how a quick spray can remove stains, make your home quieter and mowing the lawn easier.

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Prevent Sauce Stains
To prevent tomato sauce from staining your plastic containers, apply a light coating of non-stick cooking spray on the inside of a container before you pour in a tomato-based sauce.

Keep Car Wheels Clean
You know that fine black stuff that collects on the wheels of your car and is so hard to clean off? That’s brake dust—it’s ­produced every time you apply your brakes and the pads wear against the brake discs or cylinders. The next time you invest the elbow grease to get your wheels shiny, give them a light coating of cooking spray. The brake dust will wipe right off.


Cure Door Squeak
Heard that door squeak just one time too many? Hit the hinge with some non-stick cooking spray. Just make sure that you have paper towels handy to wipe up the drips.


Remove Paint and Grease
Forget smelly ­solvents to remove paint and grease from your hands. Instead, use cooking spray to do the job. Work it in well and rinse. Wash again with soap and water.


Prevent Grass from Sticking
Mowing the lawn should be easy, but cleaning stuck grass from the mower is tedious. Prevent grass from sticking on mower blades and the underside of the cover by spraying them with cooking oil before you begin mowing.


Snow Sticks to My Shovel
To keep wet snow from gluing itself to a shovel, spray the shovel with cooking spray (like Pam), silicone spray, or a household lubricant (such as WD-40) before you use it. Snow slides easily off a lubricated shovel, sparing your back from the excess weight. And store your shovel outside or in a cold shed or garage—never inside the house. Snow won’t stick as much to a cold shovel.

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