@@whaleblue833 In vitro, or on human cells present in a cell culture, then yes. In vivo, as in if you swallow acetic acid, then no, unless you swallow copious amounts.
@@joancollinsshoulderpad ok so strictly speaking, the stomach is an organ and not an area of the body, and it is sterile due to the presence of Hydrochloric Acid, aka HCl. Now some bacteria may colonize the stomach, like H pylori but those are disease conditions like Ulcers. So, no, no bacteria are killed as there isn't any to begin withand Acetic acid ( Vinegar) is a much weaker acid than HCl, so if something, like H pylori, can survive the HCl of the stomach, it will definitely not die if a person swallows vinegar. That being said, maybe you mean the intestines, which normally ARE colonized by bacteria, most of which is useful, but may at times turn pathogenic. In this case again a weak acid like acetic acid wont harm them at all since once the food enters the small intestines, Pancreatic secretions, which are highly basic, neutralize the stomach acids, to prevent them from destroying the intestines. (Only the inside lining of the stomach can withstand the HCl and that is due to the presence of a thick mucous barrier). Other organs will get destroyed if exposed to HCl. And if Pancreatic juices whose function it is normally to neutralize the HCl from stomach, and HCl is a much stronger acid than Acetic (Vinegar), then the Pancreatic juices definitely neutralize Vinegar as well. So by the time food or drink enters the intestines, it has basically a neutral pH, neither acidic nor basic, and so any harm to intestinal bacteria is prevented. In short, no, neither stomach bacteria nor intestinal bacteria will be harmed by vinegar.
@@joancollinsshoulderpad I sent you a reply But I guess it never posted. So the stomach is sterile, it has no bacteria under normal conditions, because of it's very low pH due to HCl, hydrochloric acid. Maybe you mean the gut flora in the intestines?
I use white vinegar to clean my kitchen and spray it on fresh fruits and veggies to soak for about 5 minutes and then rinse real well. I've worked for 2 pharma companies and the janitorial staff cleaned the bathrooms with vinegar. It also cuts grease.
@@burkinfaso usually it’s diluted with water anyway when you use it to clean, but I promise that the smell goes away very quickly. Maybe spray the room where you cleaned with a room freshener or light a candle, but I don’t find it to be necessary.
@@Becky0494 I hope you aren't using vinegar because you are worried about the toxicity and chemical makeup in household cleaners, because it would be highly ironic if you did and then went ahead and sprayed your house with airborne pollutants.
Roman soldiers were issued flasks of vinegar, which they would add to water to make a drink called Posca. It effectively killed off bacteria in the water, and served as a kind of ancient sports drink.
Yes, exactly! It also helps with not feeling so thirsty when walking for miles, then having to fight. It also explains why it says in the gospels that when Jesus asked for water, a Roman soldier standing guard gave him "vinegar". He just passed him his duty flask.
As a person who has worked around appliances for a couple of years now, I've learned a trick: if you have accumulated odors in your washing machine after a while, put a little bit of white vinegar in the detergent slot and start a wash cycle without any items in the machine. That will get the odors out without using high-grade chemicals.
@bina nocht just googled it and most cleaning vinegars are 6%, while standard all-purpose vinegar is 5%, and besides that there are concentrate vinegars which can be much stronger, most ads I see when I Google it are 20-75% so there's a lot of variation with different products.
Citric acid and water. A solution of citric acid and 3% peroxide is effective for pathogen emergencies but must be rinsed off after one minute. It is corrosive to latex- including paint- if left on too long, but it will clean tile grout if you run out of bleach.
For many years now, I've been using white vinegar as one of my go-to cleaning products. I prefer it to decontaminate food surfaces, like cutting boards. Works great on glass. Use baking soda for cleaning also. Much cheaper & safer than using other cleaning products.
When I was homeless, a good life hack to fight crotch and armpit stink was to wash the areas with apple cider vinegar if you could not get a shower for long periods of time. Helped a lot. The acetic acid even dissolves secretions from the sebaceous glands, which robs the smelling bacteria of their food.
@@ClanToreador I should add I am male, not sure if ACV can irritate a woman down there but it might. Perhaps diluting it 50/50 with water is a safe bet for that.
I have a good mate who fishes for live trout in Far North Queensland for the export market. He cleans his fish bins and working surfaces with White Vinegar. He goes through litres and litres of the stuff. He once had a long 'discussion' with the Food Inspectors over his use of Vinegar instead of commercial-grade food safe cleaners. The end story was they couldn't disagree with his knowledge of how good vinegar is as an antibacterial cleaner, and the fact that it is completely food safe. He still uses it.
@@yardleyj9391 The real beauty of it is that you can use it at sea without worrying about dumping toxic chemicals into the ocean. Acetic Acid is made up of Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen, so it just dissolves away in seawater into its elemental components.
Vinegar is forbidden in EU because it is NOT ECOLOGIC! It can’t be degraded by basically anything. You have to use cleaners that are at least 96% degradable. This is why instead of vinegar all cleaners have now citric acid.
My grandma used to make me gargle with pickle juice (vinegar and salt solution when I had a sore throat. It works really well preventing strep throat if you're prone to getting it.
I got strep throat once as a child. I then had acid reflux, and it killed the strep! It hurt for a few seconds, but the next morning, my throat was fine.
Vinegar is also good at getting rid of smells. The first apartment I moved into was a dump because I couldnt afford anything better, and among other things it had a lingering tobacco smell even after washing everything because the previous person living there had been smoking indoors. I put some vinegar on a plate and let it evaporate overnight and just a couple days of doing this got rid of the smell completely
Thank you. Have never seen or heard of "double strength" vinegar and all the pro-green-cleaning-crap blogs are only ever recommending regular white vinegar which here is around 5%.
@@ih82r8 - You just saw how effective it was at killing bacteria. Why would you call that "crap"? Do a bit of Googling about both vinegar and bleach. Then compare the price of a jug of white vinegar versus a jug of the rainbow-colored "anti-bacterial" cleaning products. Fake chemical scents? Color? Marketing? Is that really where you want to spend your money? You're welcome.
Remember, he used 8% Vinegar. The stuff you find in American grocery stores is 5%. This percentage difference makes a huge difference in killing bacteria. *I use 3% Hydrogen Peroxide instead because it kills everything and leaves no smell or acidic residue.*
does percentage difference make a difference if you use MORE of it? lol. Have to be a little careful; anything that reacts like that probably DOES have potential for harm. But it makes a wonderful cleaner with baking soda. Hy Peroxide is also excellent.
I always soak my strawberries and blueberries in an applesider vinegar- water solution before I eat them, it good at cleaning both bacteria and pesticides off fruits and vegetables
This is double strength vinegar. I've always used vinegar for a cleaning agent, but I would love to see this same experiment with the regular vinegar that we get from the grocery store.
DOUBLE STRENGTH white vinegar is what you used. Restaurants are allowed to clean tables with vinegar that is very much diluted with water. Providing a usable ratio of vinegar to water would be helpful. Nobody is going to clean their home with straight, double strength white vinegar. The fumes would not allow it.
@@sk.n.9302 Bleach is the only thing that really gets my hand towels clean, otherwise, they smell like mildew. Any suggestions? ❤ I don’t buy Clorox brand though.
Sirca in hindi or vinegar has been used for more than 2000 years to preserve pickles and in summers onion dipped in vinegar is used to mitigate aide effects of heat wave here
The only problem is this is double strength, which is stronger than the regular household vinegar that most people use for cleaning. I would love to see the effects of regular household vinegar on bacteria under the microscope. Apple cider vinegar with mother would be cool too!💓 @oneminmicro
I'm sure the effect would be the same, maybe slightly slower- could use the regular vinegar full strength too. Ive used apple cider vinegar diluted 50/50 with water to treat hot spots on my dog's skin, it works well!
I use cider vinegar for my skin .. it removes moles and growths cleanly and permanently. It’s the majority of my home cleaning and it’s even in my dish liquid! I live in the tropics so we have nail funguses and vinegar takes care of this too! vinegar is amazing for keeping mold off of outdoor surfaces 😊
@@kristinekerr3688 So for skin use only apple cider v. When I had a mole or wart etc. I would cut a little piece of gauze to cover it ..and then I use a gentle type of skin tape to cover over the gauze. Next (this gets quick and easy) I take a clean eye dropper with a bit of vinegar and poke it under the tape and wet the gauze. I Stick the tape back down and go about my day or to bed. You must keep the gauze wet with cider vinegar though. After a week to 2 weeks the growth diminishes and sometimes it comes off quite quickly. Continue until there is absolutely nothing left of it to the touch. If it’s not possible to wear this dressing to work etc., you can still get results just rubbing cider v onto the growth. Take an eyedrops bottle with you and apply as much as possible. You get amazing results.. just have to persist😊.
@@kristinekerr3688 There is a very fast way.. I removed a huge mole on my forehead by scuffing the surface of the mole with a nail file then cut the head off a Q-tip and soaked it in Apple Cider vinegar. I applied it to the mole with several bandages (So it wouldn't dry out quickly. I had to soak it again then wore it all day. Once the area turns very white, you can take bandages off and in a few short days, the wart will turn black and turn into a scab but DON'T pick at it!!! Let it heal (it will itch because it's healing) and it will leave no scar. 100%
It is EXTREMELY important to mention that the reason vinegar isn't considered a disinfectant is because there are large amounts of disease causing bacteria and viruses it doesn't kill. The definition of a disinfectant is normally considered to be something that kills 99.9% of disease causing pathogens which vinegar doesn't come close to doing.
Yes - which is probably why the maker of the video said vinegar was a “pretty good” disinfectant (or words to that effect). rather than saying a “perfect” or “almost perfect” disinfectant. But he did not go into the detail that you did - and which is important. Thank you.
I think the important distinction is how many of those bacteria are found in the average house? I'm sure there are many disease causing pathogens in a festering sewer pit, but they aren't in my kitchen. There has to be a distinction between "pathogens" and "household pathogens". There's also the point that you can add vinegar to dish water and safely wash but you can't do that with a disinfectant. (In general)
It is worth noting that most vinegar available to us at least in America is diluted to 4 percent. I don’t know how much the difference it would make but I know that 10 percent is corrosive to skin
I live in Eastern Europe and the most commonly found vinegar in any store is 9%, and use it all the time for cleaning instead of buying chemicals. I don't know why vinegar in the US is only 4-5%, but I'm sure it also works to kill bacteria.
@@dianaboughner7977 I've never rinsed, patted dry, or put anything on my chicken, fish, or pork to try to kill salmonella and I've never once gotten sick either. This is why you cook your food. You don't have to over cook either.
Try with Thyme water next time (liquid concentrate of thymian) or maybe just put some thymian or oregano in some semi hot water and let it be there in around 15 minutes before use.
We were working in subway tunnels and black mold started to spread. They used a vinegar solution and not bleach like we always had previously used. Vinegar is the best for many uses. Learned a lot that day.
I take 1 capful cider vinegar straight...prn as a preventative...it's a good preventative... good for sanitizing... add baking soda to it when cleaning and Voila! It's good in laundry... I use white with baking soda on oil spots etc. Also good for cleaning shower stall... it foams that tile great no scrubbing... use it in kitchen tile.... I buy it by the gallon also good on electric perculator to get rid of cofee residue... it's a staple in our house... good for sugar and blood pressure issues... great for first aid.
Amonia, chlorine, drinking alcohol, rubbing alcohol, copper metal, brass metal, zinc, stainless steel, boiling water, cold water, electricity, Pure Cold-pressed Organic Coconut Oil, Raw Whole Honey (you might be surprised with the last two). Would love to see how basic Pure Lard Soap compares with modern Chemical Based "Soap".
I spray my veggies with vinegar and allow it to work for several minutes. Seems to improve refrigerator shelf life. Of course I rinse the vinegar off and rehydrate after
I use vinegar to remove battery base that leaked out of barrel batteries on 25+ year old motherboards. Cleans up really well. In really bad cases, I dunk the board in a shallow pool of this stuff.
Was the vinegar uncut? The suggested ratio for cleaning solution is 1:1 or a 50% vinegar and 50% water. I wonder if it would still be effective 🤔. I wonder how far it can be diluted and it still works. Vinegar doesn't smell nice as a cleaning solution so I would want to use the least amount as possible while still killing germs.
The only thing is--once you are done, you'll need to quickly get a very good alkaline substance to keep it from weakening your surface(most everyday surfaces). Vinegar is quite acidic and you don't want it unchecked for too long on something you care about(and I think the harder/tougher the substance the longer you have before you are "required" to act).
I use cleaning vinegar spray to clean plates, bowls and utensils, without water & soap. Works very well. A common camping solution. The smell goes away quickly.
@@TwinkieReid I am still experimenting:when I wake up and right before bed. I just spit out the salt water, and I don't rinse out the salty taste. I use Himalayan salt, and it actually is rather pleasant. My mouth feels fresh after I do it. I am experimenting with brushing with baking soda only, but I think brushing with salt water is sufficient after flossing as we only need to get the food out of the tight places, then swish with salt water (non iodized). It makes sense: remove food residue for bacteria, then swish with salt water which is pH7. I think bacteria simply can't survive.
Great to know full strength vinegar kills but how effective is it when diluted. No puts full strength vinegar in food, but perhaps a comparison of different dilutions would help us understand the best ratios when adding to out rinsing liquid
@@Samantha360 me too! I’ve been starting to use vinegar and I stare at it wondering if it’s actually doing something. After all I can’t tell on the microscopic level so it sucks not having a high tech microscope. Someone did say the guy used 8% vinegar in the video. I’m not sure if strength makes a difference of how fast it kills.
@@rastaman7140 it probably does smell, maybe less since it's diluted, but you can help it by adding some pure essential oil that you like. The smell will not go away, but if you're spraying and wiping clean, it shouldn't be too bad. Also, you do adapt a bit.
Cool, what would ha ve made this much more interesting is to compare it to something else (like EtOH or soap solutions), and a control group. Group A = vinegar, Group B = 70% ethanol or soap, Group C = control (just water). You could have gone even further by having Vinegar at different concentrations.
Can you do a video of microscopic parasites vs different cleaning solutions? (ie vinegar, concentrated bleach, diluted bleach, alcohol, hydrogen peroxide, and ammonia?)
@@endurofan9854 can I build up immunity against mercury? would be so cool, I could splash it all over my naked body and chug frosty mercury smoothies, would be a tiktok megahit
Yup! All I need in my household would be vinegar, peroxide, and baking soda. I like to mix vinegar with orange peels and a few drops of essential oils so it smells better
Ah, depends on the pot. Obviously non stick wouldn't work well but stainless steel I suppose would be ok. I use baking soda but not the peroxide, if I recall. It's been awhile since I last cleaned my pots and glass tea kettle.
Take heed: DO NOT use vinegar with bleach. DO NOT use vinegar on top of natural stone, wood, or unsealed grout. DO NOT use vinegar as a surface disinfectant for proper food safety practices or medical safety practices. And in order for vinegar to be effective, it MUST sit on the surface for at least 30 minutes before being wiped away. Learn the two ways in which colonies are eradicated: you must kill AND prevent replication. Vinegar doesn’t do both for all types of bacteria and fungus.
ALSO: DO NOT inject vinegar into ur veins, DO NOT use vinegar as eye drops, DO NOT use vinegar to aide in making pickles, oh wait, DO use vinegar to aide in the pickling process.
Don't use vinegar as eye wash! Don't snort vinegar as a cocaine supplement! Don't try to paint your car with vinegar! Vinegar cannot be used as a glue replacement! Don't add vinegar to your gas tank! Vinegar does not make a good toothpaste! Never use vinegar as a personal lubricant!
Replace your shampoo with a mix of ACV and water ! The way apple cider vinegar cleans my scalp and hair it's phenomenal. I only wash my hair with shampoo once a month, every weekend I use a ACV spritz on my scalp and I never have to worry about sebum, dandruff nor bacteria.
@migenanikdhima8971 - 1 or 2 tsp in 300ml of water IF you use the recipe every week (adjust depending on how dense your hair is) I use this recipe on my scalp every Sundays - 3 tbsp of acv in 300ml water IF you plan to use it once a month or once in a while (again, adjust to your hair density) Don't use too much avc because it's acid PH will damage your hair badly. Listen to your hair first and foremost and if needed, start slow
Just bc. they don't move anymore doesn't mean they are dead. Plus: The concentration here is let's say 50:50 (1:1). In cleaning solutions you would use less.
We keep vinegar in a spray bottle in the bathroom and use it for cleaning everything. The smell is strong at first but quickly is replaced by a clean, fresh smell. No strong chemicals get added to our lives.
Cloves liquid. Boil cloves and let it sit overnight. There's a practice putting cloves in the mouth can remove bad breath. Curious about it under microscope.
@bowittman , My aunt used to chew that gum all the time and I thought it stank. She offered me a stick of clove gum once. I took it and the taste was horrible. I was probably around 5 years old. 😜
NO. Regular vinegar. Our ancestors have been using vinegar for years. In medical institutions we use 50/50 water, vinegar. I would never buy "cleaning vinegar."
LOL 😆 I love how your vinegar says double strength at 8%! In Korea we use vinegar around the 20-30% but, we love that German vinegar Surig at 25%. Some of the best tasting vinegar ever.
It doesn't smell too terrible. You'll get used to it. Lol. Apple Cider Vinegar tends to have a more pleasent smell then regular white vinegar. And it works just as well for cleaning.
I use Apple Cider Vinegar for Sore Throat as soon as you feel it coming on, gargle a tablespoon. Do it for at least 3 times in a day. Works like a champ!!!
Yes! Add a little raw honey. Research shows that combo kills strep. Dilute in water or apple juice. It's what my mom always did if we had sore throats growing up. Totally helps!
yes I use it time to time as a fabric softener for my towels it doesn't have a smell to the towels at all in fact I've noticed the towels are brighter when I use it
this was the equivalent on watching a nuke flatten a city
That's a good idea..... nuke the bacteria.... that will be the last video
Vvvvvcvvvcoioo
,99 for xray, 06vjv0nm9nbbgbbbbakl906vjv0nm9nbbgbbbbavvbmoa 9o8xuio700& kh99. 0ip0o9 has 9PM 99PM PM 90ovvbmoa ps o8vvbmoa
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Thought this too
RIP nuked bacteria
Want to know why? It's Acetic Acid. The drop in pH denatures the cell membrane, it's channels and integral proteins, the organelles, etc.
@@whaleblue833 In vitro, or on human cells present in a cell culture, then yes. In vivo, as in if you swallow acetic acid, then no, unless you swallow copious amounts.
@@whaleblue833 thick layers of keratin on the epidermis
Sorry if this is a silly question but does eating vinegar kill your stomach bacteria then?
@@joancollinsshoulderpad ok so strictly speaking, the stomach is an organ and not an area of the body, and it is sterile due to the presence of Hydrochloric Acid, aka HCl. Now some bacteria may colonize the stomach, like H pylori but those are disease conditions like Ulcers. So, no, no bacteria are killed as there isn't any to begin withand Acetic acid ( Vinegar) is a much weaker acid than HCl, so if something, like H pylori, can survive the HCl of the stomach, it will definitely not die if a person swallows vinegar.
That being said, maybe you mean the intestines, which normally ARE colonized by bacteria, most of which is useful, but may at times turn pathogenic. In this case again a weak acid like acetic acid wont harm them at all since once the food enters the small intestines, Pancreatic secretions, which are highly basic, neutralize the stomach acids, to prevent them from destroying the intestines. (Only the inside lining of the stomach can withstand the HCl and that is due to the presence of a thick mucous barrier). Other organs will get destroyed if exposed to HCl. And if Pancreatic juices whose function it is normally to neutralize the HCl from stomach, and HCl is a much stronger acid than Acetic (Vinegar), then the Pancreatic juices definitely neutralize Vinegar as well. So by the time food or drink enters the intestines, it has basically a neutral pH, neither acidic nor basic, and so any harm to intestinal bacteria is prevented.
In short, no, neither stomach bacteria nor intestinal bacteria will be harmed by vinegar.
@@joancollinsshoulderpad I sent you a reply But I guess it never posted. So the stomach is sterile, it has no bacteria under normal conditions, because of it's very low pH due to HCl, hydrochloric acid. Maybe you mean the gut flora in the intestines?
Its as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced.
Use the vinegar Luke!
Toast
Crazy Opie One.
It’s weird to think about how many levels of transcendence we are above them. And how many levels of transcendence are there above us?
These comments are amazing 😂
Me with vinegar over my sink : "Now I am become death, destroyer of worlds."
_pours vinegar_
😂😂😅
😂
LMAO 💀💀💀
A warrant has been issued by the international virus committee for war crimes.
I suppose we all thought that, one way or another.
I use white vinegar to clean my kitchen and spray it on fresh fruits and veggies to soak for about 5 minutes and then rinse real well. I've worked for 2 pharma companies and the janitorial staff cleaned the bathrooms with vinegar. It also cuts grease.
W2SSSS2SSSW22s22s2s22222zqss²q2ssss2ss22s2ss222q
How do you deal with the vinegar smell? Is there a trick to that?
@@burkinfaso usually it’s diluted with water anyway when you use it to clean, but I promise that the smell goes away very quickly. Maybe spray the room where you cleaned with a room freshener or light a candle, but I don’t find it to be necessary.
@@Becky0494 thank you 🙏🏻
What proportions do you dilute to?
@@Becky0494 I hope you aren't using vinegar because you are worried about the toxicity and chemical makeup in household cleaners, because it would be highly ironic if you did and then went ahead and sprayed your house with airborne pollutants.
Roman soldiers were issued flasks of vinegar, which they would add to water to make a drink called Posca. It effectively killed off bacteria in the water, and served as a kind of ancient sports drink.
Add alot of vinegar in it becomes Vodka 😆
The things you learn in the comments section.
Also on bandages I believe
Wow! That's interesting!! Thanks for sharing!
Yes, exactly! It also helps with not feeling so thirsty when walking for miles, then having to fight. It also explains why it says in the gospels that when Jesus asked for water, a Roman soldier standing guard gave him "vinegar". He just passed him his duty flask.
As a person who has worked around appliances for a couple of years now, I've learned a trick: if you have accumulated odors in your washing machine after a while, put a little bit of white vinegar in the detergent slot and start a wash cycle without any items in the machine. That will get the odors out without using high-grade chemicals.
thank you for the tip
@@cynthiaaustin1763 No problem.
If you put a brick of non soaked coal in your shoes overnight, it will absorb the bacteria that causes stinky shoes.
@@lightpropulsionguy just spray deodorant in your shoes
@@jmatt98 that creates more bacteria, ruins shoes faster, they really got people destroying everything with all the quick fix snake oil ways....
My mother in law used vinegar to clean around the house. She would also leave bowls of vineagar in rooms. This made the house smell nice.
Indeed. I detect a hint of sarcasm.
Try with diluted vinegar as that's what's commonly used for cleaning (to see how the efficacy may drop)
Exactly what i thought when he showed the 8% vinegar, most vinegar is 5%
Agreed
Do an efficacy scale.
@bina nocht just googled it and most cleaning vinegars are 6%, while standard all-purpose vinegar is 5%, and besides that there are concentrate vinegars which can be much stronger, most ads I see when I Google it are 20-75% so there's a lot of variation with different products.
Citric acid and water. A solution of citric acid and 3% peroxide is effective for pathogen emergencies but must be rinsed off after one minute. It is corrosive to latex- including paint- if left on too long, but it will clean tile grout if you run out of bleach.
For many years now, I've been using white vinegar as one of my go-to cleaning products. I prefer it to decontaminate food surfaces, like cutting boards. Works great on glass. Use baking soda for cleaning also. Much cheaper & safer than using other cleaning products.
Yep I use it for everything even weed killer.
@@jennyanimal9046 Everything? You fill your car up with it? 😊
@@nuntana2 I wish. I clean my car with it though lol.
I have heard that using baking soda with vinegar neutralizes it
@@thecure3982 I've heard that too.
When I was homeless, a good life hack to fight crotch and armpit stink was to wash the areas with apple cider vinegar if you could not get a shower for long periods of time. Helped a lot. The acetic acid even dissolves secretions from the sebaceous glands, which robs the smelling bacteria of their food.
Hope things are going better for you now ❤
That’s good to know if I’m ever in a similar position, never know these days.
@@Userhandleidk Still rough but have a roof over my head at least, thankful for that :] Thank you.
@@ClanToreador I should add I am male, not sure if ACV can irritate a woman down there but it might. Perhaps diluting it 50/50 with water is a safe bet for that.
Good advice!!
Backteria940: you feel wind?
Bacteria056: ye and what's that smell
Bacteria135: what's the swoosh sound?
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 💦💦💦💦💦💦 goochie
I have a good mate who fishes for live trout in Far North Queensland for the export market. He cleans his fish bins and working surfaces with White Vinegar. He goes through litres and litres of the stuff. He once had a long 'discussion' with the Food Inspectors over his use of Vinegar instead of commercial-grade food safe cleaners. The end story was they couldn't disagree with his knowledge of how good vinegar is as an antibacterial cleaner, and the fact that it is completely food safe. He still uses it.
Great solution! There is actually published a scientific study where bacteria immune to Penicillin were killed by 30% vinegar.
God the great 🌺 Creator
ruclips.net/video/SdZIiBLtWf4/видео.html
Such a smart, ecological and food-friendly solution!
@@yardleyj9391 The real beauty of it is that you can use it at sea without worrying about dumping toxic chemicals into the ocean. Acetic Acid is made up of Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen, so it just dissolves away in seawater into its elemental components.
Vinegar is forbidden in EU because it is NOT ECOLOGIC! It can’t be degraded by basically anything. You have to use cleaners that are at least 96% degradable. This is why instead of vinegar all cleaners have now citric acid.
Key point: he used 8% vinegar. The most commonly available vinegar I see on store shelves is either 4% or 5%
Yup, and most people suggest diluting it before using as cleaning agent. Im sure its still quite effective but maybe a little slower to react.
Studies of marinades reducing bacteria use 5% vinegar and they mostly got a 99% reduction of the worst varieties.
I bought 6% gallon jug of "Cleaning Vinegar" in the cleaning products isle.
Green gobbler has a 30% cleaning vinegar. The $+🌳 has a 6% cleaning vinegar.
Apple vinegar is the best for this .
Try using drops of various plant oils like oregano, castor oil, eucalyptus oil etc.
It would have been nice if this was done with regular strength 4% or 5% the type of vinegar that is usually used instead of double strength vinegar
Just use 2 cups instead of 1. You’re welcome 😉
@@amosbrown7068 That's nice that you're trying to be helpful but that's not really how percentage works when it comes to chemicals in science.
@@lamorenalindacopswife 👍
Yeah and if you do any type of fermenting then you know that lots of germs live in vinegar
I'd like to see it on salmonella and e coli
My grandma used to make me gargle with pickle juice (vinegar and salt solution when I had a sore throat. It works really well preventing strep throat if you're prone to getting it.
I got strep throat once as a child. I then had acid reflux, and it killed the strep! It hurt for a few seconds, but the next morning, my throat was fine.
Peroxide also. I gargle with it and it helps with cold and flu.
Really? How does it feel? I have sore throat for 2 days and thinking to try this.
@@zerad3307 buy iodine gargle, probably less likely to make you choke.
Your grandma would have had to whup my ass because I aint messing with no pickle juice.
Vinegar is also good at getting rid of smells. The first apartment I moved into was a dump because I couldnt afford anything better, and among other things it had a lingering tobacco smell even after washing everything because the previous person living there had been smoking indoors. I put some vinegar on a plate and let it evaporate overnight and just a couple days of doing this got rid of the smell completely
Wow good trick ! Gotta do this one day
I could use this trick myself, as there is always some smell from outside
Meanwhile in bacteria universe: today we're looking at humans vs hydrochloric acid above the megascope.
Thank you for proving that we do not need to use poison to clean our homes.
This is not regular/edible vinegar...
@@Cemhta Compare it to the actual poison in your "cleaning products"
I've been saying this for years! I clean with it, I put it in my laundry, it's great on windows. . . . ... it just has endless uses
I've been telling people to use vinegar to clean instead of harsh chemicals.
@@mistypedhi 💯 absolutely
I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced.
😂
🤣👍😎
A real genocide on a microscopic level
😆
We are made by bacteria
That means that it’s beneficial to add vinegar to your salad to prevent the eventual ingestion of bad bacterias in vegetables.
Uh, no.
Not a bad idea
Nope it is a bad idea. But I won't tell you why.
@@co2metal can u tell me why?
@@Sadida8310 Dont listen to this schmuck. He is just being an ass by saying he won’t tell you- there is nothing to tell.
Interesting fact, in the Middle Ages, Vinegar was used to make water drinkable far more often than alcohol.
I would love to see a comparison between normal strength vinegar and apple cider vinegar
Exactly. The average household does not have double strength vinegar.
@@ahuramazda980 you can easily purchase extra strong vinegar from any grocery store.
Apple cider vinegar
Bacteria: Mmmm apple, I'm dead
Double-strength vinegar
Bacteria: Dead
They both work. It's the acid that kills bacteria, but white vinegar is cheaper.
I'd like to see the results with Apple cider vinegar
Show us how regular strength vinegar works, as well as apple cider vinegar. Thank you!
Yes... There is cyanide to potentially kill all bacteria.
Thank you. Have never seen or heard of "double strength" vinegar and all the pro-green-cleaning-crap blogs are only ever recommending regular white vinegar which here is around 5%.
@@ih82r8 - You just saw how effective it was at killing bacteria. Why would you call that "crap"? Do a bit of Googling about both vinegar and bleach. Then compare the price of a jug of white vinegar versus a jug of the rainbow-colored "anti-bacterial" cleaning products. Fake chemical scents? Color? Marketing? Is that really where you want to spend your money? You're welcome.
@@ih82r8they sell it in cleaning sections and chemical stores rather than as food
@@ih82r8yes… now I feel like I’m wasting time and money w the regular vinegar…and I’m not going to run out and buy this higher % one.
Remember, he used 8% Vinegar. The stuff you find in American grocery stores is 5%. This percentage difference makes a huge difference in killing bacteria. *I use 3% Hydrogen Peroxide instead because it kills everything and leaves no smell or acidic residue.*
does percentage difference make a difference if you use MORE of it? lol. Have to be a little careful; anything that reacts like that probably DOES have potential for harm. But it makes a wonderful cleaner with baking soda. Hy Peroxide is also excellent.
Does it kill instantly or does it need to sit like vinegar to kill?
I use both vinegar and hydrogen peroxide but not at the same time unless it is for laundry.
Is Hydrogen Peroxide safe for countertops and fridges? As in does it fade these surfaces?
@@candymuncher8155 Yes
I always soak my strawberries and blueberries in an applesider vinegar- water solution before I eat them, it good at cleaning both bacteria and pesticides off fruits and vegetables
yes I do the same for fruits
Yep same
I use a couple of squirts of dawn in addition to the vinegar. and I soak for 15 minutes. less time for strawberries because they are so delicate.
@@robinlasobeck821 uhm hate it to be that guy but dish soap should not be used to wash produce
@@robinlasobeck821 soap should never be added to Foods
Highly concentrated vinegar is also a great non toxic way to kill weeds and other pesky plants
People have been using vinegar forever, for all sorts of household cleaning. It's nice to see an old tradition validated.
Meanwhile in the alternate universe:
“Drop the Vinegar! I repeat drop the vinegar, we have to end this world war!”
The Vinegar Wars 😢😂
Thevi neg-
This is double strength vinegar. I've always used vinegar for a cleaning agent, but I would love to see this same experiment with the regular vinegar that we get from the grocery store.
That would be a cool video to see.
This is vinegar you can get from a grocery store. Coles is a supermarket in Australia.
Just put more and wait. Same result.
nah 5% vinegar in the grocery store is not as strong as the one he uses in the vid
@@bloodofchristjesuscoversme1878 You can buy 20% also, idk why people talk about it like it's some exotic good.
"You're not slick, I'm onto youuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu" 🔥
"And just like that, everything changed"
~ Bacterial Jeager
Eren Vinegar
DOUBLE STRENGTH white vinegar is what you used. Restaurants are allowed to clean tables with vinegar that is very much diluted with water. Providing a usable ratio of vinegar to water would be helpful. Nobody is going to clean their home with straight, double strength white vinegar. The fumes would not allow it.
I had to use clorox to clean in my commercial kitchen. Licensing didn’t even recognize vinegar as a better source
Hydrogen peroxide, vinegar & bleach are the only cleaning solutions I buy.
Same
bleach is so harmful on your lungs!
Bleach (clorox) is terrible for the environment. Vinegar is non toxic
Just don't mix them together though
@@sk.n.9302
Bleach is the only thing that really gets my hand towels clean, otherwise, they smell like mildew. Any suggestions? ❤ I don’t buy Clorox brand though.
Sirca in hindi or vinegar has been used for more than 2000 years to preserve pickles and in summers onion dipped in vinegar is used to mitigate aide effects of heat wave here
The only problem is this is double strength, which is stronger than the regular household vinegar that most people use for cleaning. I would love to see the effects of regular household vinegar on bacteria under the microscope. Apple cider vinegar with mother would be cool too!💓 @oneminmicro
I've been wondering about the differences between ACV and white vinegar. Can you tell me what each is appropriate for and NOT appropriate for?
I'm sure the effect would be the same, maybe slightly slower- could use the regular vinegar full strength too.
Ive used apple cider vinegar diluted 50/50 with water to treat hot spots on my dog's skin, it works well!
I use cider vinegar for my skin .. it removes moles and growths cleanly and permanently. It’s the majority of my home cleaning and it’s even in my dish liquid! I live in the tropics so we have nail funguses and vinegar takes care of this too! vinegar is amazing for keeping mold off of outdoor surfaces 😊
How do you apply it to your skin? Do you use full strength?
Please let us know..amazing!
@@kristinekerr3688
So for skin use only apple cider v. When I had a mole or wart etc. I would cut a little piece of gauze to cover it ..and then I use a gentle type of skin tape to cover over the gauze. Next (this gets quick and easy) I take a clean eye dropper with a bit of vinegar and poke it under the tape and wet the gauze. I Stick the tape back down and go about my day or to bed. You must keep the gauze wet with cider vinegar though. After a week to 2 weeks the growth diminishes and sometimes it comes off quite quickly. Continue until there is absolutely nothing left of it to the touch. If it’s not possible to wear this dressing to work etc., you can still get results just rubbing cider v onto the growth. Take an eyedrops bottle with you and apply as much as possible.
You get amazing results.. just have to persist😊.
@@kristinekerr3688 There is a very fast way.. I removed a huge mole on my forehead by scuffing the surface of the mole with a nail file then cut the head off a Q-tip and soaked it in Apple Cider vinegar. I applied it to the mole with several bandages (So it wouldn't dry out quickly. I had to soak it again then wore it all day. Once the area turns very white, you can take bandages off and in a few short days, the wart will turn black and turn into a scab but DON'T pick at it!!! Let it heal (it will itch because it's healing) and it will leave no scar. 100%
@@mayhem-method-5450 Please don’t suggest people do this. It can be very harmful. There is a reason why doctors are supposed to remove moles
It is EXTREMELY important to mention that the reason vinegar isn't considered a disinfectant is because there are large amounts of disease causing bacteria and viruses it doesn't kill. The definition of a disinfectant is normally considered to be something that kills 99.9% of disease causing pathogens which vinegar doesn't come close to doing.
@Nicole Is true.
Yes - which is probably why the maker of the video said vinegar was a “pretty good” disinfectant (or words to that effect). rather than saying a “perfect” or “almost perfect” disinfectant. But he did not go into the detail that you did - and which is important.
Thank you.
Which diseases are they?
I think the important distinction is how many of those bacteria are found in the average house? I'm sure there are many disease causing pathogens in a festering sewer pit, but they aren't in my kitchen. There has to be a distinction between "pathogens" and "household pathogens".
There's also the point that you can add vinegar to dish water and safely wash but you can't do that with a disinfectant. (In general)
Found the big pharma worker
It is worth noting that most vinegar available to us at least in America is diluted to 4 percent. I don’t know how much the difference it would make but I know that 10 percent is corrosive to skin
Try regular household vinegar
Also try extra virgin coconut oil
But people are diluting vinegar versus using it straight. Maybe this would be more impactful if tested how most are actually using the product.
I live in Eastern Europe and the most commonly found vinegar in any store is 9%, and use it all the time for cleaning instead of buying chemicals. I don't know why vinegar in the US is only 4-5%, but I'm sure it also works to kill bacteria.
If I buy poultry or fish, I rinse it off with vinegar then pat it dry before cooking it. I have never gotten salmonella or any other food poisoning.
@@dianaboughner7977 You being daft aantu?! Just make sure your poultry is piping hot before serving, with or without vinegar! bloody ell
@@dianaboughner7977 Well you don’t have to worry about salmonella if you cook your chicken before eating it. 🤦♀️
@@dianaboughner7977 I've never rinsed, patted dry, or put anything on my chicken, fish, or pork to try to kill salmonella and I've never once gotten sick either. This is why you cook your food. You don't have to over cook either.
Try with Thyme water next time (liquid concentrate of thymian) or maybe just put some thymian or oregano in some semi hot water and let it be there in around 15 minutes before use.
We were working in subway tunnels and black mold started to spread. They used a vinegar solution and not bleach like we always had previously used. Vinegar is the best for many uses. Learned a lot that day.
They actually say that bleach feeds mould! We think it's killing it but it's only changing the colour and it spreads.
Hmmm 👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾
bleach just pisses mold off
Vinegar causes mold
@@User-z1g3z vinegar does not cause mold. It kills mold
I take 1 capful cider vinegar straight...prn as a preventative...it's a good preventative... good for sanitizing... add baking soda to it when cleaning and Voila! It's good in laundry... I use white with baking soda on oil spots etc. Also good for cleaning shower stall... it foams that tile great no scrubbing... use it in kitchen tile.... I buy it by the gallon also good on electric perculator to get rid of cofee residue... it's a staple in our house... good for sugar and blood pressure issues... great for first aid.
Can you try a lower percentage of acidity. How diluted can it be and still work? Thank you.
"These bacteria are found in your sink"
Umm, who gave you access to my house?
You
@@Squier123 😱
Will you please try to tea tree oil next as it does have antimicrobial properties
@Ebola same
Yes that’s a good one.
Yes, eucalyptus and mint oil also!
Amonia, chlorine, drinking alcohol, rubbing alcohol, copper metal, brass metal, zinc, stainless steel, boiling water, cold water, electricity, Pure Cold-pressed Organic Coconut Oil, Raw Whole Honey (you might be surprised with the last two). Would love to see how basic Pure Lard Soap compares with modern Chemical Based "Soap".
I am so down to see tests on all of these w various culture panels.
it's nice to see a cheap substance that straight-up mercs the little bastards like terminator in the molten steel.
Please do coconut oil, I keep seeing claims that it’s antibacterial but I’m not so sure... same with lemon juice and garlic!
I spray my veggies with vinegar and allow it to work for several minutes. Seems to improve refrigerator shelf life. Of course I rinse the vinegar off and rehydrate after
well i caught ascariasis doing that exact same thing 😬 vinegar don't kill some parasites eggs.
@@CherishedChristianLife clean veggies with vinegar AND salt wich kills the eggs
Parasites are not the same as bacteria.
Bleach. Don’t use it. It’s poisonous and makes fruits and vegetables taste bad.
I use vinegar to remove battery base that leaked out of barrel batteries on 25+ year old motherboards. Cleans up really well. In really bad cases, I dunk the board in a shallow pool of this stuff.
Was the vinegar uncut? The suggested ratio for cleaning solution is 1:1 or a 50% vinegar and 50% water. I wonder if it would still be effective 🤔. I wonder how far it can be diluted and it still works. Vinegar doesn't smell nice as a cleaning solution so I would want to use the least amount as possible while still killing germs.
The smell goes away quickly.
The smells goes away quickly like Lance Revell said. Plus you can use alcohol vinegar( for cleaning purpose) that has even less smell than the average
Uncut?🤣🤣🤣 wth!
It was a 8% ratio, like you can clearly see on the Bottle
He used 8% vinegar, and the most you've get is 70% one (almost pure acetic acid.) Apparently even 8% vinegar is already enough.
You should do this with normal table vinegar since that's what most people have in their homes. Does it have the same effect?
The only thing is--once you are done, you'll need to quickly get a very good alkaline substance to keep it from weakening your surface(most everyday surfaces). Vinegar is quite acidic and you don't want it unchecked for too long on something you care about(and I think the harder/tougher the substance the longer you have before you are "required" to act).
Like baking soda? 🤔
@@noeldeal8087 That or alkaline water...
It needs to not only kill bacteria but also breaks down enzymes those bacteria leave behind to be a good cleaning solution…
I use cleaning vinegar spray to clean plates, bowls and utensils, without water & soap. Works very well. A common camping solution. The smell goes away quickly.
Nothing for your body, dude!
@@saveriocannata3447 ?
@@lancerevell5979 I mean you should usevit for your food to keep your body heal.
I’d like to see what salt water does to bacteria! I’ve been rinsing my mouth with salt water, and my teeth feel healthier immediately!
How often do you do the salt water mix?
Yes salt water and baking soda solution is great for sore throat.
@@TwinkieReid I am still experimenting:when I wake up and right before bed. I just spit out the salt water, and I don't rinse out the salty taste. I use Himalayan salt, and it actually is rather pleasant. My mouth feels fresh after I do it. I am experimenting with brushing with baking soda only, but I think brushing with salt water is sufficient after flossing as we only need to get the food out of the tight places, then swish with salt water (non iodized). It makes sense: remove food residue for bacteria, then swish with salt water which is pH7. I think bacteria simply can't survive.
for some reason I thought my chemistry class was going to involve more microscopy
In the bacteria world, they call him The Destroyer.
I have become death....destroyer of worlds 🌎
In the Bacteria community, blasphemers are known and heard to be chanting "Vi ne gah"
@@ryneagheilim9782😂😂
vinegar is wonderful! I use it for many things
Love the way you said "these bacteria are in your sink, and would make you sick", I for one wouldn't be licking my sink
Medicines make you sick.
Dont kink shame me! 🤣🤣🤣
I wouldn't either but folks are out here licking toilets for views so.....
i remember a certain covid challenge...
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
So, is drinking neat vinegar good or bad for general health?
Great to know full strength vinegar kills but how effective is it when diluted. No puts full strength vinegar in food, but perhaps a comparison of different dilutions would help us understand the best ratios when adding to out rinsing liquid
I spray water And vinegar combination on my countertops all the time To clean them.. Rarely ever get sick I don’t have to worry about harsh chemicals.
I do the same but actually worried it wasn't doing the job as well as bleach. Glad this showed up on my feed. It's always nice to see proof.
@@Samantha360 me too! I’ve been starting to use vinegar and I stare at it wondering if it’s actually doing something. After all I can’t tell on the microscopic level so it sucks not having a high tech microscope. Someone did say the guy used 8% vinegar in the video. I’m not sure if strength makes a difference of how fast it kills.
Doesn’t it smell when you spray it? If not how do you eliminate the smell?
I use vinegar baking soda and dawn dish soap combo paste to scrub my Correll baking dishes and SS pots and pan.
@@rastaman7140 it probably does smell, maybe less since it's diluted, but you can help it by adding some pure essential oil that you like. The smell will not go away, but if you're spraying and wiping clean, it shouldn't be too bad. Also, you do adapt a bit.
Cool, what would ha ve made this much more interesting is to compare it to something else (like EtOH or soap solutions), and a control group. Group A = vinegar, Group B = 70% ethanol or soap, Group C = control (just water). You could have gone even further by having Vinegar at different concentrations.
🧐🤔👏🏾👏🏽👏
Can you do a video of microscopic parasites vs different cleaning solutions? (ie vinegar, concentrated bleach, diluted bleach, alcohol, hydrogen peroxide, and ammonia?)
Society wouldn't exist without vinegar
Without vinegar ... the society under the microscope would still exist ....
Beautifully said and absolutely correct!
Imagine being that one bacteria that was the 0.001% that lived
would build up immunity i guess
@@endurofan9854 can I build up immunity against mercury? would be so cool, I could splash it all over my naked body and chug frosty mercury smoothies, would be a tiktok megahit
@@toquelau5715 Yes you can. If you expose yourself enough.
PTSD?
The bacteria would tell its story, demand book rights…
Yup! All I need in my household would be vinegar, peroxide, and baking soda. I like to mix vinegar with orange peels and a few drops of essential oils so it smells better
Peroxide and baking soda combination makes my pots shiny
@@meep2253 I’ll have to try that for my pots!
Ah, depends on the pot. Obviously non stick wouldn't work well but stainless steel I suppose would be ok. I use baking soda but not the peroxide, if I recall. It's been awhile since I last cleaned my pots and glass tea kettle.
100% I even buy the extra strength peroxide by the gallon and use it for deep cleaning, laundry, toilets etc! Fantastic stuff.
Get food poisoning? Drink vinegar!
Take heed: DO NOT use vinegar with bleach. DO NOT use vinegar on top of natural stone, wood, or unsealed grout. DO NOT use vinegar as a surface disinfectant for proper food safety practices or medical safety practices. And in order for vinegar to be effective, it MUST sit on the surface for at least 30 minutes before being wiped away.
Learn the two ways in which colonies are eradicated: you must kill AND prevent replication. Vinegar doesn’t do both for all types of bacteria and fungus.
ALSO: DO NOT inject vinegar into ur veins, DO NOT use vinegar as eye drops, DO NOT use vinegar to aide in making pickles, oh wait, DO use vinegar to aide in the pickling process.
@@stevebennett9839 😂
So you are going to write all that fluff and then not tell the two ways?
What a gyp
So does apple cider vinegar do the same thing?
Don't use vinegar as eye wash!
Don't snort vinegar as a cocaine supplement!
Don't try to paint your car with vinegar!
Vinegar cannot be used as a glue replacement!
Don't add vinegar to your gas tank!
Vinegar does not make a good toothpaste!
Never use vinegar as a personal lubricant!
Replace your shampoo with a mix of ACV and water ! The way apple cider vinegar cleans my scalp and hair it's phenomenal. I only wash my hair with shampoo once a month, every weekend I use a ACV spritz on my scalp and I never have to worry about sebum, dandruff nor bacteria.
How much do you use?
Yes, i did that too, i put the vinegar in cotton and wiped into my skin hair. The scalps It became less.
Will strip your hair of essential oils
@Prof.Tarfeather not with the porper acv/water ratio. Obviously, if you use too much acv it will damage your hair and scalp.
@migenanikdhima8971
- 1 or 2 tsp in 300ml of water IF you use the recipe every week (adjust depending on how dense your hair is) I use this recipe on my scalp every Sundays
- 3 tbsp of acv in 300ml water IF you plan to use it once a month or once in a while (again, adjust to your hair density)
Don't use too much avc because it's acid PH will damage your hair badly. Listen to your hair first and foremost and if needed, start slow
Just bc. they don't move anymore doesn't mean they are dead.
Plus: The concentration here is let's say 50:50 (1:1).
In cleaning solutions you would use less.
0.1% of bacteria: hold my beer. 🗿
Coconut oil. It's antibacterial and antimicrobial
literally only thought of wanting to see this today and here it is. I want to see bacteria vs lemon juice too. thanks!
We keep vinegar in a spray bottle in the bathroom and use it for cleaning everything. The smell is strong at first but quickly is replaced by a clean, fresh smell.
No strong chemicals get added to our lives.
do you dilute the vinegar or full strength?
"No strong chemicals get added to our lives."
Vinegar is still made up of chemicals though.
@@atheistyoda8915 I only eat chemicals made exclusively from H, C, and O.
when I go camping, I use vinegar in spray bottle to clean dishes, spoon, knife etc. spray and wipe it off with paper towels
It's nice to put a few drops of orange or lemon oil in the spray bottle.
Moral of the story: Don't lick your sink, boys and girls.
Lol fr
Thanks, bro. I almost licked every inch of my kitchen sink.
Instructions clear. The vessel has found great success licking their friend's.
😂
Saltburn movie, anyone?
Can you do this video again but with 5% strength vinegar? I'm asking because this is the type of vinegar that we see every day in a grocery store.
Hi Can you please test bacteria/mold with eucalyptus oil 💕🙏
Vinegar is the best- i drink it and use it for all cleaning purposes its pretty cool to be able to consume the same product you clean with
That's why I like ethanol😉.
God I fucking love vinegar. Any time in I'm my pantry, I just have to take a lil' sip
@@dylanmonstrum1538 I have the same joy with beer stored in my pantry 🥰🍻
@@poa2.0surface77 lol I was joking, I am a recovered alcoholic so trust me I know😆, I've been sober for 6 years.
Thank you for the longest time I thought this was yet another factoid I had picked up without knowing for sure it was true
Keep up the good work Sir
Cloves liquid. Boil cloves and let it sit overnight. There's a practice putting cloves in the mouth can remove bad breath. Curious about it under microscope.
I'm 61and I remember clove chewing gum when I was little.
@bowittman ,
My aunt used to chew that gum all the time and I thought it stank.
She offered me a stick of clove gum once. I took it and the taste was horrible. I was probably around 5 years old.
😜
Can you try some plant extracts that are claimed to be antibacterial? Just low level concentrations
Cleaning vinegar not cooking vinegar. You can find cleaning vinegar in the home solutions/cleaning section usually on the bottom shelf.
NO. Regular vinegar. Our ancestors have been using vinegar for years. In medical institutions we use 50/50 water, vinegar. I would never buy "cleaning vinegar."
Can't predict which is applicable for all bacteria, the bacterial motility only stopped.
If you don’t mind I would love to see you try some colloidal silver. I am happy to send you some to try on bacteria etc. Cheers
I make my own btw
LOL 😆 I love how your vinegar says double strength at 8%! In Korea we use vinegar around the 20-30% but, we love that German vinegar Surig at 25%. Some of the best tasting vinegar ever.
So, if it dies with vinegar, it'd die too under the stomach acid, wouldn't it?
Please try coconut oil, many people say they use these oils to rid of bacteria
I've got a sinus infection. Getting a drink of vinegar right now.
yuck, that'd make me puke!
🤣🤣🤣🤣
I drink lemon juice and water for a blocked sinus.
I used to drink apple cider vinegar...
I find Sicilian lemon juice to be the best.
Vinegar vs Mold? I know it kills the mold, but I would like to see a video of it happening microscopically
Thymol also does! I bet used separately to tackle mold etc it could be very helpful (I mean I think it can mix safely too its just thyme oil)
I think borax kills mold
I'm curious about some of the plant based/natural cleaning products. I'd love to see how effective those really are.
The only problem with vinegar is the smell
In a good way 🤤🤤
@@yellowyellowyellow7894 damn. I loves it too
It doesn't smell too terrible. You'll get used to it. Lol. Apple Cider Vinegar tends to have a more pleasent smell then regular white vinegar. And it works just as well for cleaning.
You have a pessimistic mindset
I use Apple Cider Vinegar for Sore Throat as soon as you feel it coming on, gargle a tablespoon. Do it for at least 3 times in a day. Works like a champ!!!
That's VERY interesting. I'll definitely try that when I next get the sniffles.
With water?
Yes! Add a little raw honey. Research shows that combo kills strep. Dilute in water or apple juice. It's what my mom always did if we had sore throats growing up. Totally helps!
@@AndreaCrisp tell your mom I said thanks.
My mama used to make me drink like 3 glasses of acv diluted with water and honey when I was sick. I would feel better the next day.
Thank you!! I rather use vinegar than other cleaning agents.
I use this for cleaning. Vinegar also works as a fabric softener too!
Helps with the smell of socks also.
Do you put it in the bleach dispenser or with the detergent?
yes I use it time to time as a fabric softener for my towels it doesn't have a smell to the towels at all in fact I've noticed the towels are brighter when I use it
Have you been eating fries in bed!!!!
@@pete9688 I used it in the fabric softener cup
Excuse me, I have to go clean every room I’ve ever been in.
They don't sell 8% vinegar in supermarkets in Texas. Try 5%.
Where can I buy 100% vinegar ?
I buy 9% from JoeV's supermarket. It's a cheaper (price and sometimes quality) form of HEB.