooking oil mixed with 1 part lemon juice makes for an excellent furniture polish!

Hair

To lighten hair, dampen it with lemon juice and sit out in the sun for an hour. This does work, I tried it myself. Hey, it was the 80's!

I've read that the juice of a lemon mixed with one cup warm water makes for a great hair conditioner. It should be allowed to stay in your hair for a few minutes then washed off. Exercise caution if you have a sensitive scalp.

Cuts, stings and itches

A small amount of lemon juice pour onto minor wounds can help stop bleeding and disinfect the injury (it will sting a bit). Lemon juice applied to itches, poison ivy rashes and wasp stings is said to relieve discomfort.

Mouthwash

A 50/50 mixture of lemon juice and water makes for an effective mouthwash.

Hands

The smell of fish can linger on your hands, even after scrubbing with soap - rubbing your hands with lemon juice will neutralize the smell and leave your hands smelling wonderful.

Isn't it incredible how we have so many environmentally harsh cleaning chemicals in our homes when nature already offers most of what we need! Have some helpful hints for using lemons in and around the home? Please add them below!

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Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
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Comments
  • Comment #1 (Posted by Frank)

    Half a lemon or lime with salt sprinkled on top can be used to scrub dirty pots and pans.
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by joy)

    I've found a few lemon wedges, a couple of ice cubes and a spoonful of sea salt swished around in a coffee pot or coffee urn works wonders!
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by Michael [Green Living Tips])

    Great tips Frank and Joy - thanks!
     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by Jessie)

    Will all of these tips work with grapefruit as well? If not, why?
     
  • Comment #5 (Posted by Helen)

    I've descaled my kettle and showerhead with lemon juice. Put enough lemon juice (i buy the bottled home baking variety) into a bag or container to cover the shower head and put in shower head (you use less when soaking in a bag and you have to tie the bag to the shower head) and I left it for about an hour and all the limescale had gone. Rinse shower head to remove any bits remaining. I then used the lemon juice from the shower head cleaning to descale my kettle - there has to be enough to cover the element.Add more if needed. (Saves wasting the juice.) Boil the kettle, leave to cool, then rinse out kettle. Ta da!!!
     
  • Comment #6 (Posted by Michael - Green Living Tips)

    Great tips Helen, thanks! :)
     
  • Comment #7 (Posted by Sara)

    Be careful when using lemon in your dishwasher. I've been told and have seen the effects of the acid in lemon spotting and rusting my stainless steel, everyday silver wear/serving wear.
     
  • Comment #8 (Posted by Brenda Chew)

    lemon Juice helps to naturally bring down a high sugar count for diabetic people. Some of the meds have aspartame in it and this is killing people. So use lemon juice as a natural and it works great. Read about aspartame and this will concern you enough to consider lemon juice for many other things. As well as the product MSG...Lemon Juice will replace those products in many needs. MSG is hidden in products and killing people. People need to look for natural ways. Read about those and it will scare you enough to use this lemon juice and other green products.
     
  • Comment #9 (Posted by mel)

    1/2 cup of fresh lemon juice mixed with 1/2 cup grapefruit and 8ox of water is great!
     
  • Comment #10 (Posted by Klyde)

    I am wondering if vinegar and lemon juice (or any citrus juice) are the same when it comes to cleaning. Several of their uses are the same, like mirrors and windows, neutralizing fish smell, all-purpose cleaner, good hair rinse, even lowering appetite AND the glycemic index of your meal. Perhaps it is a similar pH (acidic) since one has citric acid and the other has acetic acid. Vinegar's approx. pH is 2.4 and lemon juice's is 2.2. Does anyone know?
     
  • Comment #11 (Posted by Sumi )

    I wonder how we can use lemons for eating. Because most of the methods are explaining about cleaning. What about pouring some lemon juice on the top of the fruits like apples and strawberries. It helps us have extra vitamin C and help the fruit flavor better.
     
  • Comment #12 (Posted by Ro in Richmond)

    my diabetic mother mixes vinegar and lemon in her drinking water to help stabilize her blood sugar...she swears by it...and i recently researched a natural way to remove the pesticide film from store bought fruits...it involved the same ingredients: distilled white vinegar and lemon juice...ummm, the lemon...not as sweet as the strawberry or cherry but oh so powerful and beneficial to life!
     
  • Comment #13 (Posted by leah)

    put vinegar on your hair, after you shampoo you will hve awesome highlights when you wash it out 5 minutes later
     
  • Comment #14 (Posted by zahra)

    hey you guys have awsome ideas thanks so much...i found that when you use a tablespoonful of lemon juice and water in your teapot or any kind of metal or steel can make your pots shiny clean....
     
  • Comment #15 (Posted by Zoe)

    Lemon juice on fresh cut fruit makes it last much longer without going 'brown' (like apples do when left to dry out)
    this is terrific for kids during summer, as they're not likely to eat ugly food.
    Also great for picnics or wherever you need to prepare a fruit salad before hand, keeps it fresh!

    Because we've so many lemons, we use them in so many ways. We make our own cordial (so much sticky fun!)

    But ive got so many ideas from you guys thanks!

    Hey Sumi!
    We have a thriving lemon tree at home (fruits all year round, literally, heavy branches 24/7/365)
    We rub fresh cut fruit with lemons, or if doing alot, juice it, strain it and put it in a spray bottle.
    I dont know why, but
     
  • Comment #16 (Posted by Zoe)

    Oh I remembered another one!
    Lemon juice on snails! they *hate* it!
    Has to be directly applied, and its a bit sadistic in that manner, but ive been growing basil and other herbs for years, and i declared war on snails.
    It rarely kills them, but makes them... foam... they dont return.
    (great activity for gross young boys, they'll LOVE it!)
     
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