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This post may contain affiliate links. Please see my disclosure policy for more information.
I am delighted to be one of twenty bloggers featured in Arm & Hammer’s Switch & Save Challenge. During the next five months, I’ll be testing several Arm & Hammer products and sharing my experiences with you.

After writing two posts on how to use baking soda to clean things, I was getting a little bored with pragmatic information.
This post contains nothing productive, but lots of really fun and interesting ways to use baking soda. Kids will love these, but so will adults!
The science
Every one of these activities present an awesome opportunity to talk to your kids (big or little) about science.
When baking soda comes in contact with an acid (like vinegar or lemon juice), a chemical reaction occurs. The end result* of the reaction is the creation of water and carbon dioxide – liquid and a gas. As the reaction happens, bubbles of gas form within the solution and percolate up to the top, where they burst.
*There is a step in between mixing the baking soda with acid and the water/carbon dioxide production. It’s called carbonic acid. Middle or high school age kids may want to investigate it further, but for the younger ones, I’d leave that out.
10 Fun Uses for Arm & Hammer’s Pure Baking Soda
- Homemade volcanoes – This one is so cliche, but I felt remiss in leaving it out. Make a volcano from cardboard and paper mache or clay. Put a small dish inside the center of the volcano (that little crater at the top of a volcano is called the caldera if you want to use the correct term with your kids). Place 1 tablespoon of baking soda in the cup. When you want the volcano to erupt, combine 1/4 cup of vinegar with 1 teaspoon of dishwashing liquid and a few drops of red food coloring. Pour it into the caldera, and watch your volcano fizz all over the place. That’s my idea of fun!
- Make play clay – Making the kind of clay you could use to make jewelry and ornaments because it hardens and sets, this quick and easy recipe will have you sculpting in a few minutes. You can also use it to make picture frames or hand print crafts.
- Sneaker Creatures – This is an awesome craft that you can make with your kids. Essentially, they are socks filled with baking soda and decorated. You can stuff them inside smelly shoes to neutralize odors.
Plus, they just look cute. I think we’ll be making a set of these for a certain pair of size 12 Crocs Chameleons pretty soon. - Make your own water colors – By the time this post publishes, I will have already made these water colors with Gracie. We love to color and paint, and we love homemade paints. This recipe is just awesome.
- Make dancing beans (or raisins or peanuts or rice or seeds or buttons… you get the idea) – Pour a cup or two of water in a clear cup or jar. You could add a couple drops of food coloring if you wanted to. Dissolve 1 teaspoon of baking soda in the water. Add 6-8 objects, followed by 1 tablespoon of lemon juice or vinegar, and watch them dance up and down, down and up.
The bubbles make your small objects rise and fall. As bubbles cling to the beans, the beans become more buoyant. Eventually, the reaction will stop, ceasing bubble production, or the beans will get water logged and too heavy for the bubbles to push up. - Mix up sidewalk paint – The liquid form of sidewalk chalk, this recipe is super easy and cheap to make. I also love that the blogger who shares it gave her son a spray bottle of vinegar, making the paint fizz like crazy. So cool!
- Make magic powders - I read about this activity a long time ago, and I bookmarked it. Basically, you set up the magic by filling 4 glasses half full of water and 4 more half full of white vinegar. For the other half, put a drop of food coloring on each of 8 spoons, then cover the food coloring with baking soda.
For the magic to begin, invite your kids to the table. Let them stir one spoon into each cup. The water cups will turn color (remember the food coloring?), and the vinegar cups will turn color and fizz. It sounds like such a cool experiment to me, and the original author has some neat suggestions for using the magic. It’s a good post. - Experiment with long lasting bubbles – This experiment uses the chemical reaction I explained above to create bubbles of air and carbon dioxide. I think older kids will really enjoy it.
- Make a baking soda boat – The idea behind this one is that baking soda and vinegar inside of a soda bottle will make enough pressure build up to propel the boat through water. I’ve never tried it, but I’m intrigued. Taken a little further, this idea can become a bottle rocket.
- Write a secret note – Baking soda and water makes great invisible “ink.” Make a solution from equal parts baking soda and water. Use a cotton swab or paint brush to write your message on a piece of paper and allow it to dry completely. To read the message, heat the paper (over a candle, a burner on the stove, a hot light bulb, etc.). The message will turn dark brown.
I found a lot of baking soda experiments online. Here are some others you can check out:
- Expanding hand
- Bubble bombs
- Blow up a balloon without your mouth
- Film canister explosions
What do you use baking soda for?
I’m preparing one more installment of this baking soda series, so your tips may be featured in an upcoming post. Feel free to email me or leave your tips in the comments below.
Win a $25 Visa Gift Card
Church & Dwight Co., Inc provided me with a $25 Visa gift card to give away to one lucky Feels Like Home reader. All you have to do to enter is answer this question in a comment:
What do you do with baking soda?
For extra entries:
- Like Feels Like Home on Facebook and leave a comment about it
- Subscribe to Feels Like Home via RSS or email and leave a comment about it
- Follow Feels Like Home on Google Friend Connect and leave a comment about it
- Tweet about this giveaway including @FeelsLikeHome and the link (only once)
Good luck! I’ll choose a winner randomly from the comments after noon on July 27.
Have you seen the rest of my 10 Uses For… series?
This is a sponsored post for Church & Dwight Co., Inc, the maker of ARM & HAMMER branded products, who is compensating me to try different products.
Save 50¢ off two 2lb or 4lb boxes of ARM & HAMMER Baking Soda. And be sure to visit The Switch & Save Challenge to tap into more resources and enter to win $25,000.ays to Use Baking Soda for Baby
© 2011 – 2012, Tara Ziegmont. All rights reserved.
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{ 75 comments… read them below or add one }
I use it in my laundry a lot–typically after I’ve forgotten to put it in the dryer and it starts to mildew a little. Ew. Baking soda FTW!
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I’m confused, though. Your twitter handle changed, but your post says @feelslikehome. Did you make a separate handle for the blog?
I did. You can @TaraZiegmont or @FeelsLikeHome. Both work.
Baking soda? My favorite use is for those volcanoes — the kids love it. But, I also use it in the laundry.
I sprinkle baking soda on the carpets before I vacuum. Helps with the odors from living with 4 teenagers
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I love using baking soda to keep my fridge and freezer fresh!
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For cooking mostly.
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Ive used baking soda to put in my fridge to keep odors down
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I use it to clean kitchen counter top
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I use baking soda to make the grout on my tile nice and bright!
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I use baking soda to freshen my refrigerator.
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I use it mostly for cooking, but have done a few volcano experiments.
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I tweeted about this giveaway. https://twitter.com/#!/RebeccaC75/status/101105281752252418
I use it as a deodorizer in my vacuum canister
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I use making soda in my laundry, refrigerator, and freezer to help eliminate odors.
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I use it to clean pans and pots.
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Honestly – I just use baking soda for cooking. But these science “projects” look like a lot of fun!
for baking and we use it in our fridge to keep foods fresh
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I use it to soak up pee stains (and scent) from the mattress
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I use baking soda keep fridge fresh
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I use baking soda to scrub out stains on clothes…
We use it to polish silverware.
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I put it in the fridge to help with odors.
Right now it is on an unknown bug bite. It sure does relieve the itch.
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