Refilling a bottle instead of throwing it away has become a popular way for people to reduce waste — a small, tangible action in response to larger environmental problems.
This works for fruit juices, too. Even most ‘real’ juices are created from fruit concentrates. You can just cut out the middleman and get the concentrates directly. Even including the sugar/invert sugar you gotta put in, it costs less than half as much. And you control the amount of sugar you want. I use them extensively.
Just search for concentrates or soap bases on amazon. They all have guides on how to prepare them. I usually also just look up the main/active ingredients in the products I use and just order that.
My absolute favorite is Sal’s suds. Bought a gallon well over a year ago and I use it as my everyday spray cleaner, laundry detergent, and dish soap. All at different concentrations. Only 1/3 done with the gallon!
The only downside is that it solidifies somewhat in the cold. I think the everyday spray is diluted enough that it doesn’t
Do you have any guides or resources you use for getting started with them?
This works for fruit juices, too. Even most ‘real’ juices are created from fruit concentrates. You can just cut out the middleman and get the concentrates directly. Even including the sugar/invert sugar you gotta put in, it costs less than half as much. And you control the amount of sugar you want. I use them extensively.
Just search for concentrates or soap bases on amazon. They all have guides on how to prepare them. I usually also just look up the main/active ingredients in the products I use and just order that.
My absolute favorite is Sal’s suds. Bought a gallon well over a year ago and I use it as my everyday spray cleaner, laundry detergent, and dish soap. All at different concentrations. Only 1/3 done with the gallon!
The only downside is that it solidifies somewhat in the cold. I think the everyday spray is diluted enough that it doesn’t