I used to gm high end coffee shops. For coffee staining on urns, glassware, or pretty much anything else nothing beats Cafiza. Buy the powder for cleaning, not the tablets. After you run about a tablespoon through your coffee maker you end up with a full carafe of hot cafiza, which will clean literally anything else you have that has staining. Just keep pouring scrubbing and reusing until eventually it becomes discolored. I've come across very few things that hot cafiza won't clean, up to an including the mesh filter bags that we used to use to make cold brew. Make sure you rinse thoroughly and repeatedly run multiple clean water cycles etc, but the stuff is used in commercial coffee shops all the time for espresso machine cleaning and is totally safe as long as you rinse thoroughly afterwards. It also won't damage your glassware / etc, like a lot of other things can do over time. It will eventually weaken plastic if you soak it in it for a long period of time, but a quick scrub is safe. Best to stick to glassware and ceramics though in my experience. Trust me, the results are nothing short of miraculous.
OMG. The tip regarding raising or lowering the paddle was a game-changer! I've had my Kitchenaid Stand mixer for over 30 years and figured the problem was just due to age. It's nice to know there was such an easy fix.
I sent my 25-year-old KitchenAid back to the factory for new grease / restoration. The service was expensive, but well worth it for a mixer with sentimental value. We've baked so much over the years; I just couldn't replace it with a new one.
@@seaslife60 I think it was $200 to repair my 1994 75th Anniversary KSM5. I paid for a diagnosis and shipping first. I think this cost $60, but I'm not sure. In June 2021, KitchenAid sent me a special packing box, and I sent it in. They contacted me in July 2021 for me to authorize repair, replacement of worn parts, controller board and new grease. This was exactly $136.70. I received the restored/repaired mixer in early August 2021. I could have bought a new, professional model at Costco for $300, but I wanted my old mixer. I didn't realize how much I use my mixer until I was without it for two months. I almost bought a second mixer, but I don't have room for two mixers. The repaired mixer has been working great as of July 2023. KitchenAid wanted me to go through the local authorized replace place, but the Google reviews weren't good, so I asked to send it in.
I have a KA mixer from the late 1980s that belonged to my family and a Cuisinart food processor from '94 I won't part with. I once found a trashed mixer, keeping only the bowl and attachments as extras. Sentimental value and quality American made appliances are important to me.
When you descale the coffeemaker, don't immediately discard the descaling solution. Pour it into glassware that has gone cloudy with mineral buildup (put a metal spoon into the glass first to avoid thermal shock) and let it sit for a minute. Empty the glasses and rinse well.
No-scrub method. Cleaning the grease out of mesh screens on your range hood. You know, that gummy brownish grease film that won't break down in the dishwasher cycle and won't scub off with regular Dawn. Get a bottle of the cheapest, generic, house brand DISHWASHER gel that you use in an automatic dishwasher (NOT the dishwashing liquid ie Dawn, for hand washing ) and a preferably, rimmed baking sheet that the screen can completely fit in (or an empty kitchen sink if you dont have one and can set aside the time for the soak) place screens in baking sheet or sink. Pour straight, undiluted gel all over both sides of screens coating completely in every nook and cranny. A disposable paint brush you can find in the hardware and cleaning aisle in the grocery store works great for thoroughly painting on the gel & working it into the mesh. Let stand with gel, over night. No scrubbing required. The enzymatic cleaners in the dishwasher gel that breaksdown stuck-on food and grease, proteins and starches on your dishes, in its concentrated form will dissolve the thick built up grease film without harsh chemicals and the thick gel will cling to and get into the intricate mesh where scrubbers can't get to. In the morning under hot water, rinse thoroughly with your sink sprayer or under full stream until water runs clear. The mesh screens and fan are designed to capture grease vapors and trap them in the screens before they waft off into your kitchen and coat your cabinets and walls. So the soaking method will release a lot of grease trapped inside the screens that arent initially visible and which conventional soap and water scrubbing cannot reach or break down. Safe, no gloves required, no fumes no harsh chemicals.
Hint on Pizza Stones: Stone Countertop companies have lots of sink cutouts. Contact a few and ask them to cut a sink cut our down to about three inches smaller than the dimensions on your oven. I have two soapstone “pizza stones” I got that way for about $20/each. I put one on the upper rack, and one on a rack set two slots below it. Preheat the oven as hot as yours gets, and you have in essence a small version of a commercial pizza oven.
@@MikehMike01 Not if the stone is thick. The standard 30-mm, (1-1/4-inch), slab holds a lot of heat, and has a low heat transfer rate. This high thermal mass means it keeps a very constant temperature, through out the cooking process. The metal has a lot higher heat transfer rate and unless it is really thick looses heat quickly.
Hi, just found your channel, love your presentation style. An alternative to the dishwasher tab for cleaning coffee/tea stains is to use denture cleaning tabs. I have a ton of Contigo mugs that I use daily, and after a few weeks of use they can look grimy, despite daily rinsing. In the UK a dishwasher is still not an everyday kitchen appliance, so dish tabs are quite pricey, whereas any of the Pound Stores will sell denture tabs cheaply, a tube lasts a good six months or so, depending on how many mugs you have... Keep up the good work.
Tip from a woodworker; pay special attention to the ends (known as "end grain") of any wooden product. You'll notice that any wooden product, (say a cutting board) 99% of the time splits along the ends first. Picture a piece of wood as if it's a bundle of drinking straws; drop water onto the sides, not a lot happens. Put water on the ends, the water is now in the straws. End grain absorbs water and water vapour much faster than face grain. There is now a lack of moisture equilibrium in the wood, areas are now expanding and contracting at different rates, from within the wood as well as the surrounding atmosphere. Something's got to give, and it's going to be the wood. There are many food safe, durable finishes that are great for sealing the end grain of your beloved kitchen tools!
I loved the adjusting the beater blade height on the Kitchen Aid mixer!!! I have had a Kitchen Aid mixer for over 25 years and have never heard of being able to adjust the blade. Thank you!!
Worth noting that on kitchen aid stand mixers (and I would assume many other brands) repairs to the gear assembly aren’t terribly difficult. I’m not a handy person AT ALL, but when our stand mixer broke, I was not going to let my hubby toss it for a new one. Parts schematics are online, parts are cheap and easily accessible, and there are plenty of RUclips tutorials that will guide you through the whole process. All told, the whole thing cost me ~$85 and was extremely rewarding.
Curious as to what that cost you, if you don't mind me asking. We've had ours 25 years also, but our accessory hub needs to be repaired as well. Thank you for any info you can provide.
I just threw away a deeply stained sheet pan. I thought it was not going to heat as well as it used to. Not to worry. I had already purchased a new NordicWare half sheet pan to replace it. Now I know not to toss out a well-seasoned, not ruined sheet pan. And the KitchenAid advice was very helpful. I need to use mine right away. It's been sitting for a while. Always learn something valuable from these videos.
Buy the smallest bottle of food grade mineral oil, otherwise you'll likely have it forever. I have never heard of anyone (sane, that is) who boils wooden spoons. A good soapy wash and upright air dry were all I ever did, since there's just no avoiding staining. Placing wooden implements in a separate caddy with really good access to air, not touching each other, greatly reduces off smells to form and prevents mildew. These days, I've shifted to high heat silicone most often.
For the Dutch oven try a paste of baking soda. It cleans well both ceramic and metal and much lower abrasiveness than BKF. Try cleaning burnt-on pans overnight with a solution of dissolved Oxyclean, which I have tried with success.
If you're struggling with burnt on greasy stuff, there's this gel that Dawn makes I think it's called Power Gel? I would definitely use it outside though there are a lot of fumes but it's not supposed to be crazy toxic anyting. You just spray it on let it sit and wipe everything off
For my enamel cast iron I also use baking soda and water after I soak in hot water. I also use barkeepers friend for stubborn stains. I love the stuff.
Best sheet pans, pizza pans and cake pans are USA pans, they are slightly more expensive but they don’t warp under 450F I use them on a regular basis and they clean well too.
During our drought our water started tasting like dirt so we started using our Britta Pitcher for coffee and the electric kettle. We could see scale build in the electric kettle right above the heating element and I would have to de-scale every 6 months. Nearly 2 years of using the Britta filter in the electric kettle every night - no scale at all.
To clean pans with burnt food, I found an easy way as well. Good quality washing soap (clothes soap) and water and soak overnight. Been using it for years.
I just bought bar keepers friend to clean my old allclad fry pans with the baked on gunk and it worked like a charm. It took more than one try on 1 of them but I'm sold.
I went through a bread-baking phase and my KitchenAid got a lot of use. It was starting to wobble and the head lock wouldn’t work. I learned that trick about the screw and adjusted it, and it’s working even better than the day I unboxed it! The dime trick is a good one, I’ll have to check mine against one.
After working Bar Keeper's Friend into a paste, leave it to sit for about 5 minutes allowing the oxalic acid to work on the stains. It increases the effectiveness while reducing the amount of elbow grease required.
Hi everyone. I have bought lovely old pans and glass/Pyrex ware at thrift stores. If there is smultz and gunk, I will use oven Cleaner on them. Just light spray and place in a garbage bag up to 24 hours. Works like a charm! I know oven cleaners are not good for the environment, so I use it sparingly. If it keeps quality cookware out of the landfill, I'm happy.
Oven cleaner comes in a few varieties. The yellow cap usually indicates it is a lye solution. Lye is great for removing stuff, but you need to be careful since some materials react to basic(opposite acid on the pH scale) chemicals, like aluminum. The same way you don't want to use vinegar on marble. Acids and bases are great for cleaning stuff we use for cooking because the stuff that gets stuck on them is susceptible to breaking down in both, whereas the implements usually aren't.
LOL I have been experimenting with different methods of cleaning the white enamel coating inside my Dutch over. So I'm so glad you did this episode. I never thought about bleach. I've tried just about everything else.. But the one thing I've found that also really works is denture tablets.. Fill the pot with water and heat it till hot but not boiling.. I have a 7qt so pretty large.. I add about 10... Of the overnight tablets to the hot water turn off the flame put on the lid and allow it to soak over night to about 24 hours. Drain the water scrub the pot well with a soap and water and rinse well. Sometimes you do need to repeat the process but most of the time once is enough. You can also scrub the inside of the pan with a mixture of baking soda and water..
Oh my the trick with the screw in the kitchen aid mixer is genius. I was annoyed that my mixer wouldn’t mix things in the bottom. It is now perfect! Thank you
A denture cleaning tab works fabulous for removing coffee stain from the carafe or thermos. I do this with hubby’s old school large Stanley coffee thermos. PS they work great for cleaning the toilet bowl too. Drop in a tab once a week, let it sit for an hour or longer & swish away. 👍😊
Love it! Especially the stand mixer tips. P.S. THANK you for not doing the cast iron cleaning tips that we've all seen a millions times over at this point. I'm sure you were tempted, but we all know em. Great video!
When cleaning or descaling your coffee maker, I use 'Denture' tablets. I place two tablets with warm water in the water reservoir and run through the cycle. Run a rinse cycle and voila. This works on a single serve as well, just put in an empty puck/pod (I use a refillable/reusable one, empty) and complete the same process. Thanks for all these amazing tips & ideas.
I found Bar Keeper's Friend many years ago and I try to never be without it! Besides cleaning pots, pans, and skillets....It will easily and safely remove cooked-on residue on your glass top cooking surface. My favorite tip from Lisa is adjusting the beater blade on the Kitchenaid....I've had several of them and I never knew you could adjust it! Awesome....I gave one of mine to my daughter and my granddaughter has one...passing this on to them! Hannah, I've never had my good quality sheet pans warp but this is great info to have handy. My pizza stone seems to be a lost cause and I've done what you recommended and just go for it! Thanks for validating my efforts!
I really like the info for the Dutch Oven but I'd like to know how to get the outside back to new, mine has this sticky gunk that just wont really come off.
Totally agree on BKF. I keep a can of it next to the sink for many of these same reasons. Also, to help aid in cleaning stainless steel pans, put about an inch of water in the pan, then place it on the stove on medium/medium high until it begins to sizzle, then "deglaze" with a wooden utensil and most of the stuck on food will release, then if needed, BKF can finish the job, wash/rinse and dry and put away.
I bought food-grade oil for my leaking KitchenAid but was too scared to take it apart! So I found a RUclips video that said to just turn it on and run until it felt warm on top (10 minutes or so) and it worked. I keep a paper towel in the bowl when stored just in case it leaks again and you are correct about running the machine once 8n a while.
Oh wow, I bought a Teakhaus board six years ago, glad to hear it was your winner! It's got some minor knife marks but otherwise it's still as good as new thanks to periodic oiling.
For burnt-on grease or food residue in a stainless steel pan, I fill the pan halfway with water and a little dish washing detergent (e.g. Dawn) and sprinkle the burnt areas with baking soda, then let come up to a simmer over low heat on the stove. When the baking soda starts to foam up, I turn off the heat and let the pan cool down with the solution still in it. I've rarely had to use heavy scrubbing to clean a pan after that, it usually comes clean with just a scrubbie sponge.
I use bar keepers friend. My ex said it’s what his mom used on stainless steel cooper bottoms. Discovered bar keepers friend works for a lot of things. I also use Howard Butcher block conditioner food grade mineral oil for my kitchen wood stuff.
Any tips on kitchenAid mixers that haven't been used in years? I want to start using mine that I got 2nd hand, but I am assuming it will be out of sorts due to lack of use (haven't used it yet in the 2 years I've had it). Do I need to pay for an expensive restoration or is there something I can do myself? Or, is there a chance it's still fine even after a few years of neglect
I use washing-up liquid, baking powder (or baking soda), and citric acid (either powder or liquid) for most things to clean in the kitchen and it all works out fine. The big advantage of baking powder and citric acid is that it is totally safe to use. I descale with cictric acid which is the same agent used in "professional descaling" products, only for a fraction of the price. Baking powder or soda are great to clean out coffee and tea residue from the caraffe. For food residue in the skillet or pan, time is of the essence. MORE TIME. Leaving the skillet with a mixture of hot water plus washing-up liquid and some soda for some hours will definitely get most of the residue out very gently. Otherwise, orange oil is a potent fat solvent and scouring milk an effective go-to cleaning agent for anything metal.
OK, but my question is about how to get the gunk *around* the rivets on the inside of my stainless off? I use BKF religiously, but I've never been able to get that off--and I've even used an old toothbrush to do it (maybe I should use my sonic toothbrush, but maybe I'm not that OCD).
I've found that the Dawn grease cutting spray works really well for that. I was skeptical but I got some for free and figured it was worth a try. Spray it, leave it for a little while, and then scrub it with a toothbrush. It might take a couple of tries but I've found it gets the job done.
For cleaning the Coffee Carafe I use a couple of Cafiza tables, throw them in with a pot of Hot water.... 30 minutes later your done... may want to keep the bottle brush handy but for the most part it's done.... Cafiza is made to remove residue, coffee oils, and lime scale deposits from your espresso machine, but works on drip carafes as well:-).
For cheap pizza steels, you can get flat bar steel cuts from just about any industrial metal shop. I use two A36 plates (1/2” x 7” x 18”) that cost me less than $80. Yes, it’s two plates, but that doesn’t affect the quality of the pizza. Also, If they were combined to be a single plate, they’d be too heavy to move safely. I just leave them on the bottom rack (closest to element) and they hold the heat really well and prevent scorched bottoms whenever I cook sourdough in the cast iron Dutch oven . After a wash with vinegar and soap, I seasoned them like I would any of my carbon steel or cast iron cookware.
I use a product called One-Step which I use in beer brewing. Add a shake to a stainless-steel pan with water and let sit overnight, cleans up easy the next day. For boards and wooden utensils I use Odie's Oil which lasts longer than mineral oil.
I learned the dime trick from Helen Rennie and I've kept a dime in the bowl of my mixer ever since. I just put it in the divot under the bowl while the machine is in use. Good to know that I should be using my mixer more frequently!
Yep my mom taught me all about Bar Keepers Friend 50 years ago. Nothing better out there. Then I had that problem with my Kitchen aid just a couple of hours ago where I had to beat just one stick of butter but my whisk wouldn't reach the bottom of the bowl. Unfortunately my Kitchen aid isn't the tilt back model, so I don't know if I have that adjustability that yours has! Thanks for all the tips.
Cleaning Oven Window - If you have smoke & splatters on the inside of your oven window - get a razor-blade scraper. Carefully to not dig the corners of the blade into the glass, use the razor blade to skate over the glass and it will remove the baked on splatters. Then use a chemical cleaner to dissolve & remove the thin layer of smoke and grease in the cracks in the glass that the razor blade could not touch.
You seem to use the kitchenaid stand mixture with the tilt head instead of the professional series where the bowl lifts up. I'm curious why? Thank you!
I have made so many mistakes that I have just learned to fix!!! And I believe that there are a few that I’ll be able to avoid a few that I haven’t made yet. Thank you!!!
How do you fix stainless steel frypans that are not "flat" anymore on the bottom? I love my pans but the cooking in them ... the heat is not consistent. One area cooks faster than another area. Thank you. Carole
Submerging any hot pan or baking sheet into cooler water will warp it. Let them cool before putting in hot or cold water. Dark sheet pans are seasoned pans, rather than 'stained'. Avoid bamboo cutting boards. They dull knives faster, as they have a high silica (think sand) content.
I have to say that pouring all the crud you burned in your Dutch oven down the drain is NOT a good idea. Use a fine strainer to get a lot of it out or you might need a plumber sooner than you expect.
Many modern ovens have a self clean cycle where you leave the racks inside. If you have one of them, put your pizza stone in for the self clean cycle. Just make sure you have good ventilation. It'll produce a TON of smoke, but the stone will come out like brand new.
Question on stainless steel pan, what to do when smallish pitting develops on the cooking surface? Why does pitting occur to begin with? I can never find any information on this. Also my aluminum sheet pans develop pitting as well. What am I doing wrong and do I need to replace my aluminum sheet pan and stainless steel skillet when pitting starts to develop? Please any guidance is appreciated.
4:11 To remove the brown coating in your carafe, try two denture cleaning tablets (e.g. Efferdent, Polident) in a full carafe of hot water. No scrubbing necessary. Good use for the hot water rinse in the carafe after descaling.
Regular unscented household bleach and host water will also do the trick. One good rinse and you are good to go after shaking and swirling the bleach solution around the carafe. It works for both stainless steel and glass carafes. Unlike with soap or dishwater detergent, you don't have to worry about residue making anyone sick or the coffee tasting funny. We cleaned all the carafes, brew baskets and airpots with bleach and hot water when I worked at a pre-Starbucks gourmet coffee shop. The componenets were all clean and disinfected.
For SS pots after stews or roasts I use a dishwasher pod, fill with hot water let sit for a few hours. Then rinse with dish soap to get the pod residue.
Wondering what the mineral abrasive is in BKF? For years I’ve successfully used only kosher salt and (old out of date) baking soda for stainless steel, ceramic lined or cast iron kitchenware. It’s cheap and it works!
Any advice on sanitizing wooden cutting boards, say if we handle raw meats on them and we want to periodically be a bit more cautious than just using soap and water to do the job?
The board is porous and bleach is toxic. Please don't do that. Try hydrogen peroxide. But I'm with wafflesaurus, use the cheap plastic ones for raw meat. Atk has a winning plastic board on their site that can go in dishwasher
You did sheet pans, but not the racks that go with them. I have an oven with air fry / convection. It cooks wonderful chicken in a half hour, but you have to raise the meat up off the sheet pan on a metal rack. Cleaning that rack with burned in chicken skin takes as long as cooking the chicken did. There's always crusty stuff caught in the grid. What's the best way to clean that? Can I throw the rack in the dishwasher?
Oxyclean powder is a great cleaner. I imagine it would work fine for descaling coffee makers, though I’ve never tried it. I do use it regularly to get tea and coffee stains out of coffee mugs and coffee/tea cups. I fill the cup/mug with hot water and add 1 scant tsp. of Oxyclean. Depending on the degree of staining, it generally takes only about 5 minutes for the cup/mug to look as good as brand new. If not, I add more hot water and about 1/2 tsp. of the Oxyclean and wait another 5 minutes. It has never failed!
It would not! The chemistry involved in descaling is pretty simple, is a chemical clean that requires acid and ideally de-mineralized water. I reckon oxyclean would mess things up as ducts are blocked already, last thing you want is any foam
Bar Keepers? How about some good old Baking Soda or wood ashes like my grandma used to use and now I do it too bc they work, they are cheap & safe for both dishes and the environment. If you go camping, use those as well, it won't disappoint. I buy the 4 lb box for $3 at general dollar or any of those discount stores. The baking soda is great for cleaning jewelry, toilets sinks etc etc. For squeaky clean glass wear use run of the mill vinegar. A huge bottle for pennies. Just use about 1/4 c in your dish washing liquid. Your glasses will shine, waterspot free & helps prevent hard water deposits and removes existing deposits. Great for the environment too.
I've been looking for a good way of cleaning up our 18qt NESCO cook well. I will have to try the Bar Keepers Friend method to see if that can take out the burnt sides we always get. BTW - I use a combo method to clean my stainless fry pans. I start with a dry pan add a small amount of Dawn liquid and a small amount of standard hand cleaner. I like to use Fast Orange with pumice. Most times i don't even have to scrub I can just use my hand and the darkened spots come right up. Then rinse clean and wash with dawn only once more just to be sure no hand cleaner is left behind.
Pro tip for de-scaling (I'm a chemical engineer): Use de-mineralized water, it's the only kind that instead of depositing minerals will actually lift them up! If it's clogged up already you will need descaling solution too, but it's better to dissolve the packaged solution in de-mineralized water instead of just tap water and then use it to run a couple rinsing cycles with it too. It'll clean up much better, for long and it costs next to nothings. Just be sure to label it properly and NEVER use it to prepare your coffee!! It is toxic because it will pick up minerals in your body as it does on your coffee maker
@@rabbit_scribe Effectively the same thing. He's misinformed on the toxic part. If you don't start starving yourself in addition to drinking demineralized water, you'll be just fine
Great video. I just want to point out that while I currently use Dezcal and Cleancaf from Urnex to descale and clean my Moccamaster, it's MUCH more cost-effective to buy Dezcal in the 900 gram jar. I last bought one in 2019 for $18 on Amazon and it will last me into the beginning of 2025 (over five years). The price now is about $29. To use the product from the bulk container I just looked at what the weight was for each packet in the box version and then I weigh that amount and use that each time. Huge savings. Also, while Urnex doesn't make Cleancaf in a bulk container like this, only boxes with three packets or whatever, they do make more environmentally friendly products now that Moccamaster also recommends called Biocaf Descaling Powder and Biocaf Cleaning Powder. Both of those are also less expensive when you buy them in the jar instead of in the boxes with packets. You are literally buying enough to use for years and years. For the pizza stone, it only took one time for one to crack before I said enough of that and moved over to the BakingSteel. I have never looked back. Wonderful product. Very easy to maintain.
How can I get rid of oil and food practically glued to a silpat? I've tried scraping after letting water and vinegar and baking soda sit for several hours. Not much came off without scraping vigorously.
I can't get Bar Keepers Friend where I am, but for my stainless steel cookware I use regular baking soda the same way and it works amazingly. A tip though - don't use a scouring pad with it; just a washcloth or kitchen paper, slightly dampened with water or detergent, will magically wash the burnt-on buildup away. (Using an abrasive scouring pad with the baking soda wears away the metal too drastically - if you did that, try wiping it with kitchen paper after to see just how much gray metallic residue comes off (as much as when you cook/wash with vinegar).
For Stainless Steel pans, heating it up and using a spatula to scrape it off sometimes can get a lot off. Basically deglazing. I like to use this really old, almost ruined nylon spatula. This sometimes is enough even to get the oil off. Sometimes a slightly heated pan makes Bar Keeper's Friend work better.
Lisa, while I commented below that I loved your tip on adjusting the beater blade, I can't adjust mine. I no longer have my tilt head mixer, I have the Pro instead. I have made multiple attempts to raise the arms that hold the bowl which would lower the blade, but no matter how much I can slide the arm UP, holding it firmly while I retighten the screws, it just slides back down into it's original position. Do you have a solution for this, because my beater blade will not even touch the dime.
Season 2 of The Bear had an episode where Sydney tells Tina to use Bar Keeper’s Friend on a pan that Tina thought was ruined. Tina was completely impressed when she saw how great it worked.
+1 for oven cleaner. I use it to clean all my enamelled Le Creuset cast iron pots and pans as well as SS pots, pans and stove top. Twenty minutes and all those baked on spots are gone. No scrubbing. I just discovered I had a container of bars keepers friend in the storage and tried it out on a SS fry pan. Miraculous is all I can say.
@@rbm0307 Beware using caustic oven cleaner on clad stainless pans, if the aluminium is exposed around the edge of the pan, the oven cleaner will react with it and corrode it.
For really greased up pans cast iron or sheet and muffin pans place in a large refuse bag overnight with a splash of scrubs ammonia. The next day mix in some dish wash soap and scrub using steel wool. Clean your oven by preheating a bit and standing a bowl of ammonia inside overnight. Next morning add dish wash liquid, brush the sides and scrub with scourer. Not much do now grease required.
For cleaning your coffee carafe, try denture cleansing tablets! They are much less expensive than dishwasher pods and you use them the same way. I've been using them on my Thermos ever since my grandpa taught me that trick as a kid. :)
Big fan of BFK forever, for many uses, but it hasn't helped the iridescent "rainbow" marks on my old stainless pot that boiled dry. Any tips for removing those marks?
I've had good luck with using baked baking soda (sodium carbonate) and boiling water for de-staining pans, thermoses, carafes, my dutch oven, and my cooktop. It's also cheap and something I cook with too (ramen, pretzels, etc.). I'm not quite sure how corrosive it is though and I've been too nervous to toss it in the coffee maker.
where do you get the GREASE for the Kitchen Aid and how do you take it apart to apply new grease? Mine has been in storage for a year now. Im sure its been effected because of temp changes also. Im getting ready next month to use it again for grinding meats, mainly. tyia Althea
I really like the stainless steel pans, food might stick a bit more, but they last forever and you don't need to worry about scratching the surface with utensils
What would you recommend for removing gunk and algae collecting around metal bars and plastic cup on an ice machine? The brand I had was an Igloo but wound up replacing it for a different unit that looks easier to clean. Tried vinegar and brushes to reach in between the metal bars and grooves in the plastic but nothing worked.
you would have to melt the entire unit but steam cleaners do great at getting in there. i saw a small one got great reviews. I think it was black and decker maybe?
I used to gm high end coffee shops. For coffee staining on urns, glassware, or pretty much anything else nothing beats Cafiza. Buy the powder for cleaning, not the tablets. After you run about a tablespoon through your coffee maker you end up with a full carafe of hot cafiza, which will clean literally anything else you have that has staining. Just keep pouring scrubbing and reusing until eventually it becomes discolored.
I've come across very few things that hot cafiza won't clean, up to an including the mesh filter bags that we used to use to make cold brew. Make sure you rinse thoroughly and repeatedly run multiple clean water cycles etc, but the stuff is used in commercial coffee shops all the time for espresso machine cleaning and is totally safe as long as you rinse thoroughly afterwards. It also won't damage your glassware / etc, like a lot of other things can do over time. It will eventually weaken plastic if you soak it in it for a long period of time, but a quick scrub is safe. Best to stick to glassware and ceramics though in my experience.
Trust me, the results are nothing short of miraculous.
Ps, forgot to mention it's also safe and effective on stainless steel carafes.
OMG. The tip regarding raising or lowering the paddle was a game-changer! I've had my Kitchenaid Stand mixer for over 30 years and figured the problem was just due to age. It's nice to know there was such an easy fix.
If you have never used Bar Keepers Friend you will be amazed at how easily it cleans stainless steel pans.
Thanks for the tip. Just ordered some off amazon, hopefully it will restore my beloved pans
😊😊😊😊
I have those old ones with copper bottoms, I used Klein King or something like that. It used to leave them like new. However it stopped working!
I use it and love it! I scrub my shower to get rid of hard water stains! The cream one is better for this because the powder get in your eyes💀🩸🤯🥹😂
BKF shouldn’t be used for Dutch ovens? If yes, why? Thanks.
I sent my 25-year-old KitchenAid back to the factory for new grease / restoration. The service was expensive, but well worth it for a mixer with sentimental value. We've baked so much over the years; I just couldn't replace it with a new one.
Curious. How expensive?
@@seaslife60 I think it was $200 to repair my 1994 75th Anniversary KSM5.
I paid for a diagnosis and shipping first. I think this cost $60, but I'm not sure. In June 2021, KitchenAid sent me a special packing box, and I sent it in. They contacted me in July 2021 for me to authorize repair, replacement of worn parts, controller board and new grease. This was exactly $136.70. I received the restored/repaired mixer in early August 2021. I could have bought a new, professional model at Costco for $300, but I wanted my old mixer.
I didn't realize how much I use my mixer until I was without it for two months. I almost bought a second mixer, but I don't have room for two mixers. The repaired mixer has been working great as of July 2023.
KitchenAid wanted me to go through the local authorized replace place, but the Google reviews weren't good, so I asked to send it in.
I have a KA mixer from the late 1980s that belonged to my family and a Cuisinart food processor from '94 I won't part with.
I once found a trashed mixer, keeping only the bowl and attachments as extras. Sentimental value and quality American made appliances are important to me.
UPDATE: As of May 2024, still working great!
Mr. Miller.....👍👍
When you descale the coffeemaker, don't immediately discard the descaling solution. Pour it into glassware that has gone cloudy with mineral buildup (put a metal spoon into the glass first to avoid thermal shock) and let it sit for a minute. Empty the glasses and rinse well.
No-scrub method. Cleaning the grease out of mesh screens on your range hood. You know, that gummy brownish grease film that won't break down in the dishwasher cycle and won't scub off with regular Dawn. Get a bottle of the cheapest, generic, house brand DISHWASHER gel that you use in an automatic dishwasher (NOT the dishwashing liquid ie Dawn, for hand washing ) and a preferably, rimmed baking sheet that the screen can completely fit in (or an empty kitchen sink if you dont have one and can set aside the time for the soak) place screens in baking sheet or sink. Pour straight, undiluted gel all over both sides of screens coating completely in every nook and cranny. A disposable paint brush you can find in the hardware and cleaning aisle in the grocery store works great for thoroughly painting on the gel & working it into the mesh. Let stand with gel, over night. No scrubbing required. The enzymatic cleaners in the dishwasher gel that breaksdown stuck-on food and grease, proteins and starches on your dishes, in its concentrated form will dissolve the thick built up grease film without harsh chemicals and the thick gel will cling to and get into the intricate mesh where scrubbers can't get to. In the morning under hot water, rinse thoroughly with your sink sprayer or under full stream until water runs clear. The mesh screens and fan are designed to capture grease vapors and trap them in the screens before they waft off into your kitchen and coat your cabinets and walls. So the soaking method will release a lot of grease trapped inside the screens that arent initially visible and which conventional soap and water scrubbing cannot reach or break down. Safe, no gloves required, no fumes no harsh chemicals.
A can of “brake cleaner” from the auto parts store will also dissolve it quickly…
Oh wow, the comment I needed to see today!
Soaking in Simple Green will also work. It's a non-toxic degreaser.
Thanks!
Hint on Pizza Stones: Stone Countertop companies have lots of sink cutouts. Contact a few and ask them to cut a sink cut our down to about three inches smaller than the dimensions on your oven. I have two soapstone “pizza stones” I got that way for about $20/each. I put one on the upper rack, and one on a rack set two slots below it. Preheat the oven as hot as yours gets, and you have in essence a small version of a commercial pizza oven.
I did this, but with a metal shop. Just had to file them
Pizza steel works better than stone
Very cool idea of concentrating radiant heat!!! Food physics rocks!
@@MikehMike01 Not if the stone is thick. The standard 30-mm, (1-1/4-inch), slab holds a lot of heat, and has a low heat transfer rate. This high thermal mass means it keeps a very constant temperature, through out the cooking process. The metal has a lot higher heat transfer rate and unless it is really thick looses heat quickly.
@@randallthomas5207 the higher transfer rate makes better pizza, doofus
Hi, just found your channel, love your presentation style. An alternative to the dishwasher tab for cleaning coffee/tea stains is to use denture cleaning tabs. I have a ton of Contigo mugs that I use daily, and after a few weeks of use they can look grimy, despite daily rinsing. In the UK a dishwasher is still not an everyday kitchen appliance, so dish tabs are quite pricey, whereas any of the Pound Stores will sell denture tabs cheaply, a tube lasts a good six months or so, depending on how many mugs you have... Keep up the good work.
I have used my denture tablets in my thermos and coffee maker carafe. Works well. If you leave it in overnight just remember to rinse well afterwards.
I use baking soda, it works great!
Boraxo soap takes the coffee/tea stains right off!
I have used those for cloudy vases
Tip from a woodworker; pay special attention to the ends (known as "end grain") of any wooden product. You'll notice that any wooden product, (say a cutting board) 99% of the time splits along the ends first. Picture a piece of wood as if it's a bundle of drinking straws; drop water onto the sides, not a lot happens. Put water on the ends, the water is now in the straws. End grain absorbs water and water vapour much faster than face grain. There is now a lack of moisture equilibrium in the wood, areas are now expanding and contracting at different rates, from within the wood as well as the surrounding atmosphere. Something's got to give, and it's going to be the wood.
There are many food safe, durable finishes that are great for sealing the end grain of your beloved kitchen tools!
this comment needs to be pinned.
I loved the adjusting the beater blade height on the Kitchen Aid mixer!!! I have had a Kitchen Aid mixer for over 25 years and have never heard of being able to adjust the blade. Thank you!!
Worth noting that on kitchen aid stand mixers (and I would assume many other brands) repairs to the gear assembly aren’t terribly difficult. I’m not a handy person AT ALL, but when our stand mixer broke, I was not going to let my hubby toss it for a new one. Parts schematics are online, parts are cheap and easily accessible, and there are plenty of RUclips tutorials that will guide you through the whole process. All told, the whole thing cost me ~$85 and was extremely rewarding.
Curious as to what that cost you, if you don't mind me asking. We've had ours 25 years also, but our accessory hub needs to be repaired as well. Thank you for any info you can provide.
I just threw away a deeply stained sheet pan. I thought it was not going to heat as well as it used to. Not to worry. I had already purchased a new NordicWare half sheet pan to replace it. Now I know not to toss out a well-seasoned, not ruined sheet pan. And the KitchenAid advice was very helpful. I need to use mine right away. It's been sitting for a while. Always learn something valuable from these videos.
Buy the smallest bottle of food grade mineral oil, otherwise you'll likely have it forever. I have never heard of anyone (sane, that is) who boils wooden spoons. A good soapy wash and upright air dry were all I ever did, since there's just no avoiding staining. Placing wooden implements in a separate caddy with really good access to air, not touching each other, greatly reduces off smells to form and prevents mildew. These days, I've shifted to high heat silicone most often.
For the Dutch oven try a paste of baking soda. It cleans well both ceramic and metal and much lower abrasiveness than BKF. Try cleaning burnt-on pans overnight with a solution of dissolved Oxyclean, which I have tried with success.
Baking soda makes the sink drain and garbage disposal smell good too.
I also use baking soda to scrub my kitchen sink.
If you're struggling with burnt on greasy stuff, there's this gel that Dawn makes I think it's called Power Gel? I would definitely use it outside though there are a lot of fumes but it's not supposed to be crazy toxic anyting. You just spray it on let it sit and wipe everything off
@@jg3094 baking soda is a godsend for every household. it cleans soap grime in the bathroom better than anything else i tried.
If you boil baking soda and water in your Dutch oven, no scrubbing at all, the color comes back after a wipe and a rinse.
For my enamel cast iron I also use baking soda and water after I soak in hot water. I also use barkeepers friend for stubborn stains. I love the stuff.
I don't want to put bleach in something I cook in. Thank you
Best sheet pans, pizza pans and cake pans are USA pans, they are slightly more expensive but they don’t warp under 450F I use them on a regular basis and they clean well too.
During our drought our water started tasting like dirt so we started using our Britta Pitcher for coffee and the electric kettle. We could see scale build in the electric kettle right above the heating element and I would have to de-scale every 6 months. Nearly 2 years of using the Britta filter in the electric kettle every night - no scale at all.
To clean pans with burnt food, I found an easy way as well. Good quality washing soap (clothes soap) and water and soak overnight. Been using it for years.
I just bought bar keepers friend to clean my old allclad fry pans with the baked on gunk and it worked like a charm. It took more than one try on 1 of them but I'm sold.
I went through a bread-baking phase and my KitchenAid got a lot of use. It was starting to wobble and the head lock wouldn’t work. I learned that trick about the screw and adjusted it, and it’s working even better than the day I unboxed it! The dime trick is a good one, I’ll have to check mine against one.
After working Bar Keeper's Friend into a paste, leave it to sit for about 5 minutes allowing the oxalic acid to work on the stains. It increases the effectiveness while reducing the amount of elbow grease required.
Hi everyone. I have bought lovely old pans and glass/Pyrex ware at thrift stores. If there is smultz and gunk, I will use oven Cleaner on them. Just light spray and place in a garbage bag up to 24 hours. Works like a charm! I know oven cleaners are not good for the environment, so I use it sparingly. If it keeps quality cookware out of the landfill, I'm happy.
Oven cleaner comes in a few varieties. The yellow cap usually indicates it is a lye solution. Lye is great for removing stuff, but you need to be careful since some materials react to basic(opposite acid on the pH scale) chemicals, like aluminum. The same way you don't want to use vinegar on marble.
Acids and bases are great for cleaning stuff we use for cooking because the stuff that gets stuck on them is susceptible to breaking down in both, whereas the implements usually aren't.
LOL I have been experimenting with different methods of cleaning the white enamel coating inside my Dutch over. So I'm so glad you did this episode. I never thought about bleach. I've tried just about everything else.. But the one thing I've found that also really works is denture tablets.. Fill the pot with water and heat it till hot but not boiling.. I have a 7qt so pretty large.. I add about 10... Of the overnight tablets to the hot water turn off the flame put on the lid and allow it to soak over night to about 24 hours. Drain the water scrub the pot well with a soap and water and rinse well. Sometimes you do need to repeat the process but most of the time once is enough. You can also scrub the inside of the pan with a mixture of baking soda and water..
Thank you. I don't want to put bleach in something food goes into. I would think denture tablets are safe since you put dentures in your mouth
Barkeepers Friend keeps my pots and pans sparkling! I’ve used it for years. A great video with helpful how tos!
Oh my the trick with the screw in the kitchen aid mixer is genius. I was annoyed that my mixer wouldn’t mix things in the bottom. It is now perfect! Thank you
A denture cleaning tab works fabulous for removing coffee stain from the carafe or thermos. I do this with hubby’s old school large Stanley coffee thermos.
PS they work great for cleaning the toilet bowl too. Drop in a tab once a week, let it sit for an hour or longer & swish away. 👍😊
Love it! Especially the stand mixer tips. P.S. THANK you for not doing the cast iron cleaning tips that we've all seen a millions times over at this point. I'm sure you were tempted, but we all know em. Great video!
When cleaning or descaling your coffee maker, I use 'Denture' tablets. I place two tablets with warm water in the water reservoir and run through the cycle. Run a rinse cycle and voila. This works on a single serve as well, just put in an empty puck/pod (I use a refillable/reusable one, empty) and complete the same process. Thanks for all these amazing tips & ideas.
I found Bar Keeper's Friend many years ago and I try to never be without it! Besides cleaning pots, pans, and skillets....It will easily and safely remove cooked-on residue on your glass top cooking surface. My favorite tip from Lisa is adjusting the beater blade on the Kitchenaid....I've had several of them and I never knew you could adjust it! Awesome....I gave one of mine to my daughter and my granddaughter has one...passing this on to them! Hannah, I've never had my good quality sheet pans warp but this is great info to have handy. My pizza stone seems to be a lost cause and I've done what you recommended and just go for it! Thanks for validating my efforts!
I actually clean my pizza stone in my self cleaning oven and have had no problems.
@@deborahshallin5843 it didn't crack it or anything??
I really like the info for the Dutch Oven but I'd like to know how to get the outside back to new, mine has this sticky gunk that just wont really come off.
I use Barkeepers Friend with a Magic Eraser. It cleans literally anything.
Great tip for the coffee carafe cleaning. The dishwasher soap pod scrubbed the interior back to brand new.
we also used ice and salt to clean coffee pots. I wonder which is better
Totally agree on BKF. I keep a can of it next to the sink for many of these same reasons. Also, to help aid in cleaning stainless steel pans, put about an inch of water in the pan, then place it on the stove on medium/medium high until it begins to sizzle, then "deglaze" with a wooden utensil and most of the stuck on food will release, then if needed, BKF can finish the job, wash/rinse and dry and put away.
Yep. I've used it for years. I found out about it from a bartender (hic)
I bought food-grade oil for my leaking KitchenAid but was too scared to take it apart! So I found a RUclips video that said to just turn it on and run until it felt warm on top (10 minutes or so) and it worked. I keep a paper towel in the bowl when stored just in case it leaks again and you are correct about running the machine once 8n a while.
I love that cutting board, got it two years ago and it's been a delight. Also yes I keep it oiled.
Oh wow, I bought a Teakhaus board six years ago, glad to hear it was your winner! It's got some minor knife marks but otherwise it's still as good as new thanks to periodic oiling.
For burnt-on grease or food residue in a stainless steel pan, I fill the pan halfway with water and a little dish washing detergent (e.g. Dawn) and sprinkle the burnt areas with baking soda, then let come up to a simmer over low heat on the stove. When the baking soda starts to foam up, I turn off the heat and let the pan cool down with the solution still in it. I've rarely had to use heavy scrubbing to clean a pan after that, it usually comes clean with just a scrubbie sponge.
I use bar keepers friend. My ex said it’s what his mom used on stainless steel cooper bottoms.
Discovered bar keepers friend works for a lot of things.
I also use Howard Butcher block conditioner food grade mineral oil for my kitchen wood stuff.
Any tips on kitchenAid mixers that haven't been used in years? I want to start using mine that I got 2nd hand, but I am assuming it will be out of sorts due to lack of use (haven't used it yet in the 2 years I've had it). Do I need to pay for an expensive restoration or is there something I can do myself? Or, is there a chance it's still fine even after a few years of neglect
I use washing-up liquid, baking powder (or baking soda), and citric acid (either powder or liquid) for most things to clean in the kitchen and it all works out fine. The big advantage of baking powder and citric acid is that it is totally safe to use. I descale with cictric acid which is the same agent used in "professional descaling" products, only for a fraction of the price. Baking powder or soda are great to clean out coffee and tea residue from the caraffe. For food residue in the skillet or pan, time is of the essence. MORE TIME. Leaving the skillet with a mixture of hot water plus washing-up liquid and some soda for some hours will definitely get most of the residue out very gently. Otherwise, orange oil is a potent fat solvent and scouring milk an effective go-to cleaning agent for anything metal.
Denture cleaner works on your coffee carafe, too. Fill with Cool water, Add a few tablets, leave overnight, scrub with a brush and soap the next day.
OK, but my question is about how to get the gunk *around* the rivets on the inside of my stainless off? I use BKF religiously, but I've never been able to get that off--and I've even used an old toothbrush to do it (maybe I should use my sonic toothbrush, but maybe I'm not that OCD).
I've found that the Dawn grease cutting spray works really well for that. I was skeptical but I got some for free and figured it was worth a try. Spray it, leave it for a little while, and then scrub it with a toothbrush. It might take a couple of tries but I've found it gets the job done.
For cleaning the Coffee Carafe I use a couple of Cafiza tables, throw them in with a pot of Hot water.... 30 minutes later your done... may want to keep the bottle brush handy but for the most part it's done.... Cafiza is made to remove residue, coffee oils, and lime scale deposits from your espresso machine, but works on drip carafes as well:-).
For cheap pizza steels, you can get flat bar steel cuts from just about any industrial metal shop. I use two A36 plates (1/2” x 7” x 18”) that cost me less than $80. Yes, it’s two plates, but that doesn’t affect the quality of the pizza. Also, If they were combined to be a single plate, they’d be too heavy to move safely.
I just leave them on the bottom rack (closest to element) and they hold the heat really well and prevent scorched bottoms whenever I cook sourdough in the cast iron Dutch oven .
After a wash with vinegar and soap, I seasoned them like I would any of my carbon steel or cast iron cookware.
I use a product called One-Step which I use in beer brewing. Add a shake to a stainless-steel pan with water and let sit overnight, cleans up easy the next day. For boards and wooden utensils I use Odie's Oil which lasts longer than mineral oil.
Never knew about how to fix the height on my mixer. Awesome tip! Mines better now. Just needed a quarter turn.
I learned the dime trick from Helen Rennie and I've kept a dime in the bowl of my mixer ever since. I just put it in the divot under the bowl while the machine is in use. Good to know that I should be using my mixer more frequently!
Yep my mom taught me all about Bar Keepers Friend 50 years ago. Nothing better out there. Then
I had that problem with my Kitchen aid just a couple of hours ago where I had to beat just one
stick of butter but my whisk wouldn't reach the bottom of the bowl. Unfortunately my Kitchen aid
isn't the tilt back model, so I don't know if I have that adjustability that yours has! Thanks for all the tips.
Cleaning Oven Window - If you have smoke & splatters on the inside of your oven window - get a razor-blade scraper. Carefully to not dig the corners of the blade into the glass, use the razor blade to skate over the glass and it will remove the baked on splatters. Then use a chemical cleaner to dissolve & remove the thin layer of smoke and grease in the cracks in the glass that the razor blade could not touch.
I look forward to these videos, and they never disappoint!
You seem to use the kitchenaid stand mixture with the tilt head instead of the professional series where the bowl lifts up. I'm curious why? Thank you!
I have made so many mistakes that I have just learned to fix!!!
And I believe that there are a few that I’ll be able to avoid a few that I haven’t made yet. Thank you!!!
I use SOS pads on my pans and baking sheets. I don't know what's in the soap in those pads, but it works amazingly well.
How do you fix stainless steel frypans that are not "flat" anymore on the bottom? I love my pans but the cooking in them ... the heat is not consistent. One area cooks faster than another area. Thank you. Carole
Barkeep and elbow grease makes all clad nice and shiny
I use my stand mixer all the time. In fact I am on my second one because I did not know how to do the maintence on it. This video is great ! Thanks!
Submerging any hot pan or baking sheet into cooler water will warp it. Let them cool before putting in hot or cold water.
Dark sheet pans are seasoned pans, rather than 'stained'.
Avoid bamboo cutting boards. They dull knives faster, as they have a high silica (think sand) content.
Yes, we watched the video.
@@Nocturne22
You only sort of watched the video...
I never see videos on how to clean a grater or sieve properly. That's what I need.
I have to say that pouring all the crud you burned in your Dutch oven down the drain is NOT a good idea. Use a fine strainer to get a lot of it out or you might need a plumber sooner than you expect.
Many modern ovens have a self clean cycle where you leave the racks inside. If you have one of them, put your pizza stone in for the self clean cycle. Just make sure you have good ventilation. It'll produce a TON of smoke, but the stone will come out like brand new.
Question on stainless steel pan, what to do when smallish pitting develops on the cooking surface? Why does pitting occur to begin with? I can never find any information on this. Also my aluminum sheet pans develop pitting as well. What am I doing wrong and do I need to replace my aluminum sheet pan and stainless steel skillet when pitting starts to develop? Please any guidance is appreciated.
There is a ton of info.!
Google "pitting on stainless steel pan"
4:11 To remove the brown coating in your carafe, try two denture cleaning tablets (e.g. Efferdent, Polident) in a full carafe of hot water. No scrubbing necessary. Good use for the hot water rinse in the carafe after descaling.
Regular unscented household bleach and host water will also do the trick. One good rinse and you are good to go after shaking and swirling the bleach solution around the carafe. It works for both stainless steel and glass carafes. Unlike with soap or dishwater detergent, you don't have to worry about residue making anyone sick or the coffee tasting funny. We cleaned all the carafes, brew baskets and airpots with bleach and hot water when I worked at a pre-Starbucks gourmet coffee shop. The componenets were all clean and disinfected.
Thank you. I use Bar Keeper’s Friend ❤
Great real, no nonsense advice!
For SS pots after stews or roasts I use a dishwasher pod, fill with hot water let sit for a few hours. Then rinse with dish soap to get the pod residue.
Wondering what the mineral abrasive is in BKF? For years I’ve successfully used only kosher salt and (old out of date) baking soda for stainless steel, ceramic lined or cast iron kitchenware. It’s cheap and it works!
It's actually a powdered mild acid. When it gets wet it stinks pretty bad.
Any advice on sanitizing wooden cutting boards, say if we handle raw meats on them and we want to periodically be a bit more cautious than just using soap and water to do the job?
Wiping off with a solution of water and unscented household bleach, rinsing with hot water and air drying should do the trick.
The board is porous and bleach is toxic. Please don't do that. Try hydrogen peroxide. But I'm with wafflesaurus, use the cheap plastic ones for raw meat. Atk has a winning plastic board on their site that can go in dishwasher
Denture cleaning tablets work well on removing the stains and residue in coffee pots/carafes. Like Efferdent.
You did sheet pans, but not the racks that go with them. I have an oven with air fry / convection. It cooks wonderful chicken in a half hour, but you have to raise the meat up off the sheet pan on a metal rack. Cleaning that rack with burned in chicken skin takes as long as cooking the chicken did. There's always crusty stuff caught in the grid. What's the best way to clean that? Can I throw the rack in the dishwasher?
Same problem with broiler pans.
Good question I would like to know
Great video Hannah and Lisa! Such useful tips!
Oxyclean powder is a great cleaner. I imagine it would work fine for descaling coffee makers, though I’ve never tried it. I do use it regularly to get tea and coffee stains out of coffee mugs and coffee/tea cups. I fill the cup/mug with hot water and add 1 scant tsp. of Oxyclean. Depending on the degree of staining, it generally takes only about 5 minutes for the cup/mug to look as good as brand new. If not, I add more hot water and about 1/2 tsp. of the Oxyclean and wait another 5 minutes. It has never failed!
It would not! The chemistry involved in descaling is pretty simple, is a chemical clean that requires acid and ideally de-mineralized water. I reckon oxyclean would mess things up as ducts are blocked already, last thing you want is any foam
It does work wonderfully to make my stainless steel carafe sparkle.
Bar Keepers? How about some good old Baking Soda or wood ashes like my grandma used to use and now I do it too bc they work, they are cheap & safe for both dishes and the environment. If you go camping, use those as well, it won't disappoint. I buy the 4 lb box for $3 at general dollar or any of those discount stores. The baking soda is great for cleaning jewelry, toilets sinks etc etc. For squeaky clean glass wear use run of the mill vinegar. A huge bottle for pennies. Just use about 1/4 c in your dish washing liquid. Your glasses will shine, waterspot free & helps prevent hard water deposits and removes existing deposits. Great for the environment too.
I've been looking for a good way of cleaning up our 18qt NESCO cook well. I will have to try the Bar Keepers Friend method to see if that can take out the burnt sides we always get.
BTW - I use a combo method to clean my stainless fry pans. I start with a dry pan add a small amount of Dawn liquid and a small amount of standard hand cleaner. I like to use Fast Orange with pumice. Most times i don't even have to scrub I can just use my hand and the darkened spots come right up. Then rinse clean and wash with dawn only once more just to be sure no hand cleaner is left behind.
Very useful tips. Thank you.
Pro tip for de-scaling (I'm a chemical engineer): Use de-mineralized water, it's the only kind that instead of depositing minerals will actually lift them up! If it's clogged up already you will need descaling solution too, but it's better to dissolve the packaged solution in de-mineralized water instead of just tap water and then use it to run a couple rinsing cycles with it too. It'll clean up much better, for long and it costs next to nothings. Just be sure to label it properly and NEVER use it to prepare your coffee!! It is toxic because it will pick up minerals in your body as it does on your coffee maker
What exactly is demineralized water? I thought it was the same as distilled water until you got to the toxic part! Where can I get it?
@@rabbit_scribe Effectively the same thing. He's misinformed on the toxic part. If you don't start starving yourself in addition to drinking demineralized water, you'll be just fine
Hi Ladies. I very much like and appreciate these type of videos. Informative and helpful. Thanks!
Those were very helpful! thanks for making this video!
Great video. I just want to point out that while I currently use Dezcal and Cleancaf from Urnex to descale and clean my Moccamaster, it's MUCH more cost-effective to buy Dezcal in the 900 gram jar. I last bought one in 2019 for $18 on Amazon and it will last me into the beginning of 2025 (over five years). The price now is about $29. To use the product from the bulk container I just looked at what the weight was for each packet in the box version and then I weigh that amount and use that each time. Huge savings.
Also, while Urnex doesn't make Cleancaf in a bulk container like this, only boxes with three packets or whatever, they do make more environmentally friendly products now that Moccamaster also recommends called Biocaf Descaling Powder and Biocaf Cleaning Powder. Both of those are also less expensive when you buy them in the jar instead of in the boxes with packets. You are literally buying enough to use for years and years.
For the pizza stone, it only took one time for one to crack before I said enough of that and moved over to the BakingSteel. I have never looked back. Wonderful product. Very easy to maintain.
How can I get rid of oil and food practically glued to a silpat? I've tried scraping after letting water and vinegar and baking soda sit for several hours. Not much came off without scraping vigorously.
I want to know this too. It seems harder to clean than the pan
I can't get Bar Keepers Friend where I am, but for my stainless steel cookware I use regular baking soda the same way and it works amazingly. A tip though - don't use a scouring pad with it; just a washcloth or kitchen paper, slightly dampened with water or detergent, will magically wash the burnt-on buildup away. (Using an abrasive scouring pad with the baking soda wears away the metal too drastically - if you did that, try wiping it with kitchen paper after to see just how much gray metallic residue comes off (as much as when you cook/wash with vinegar).
I love you guys! I’m so glad I can watch on RUclips. You all are great 👍 😊
For Stainless Steel pans, heating it up and using a spatula to scrape it off sometimes can get a lot off. Basically deglazing. I like to use this really old, almost ruined nylon spatula. This sometimes is enough even to get the oil off. Sometimes a slightly heated pan makes Bar Keeper's Friend work better.
These are amazing tips! Really enjoyed this video, thank you
Thank you for a very helpful video. Love it when you two do things Iike this as I was never taught these things before.
Lisa, while I commented below that I loved your tip on adjusting the beater blade, I can't adjust mine. I no longer have my tilt head mixer, I have the Pro instead. I have made multiple attempts to raise the arms that hold the bowl which would lower the blade, but no matter how much I can slide the arm UP, holding it firmly while I retighten the screws, it just slides back down into it's original position. Do you have a solution for this, because my beater blade will not even touch the dime.
Season 2 of The Bear had an episode where Sydney tells Tina to use Bar Keeper’s Friend on a pan that Tina thought was ruined. Tina was completely impressed when she saw how great it worked.
+1 for oven cleaner. I use it to clean all my enamelled Le Creuset cast iron pots and pans as well as SS pots, pans and stove top. Twenty minutes and all those baked on spots are gone. No scrubbing. I just discovered I had a container of bars keepers friend in the storage and tried it out on a SS fry pan. Miraculous is all I can say.
@@rbm0307 Beware using caustic oven cleaner on clad stainless pans, if the aluminium is exposed around the edge of the pan, the oven cleaner will react with it and corrode it.
For really greased up pans cast iron or sheet and muffin pans place in a large refuse bag overnight with a splash of scrubs ammonia. The next day mix in some dish wash soap and scrub using steel wool.
Clean your oven by preheating a bit and standing a bowl of ammonia inside overnight. Next morning add dish wash liquid, brush the sides and scrub with scourer. Not much do now grease required.
I love your channel so much!
You two are the bomb--or should that be bombettes--with your helpful gear tips and information. Thank you, chefs!
For cleaning your coffee carafe, try denture cleansing tablets! They are much less expensive than dishwasher pods and you use them the same way. I've been using them on my Thermos ever since my grandpa taught me that trick as a kid. :)
Just came by for my Hannah fix. Thanks, ladies!
So awesome, thank you Gear Heads!
Big fan of BFK forever, for many uses, but it hasn't helped the iridescent "rainbow" marks on my old stainless pot that boiled dry. Any tips for removing those marks?
I've had good luck with using baked baking soda (sodium carbonate) and boiling water for de-staining pans, thermoses, carafes, my dutch oven, and my cooktop. It's also cheap and something I cook with too (ramen, pretzels, etc.). I'm not quite sure how corrosive it is though and I've been too nervous to toss it in the coffee maker.
where do you get the GREASE for the Kitchen Aid and how do you take it apart to apply new grease? Mine has been in storage for a year now. Im sure its been effected because of temp changes also. Im getting ready next month to use it again for grinding meats, mainly. tyia Althea
The kitchen aids tips are great! thank you.
You said SCHUMTZ!😂 I live in Muskogee, OK now. No one here as ever heard of Yiddish words like schumtz. Love you using it!
Heat helps to remove discoloration in mugs and carafes. Heat it and then use your scrubber.
I really like the stainless steel pans, food might stick a bit more, but they last forever and you don't need to worry about scratching the surface with utensils
In a busy kitchen, this is what you want
As a person allergic to Bees Wax, you can use 100% Tung Oil for the wood items too.
What would you recommend for removing gunk and algae collecting around metal bars and plastic cup on an ice machine? The brand I had was an Igloo but wound up replacing it for a different unit that looks easier to clean. Tried vinegar and brushes to reach in between the metal bars and grooves in the plastic but nothing worked.
you would have to melt the entire unit but steam cleaners do great at getting in there. i saw a small one got great reviews. I think it was black and decker maybe?