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Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

Sponges and kitchen scrub brushes can be loaded with disease-causing viruses and bacteria. So microwave them, scientists say.

By Designer sheets from Mississippi

Editor's Note: The University of Florida Researchers recommends, making sure the sponge is very wet and microwave it for 2 minutes.

Answers:

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Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

I wonder if toothbrushes can be sterilized this way?

I buy wash cloths on sale when ever I see them and use one after the other all day. Then I wash them. I have light colored cloths, dark colored cloths because I do laundry everyday, either light or darks. (01/31/2007)

By Christine

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

Be careful!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R8VPPwDEroQ
(01/31/2007)

By Food 411 for One

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

I have a question about the tea towels suggestion. Actually, it's a stupid question, but I'm not sure of the answer, so I guess not so stupid, huh? Anyway, tea towels, kitchen towels, same thing? Probably, right? Also, getting them at 99 cent stores, better than say at Wal-Mart or Target? Kitchen towels I found at Wal-Mart are less than $3.00, but still, getting a dozen of them?

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(02/01/2007)

By Trish M.

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

I also read this in the newspaper, and decided it was a quick solution.
I use the kind that has a scrubber on one side, so I try to get my money's worth. Well, I didn't think about rinsing the sponge first.
After 2 minutes in the microwave, I had enough soap suds to do a sink full of dishes!! Make sure you rinse out your sponge first! (02/01/2007)

By Barbara Huggins

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

I just read this on the web:

How To Successfully Sanitize Your Sponges

Zapping your sponges in the microwave for two minutes will wipe out bacteria, a recent study says - but the GH Research Institute advises: Don't do it! "Microwaves vary greatly based on size and wattage," says GHRI Kitchen Appliances Director, Sharon Franke. "So if you have a less powerful model than the one used in the study, it may not be able to kill bacteria in two minutes." And if your model is more powerful, your sponge could dry out, harden, get destroyed - or even cause a fire.

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The safest way to sanitize: Soak sponges in a solution of three tablespoons bleach to one quart water for five minutes. Rinse, wring out, and let dry.

So I guess it's back to good ol' dependable bleach for me!

(02/07/2007)

By Barbara Huggins

Relax, People

Funny, people have been using sponges for years and years without getting sick. Do you know anyone who's gotten sick from a sponge? This paranoia about bacteria is sick. The world is fully of bacteria and we coexist safely with it most of the time; as long as you take reasonable care handling and preparing your food, you are fine. If I wring out my sponges well and let them dry (note that letting something dry also tends to kill bacteria, just not instantly, and maybe not 100%) they don't get stinky. No problem. (02/14/2007)

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By Funny

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

I really am amazed to see the first posting by "Funny" that indicates a lack of proof that kitchen sponges harbor germs. A collection of various rooms throughout houses across America have shown consistently that surprisingly enough the bathroom is cleanest room and the kitchen is the dirtiest. This is due to the disinfectants being used in the bathroom diligently and not the kitchen - the sponge being the worst by far. I personally pop it in the micro for 4 minutes frequently and also have a spray bottle of diluted peroxide handy for misting the counter after wiping. I've heard the 70% of presumed stomach flus are acutally a case of food poisoning. (02/24/2007)

By Diane and JT

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

Also, for those who don't have a special preference of sponge style, you can head down to your local dollar store and buy a bunch for very cheap and make them disposable. (02/24/2007)

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By Diane and JT

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

DON'T DO IT and walk away. Our microwave ignited the sponge when my wife walked away after setting the timer. The microwave is toast now, but at least the house still stands and no one got hurt.

Save yourself the worry and place them in the dishwasher to clean them. I don't know if it's as effective, but it won't catch fire. (02/28/2007)

By Greg

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

Well Greg, she didn't do it wet, did she? This is the same mistake made over and over and over by people who don't read fully. MICROWAVE ONLY WHEN WET! (03/02/2007)

By RC

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

"you can head down to your local dollar store and buy a bunch for very cheap and make them disposable." Just what our world needs, more stuff in our landfills! (03/31/2007)

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By John

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

Just yesterday I decided to microwave my sponge to try and rid it of that horrible stench it develops over time. I tried 30 seconds, then 30 more, and then 30 more, keeping it moist.

VOILA! I thought I was a genius. Now I do this search and it's old news.

Anyway, my house is now one step closer to that sterile state we Americans try so hard to achieve and yet, in doing, only set ourselves up for more resistant bacteria which will inevitably smell worse and be harder to eradicate.

(04/10/2007)

By Mark

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

OR, you can put it in the dishwasher each time you do the dishes. But the most important thing is to keep your sponge as clean as possible. Who wants to think they are cleaning, when they are really actually spreading germs instead!

REMEMBER - If your sponge stinks, It's REALLY spreading germs! & if it doesn't smell, it probably still is! Disinfect your sponge or dishrag at least several times a week.

If you use a sponge wipe up your cutting board after cutting chicken, fish or meat. You should bleach it, then secondly, wash it in the dishwasher or microwave it, or just throw it out! It's amazing how many people don't realize the germs sponges AND DISHRAGS are harboring!

If you use dishrags instead of sponges: Wash them in the washing machine in hot soapy water and be sure to add bleach!

My daughter keeps 3 kitchen sponges, one for dishes, one for the countertops, & the kitchen table and one for wiping up spills on the floor. Buying 3 different colors helps! (04/10/2007)

By Cyinda

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

You can also soak sponges in a diluted bleach mixture for at least an hour. I put a tablespoon of bleach, a little dish soap, and a quart of hot water, and use any deep plastic container, and weigh down the sponge(s) with a small plate. It works really well! (06/23/2007)

By opal beach

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

I saw a commercial on TV about sterilizing sponges. The lady said to put it in the microwave for 5 minutes, and by the way, the sponge looked wet. So, I got mine wet, set it in the microwave for 5 minutes, well, DON'T DO THAT. Although mine had a scrubby on the other side of the sponge, well, when the timer went off, my eyes had been burning, and I know why. The sponge was all burnt like a piece of burnt toast and the house full of smoke. (10/14/2007)

By RoxAnn

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

The microwave thing works well in a jiffy if your wife is yelling at you to do the dishes, I have found. (10/17/2007)

By sean

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

In a new, but not mid-powered microwave, I nuked my sponge for a minute and it did the trick. No more stinky sponge. The sponge does have to be wet. Because microwave power varies between different models, do it 30 seconds at a time for no more than 2 minutes, making sure to the sponge stays wet and is not burning. Be careful because that sponge can get HOT. I also use an "oxygenated" detergent, such as palmolive oxy plus, in order to help keep those scents away.
(12/08/2007)

By geniusiknowit

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

Yeah, I just did this and caused a fire (12/12/2007)

Editor's Note: Be sure to microwave it for 2 minutes or less at a time and stand by to prevent a fire.

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

But does it really work?

Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists in Beltsville, Md., tested several methods for reducing risks from harmful microbes hiding in reused sponges. They soaked sponges for 48 hours in a solution made from ground beef and lab growth medium to attain a high level of microbes to simulate a very dirty sponge. Then they treated each sponge in one of five ways: soaked for three minutes in a 10 percent bleach solution, soaked in lemon juice for one minute, soaked in deionized water for one minute, heated in a microwave for one minute, run through a dishwasher cycle (including the drying cycle).

The conclusion: Microwaving sponges killed 99.99999 percent of bacteria. Dishwashing (with drying cycle) killed 99.9998 percent of bacteria. The other methods killed between 37 and 87 percent of bacteria, still leaving enough bacteria to potentially cause disease. As for yeasts and molds, the sponges treated in the microwave oven or dishwasher were found to harbor less than 1 percent (0.00001 percent), while between 6.7 and 63 percent of yeasts and molds survived on sponges soaked in bleach, lemon juice and deionized water.

The University of Florida did a similar study and also found microwaving to be the most effective way to sterilize a sponge. The researchers soaked sponges and scrubbing pads in raw wastewater containing fecal bacteria, viruses, protozoan parasites and bacterial spores. They used an off-the-shelf microwave oven to zap the sponges and scrub pads for varying lengths of time, wringing them out and determining the microbial load of the water for each test. They compared their findings with water from control sponges and pads not placed in the microwave. The results were unambiguous: Two minutes of microwaving on full power mode killed or inactivated more than 99 percent of all the living pathogens in the sponges and pads. Their conclusion, "What we found is that we could knock out most bacteria in two minutes in the microwave. People often put their sponges and scrubbers in the dishwasher, but if they really want to decontaminate them and not just clean them, they should use the microwave". The researchers said the heat, rather than the microwave radiation, likely is what proves fatal to the pathogens. Because the microwave works by exciting water molecules, it is better to microwave wet rather than dry sponges or scrub pads.

If two minutes in the microwave will kill that gawdawful crud, you don't need to do it for longer!
(12/26/2007)

By Doug

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

I microwaved my sponge and it loosened the grease splatters in the microwave, so they easily wiped away. (03/12/2008)

By Kitchen Cleaner

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

So if nuking a sponge kills germs, what does it kill in your food? Soak the sponge and dish rag in an old plastic container (ex. margarine) with hot water, bleach and some soap after dishes. Air dry. I've never had a stinky sponge or dish rag, I can't imagine. I'm not good with smells or germs, so I think I'd die!! I have family members who have allergies/sensitivity to germs and after doing this with my sponge/rags, they noticed the difference right away.
(03/12/2008)

By Friendly kitchen wiz

nipple sterilizing

How long to sterilize bottle nipples in the microwave
(04/06/2008)

By jessica

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

About disinfecting with bleach. One tablespoon of bleach in a gallon of water is all you need to kill germs. Using pure bleach will definitely disintegrate your sponge. (04/19/2008)

By GrMaLinda

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

This worked great!! I wish I had known about this a long time ago. I ran the sponge under water and then placed it in a shallow bowl WITHOUT wringing it out AT ALL. I have an 1150 watt microwave, so I only put it in for 1 minute and 45 seconds. When I pulled it out, the bowl and sponge were hot, but quickly cooled. I ran the sponge under water and wringed it out. The nasty smell was gone! I don't see how this could cause a fire if you keep the time down and make sure you soak the sponge and don't wring it out before microwaving it. (06/02/2008)

By Kristina

Sterilize Your Sponge in the Microwave

Don't put a sponge in the microwave DRY! Its common sense to have it soak in water first and not to wring it out. Sort of how Electricity needs water as a conductor, almost the same concept. Microwaves can Kill pretty much everything with some lubrication. Just like it kills all nutrients in Vegetables when microwaving them. All Protein & Vitamins in meats. The most harm it will do to your sponge is cause a few tiny splits. I recommend doing it twice for 2 minutes wringing it out after each time and re-soaking it for better results. (07/07/2008)

By Paul

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