The Many Uses of Vodka
Aside from being a fantastic drink, vodka has many uses which you may not have known about. Since vodka is one of the world’s most popular drinks, many of us have a bottle handy in the home. And since its typically filtered and pure, it makes a handy liquid to have around.
Here are a few uses:
- To remove a bandage painlessly, saturate the bandage with vodka. The solvent dissolves adhesive
- To clean the caulking around bathtubs and showers, fill a trigger-spray bottle with vodka, spray the caulking, let set five minutes and wash clean. The alcohol in the vodka kills mold and mildew.
- Clean jewelry. Soak the jewelry in vodka for five minutes, then rinse, and dry.
- Clean lipstick from clothing. Rub the stain with vodka, then throw into your regular wash.
- Remove the glue left behind by a bumper sticker. Rub the glue with a soft, clean cloth soaked with vodka
- Prolong the life of razors by filling a cup with vodka and letting your safety razor blade soak in the alcohol after shaving. The vodka disinfects the blade and prevents rusting.
- Spray vodka on vomit stains, scrub with a brush, then blot dry.
- Using a cotton ball, apply vodka to your face as an astringent to cleanse the skin and tighten pores.
- Add a jigger of vodka to a 12-ounce bottle of shampoo. The alcohol cleanses the scalp, removes toxins from hair, and stimulates the growth of healthy hair.
- Fill a sixteen-ounce trigger-spray bottle and spray bees or wasps to kill them.
- Pour one-half cup vodka and one-half cup water in a Ziplock freezer bag and freeze for a slushy, refreshable ice pack for aches, pain or black eyes.
- Fill a clean, used mayonnaise jar with freshly packed lavender flowers, fill the jar with vodka, seal the lid tightly and set in the sun for three days. Strain liquid through a coffee filter, then apply the tincture to aches and pains.
- To relieve a fever, use a washcloth to rub vodka on your chest and back as a liniment.
- To cure foot odor, wash your feet with vodka.
- vodka will disinfect and alleviate a jellyfish sting.
- Pour vodka over an area affected with poison ivy to remove the urushiol oil from your skin.
- Swish a shot of vodka over an aching tooth. Allow your gums to absorb some of the alcohol to numb the pain.
- Soothe a sore throat. Add a tablespoon of vodka to glass of warm water and gargle. The alcohol helps numb the sore throat.
Eliminate swimer’s ear. If you don’t have rubbing alcohol, fill an eardropper with vodka, and squeeze it into the affected ear, then let it drain out
Why waste vodka when you can simply use rubbing alcohol? My vodka is for drinking only.
Some of these have been tested and debunked (the wasp killer, vomit stains, shampoo, poison ivy), and some are just plain made up. It isn’t vodka that kills germs, its just alcohol. Vodka doesn’t tighten your skin, the booze in it evaporates along with alot of your skins natural moisture, leaving it overly dry, hence the tight feeling. A smart person would let their dumb friend try these before attempting them first hand.
What if there is Vodka in the vomit already?
What if there is vodka in the vomit already? – You spread the vomit all over the rug and let it dry..and enjoy the smell for weeks!!
If you get bored of that smell, have a beer party and spread the vomit with beer all over and let it dry..
Invite some chicks for a jello party and have a chickpuke week!
You can even mix and match!! The options are countless…
I am going to leave all the vodka for drinking…
I’m going to have to try some of these
So….basically vodka has alcohol in it. Why not just use alcohol for this stuff and drink the vodka?
Shelly,
Rubbing alcohol is not the same alcohol as what you would find in vodka. In alcoholic beverages one would find ethanol whereas in rubbing alcohol is primarily iso-propanol. Iso-propanol has a greater toxicity (LD 50) then ethanol as well.
see mythbusters. the only thing it did do was to take smoke smell out of clothes
Thank you! I would now go on this blog every day!