Disinfecting should be the second step in your housework routine, after
dusting. That doesn't mean you
have to don surgical scrubs and autoclave everything in sight.
There's a difference, after all, between disinfecting and
sterilizing, and chlorine bleach is usually overkill (with the
exception of occasional use on food-preparation surfaces that come
into contact with raw meat and potentially harmful bacteria).
According to Cheryl Mendelson, author of
Home Comforts (Scribner, $24,
www.amazon.com), "you do need to sanitize
occasionally in the kitchen, but by and large, using detergent and
hot water is enough."
Chlorine bleach doesn't really deserve its
gleaming reputation anyway. "People don't use bleach correctly,"
says cleaning authority and author Don Aslett. "It rots mops,
oxidizes toilets, and makes the ring on the toilet white but
doesn't clean it."