I have a nice big gas range on my kitchen island. Above it is a stainless steel fume hood. After a good few runs of smashburgers, bacon, stir fried rice, etc., the thing is covered with sticky grease.
I’ve tried a variety of kitchen products and none of them really seem to do that great of a job. I end up having to use more grease of the elbow kind for a good 30 minutes or so, and a buttload of paper towels. Hell, I’m having trouble finding anything at the grocery store even labeled specifically as a degreaser. All of them now (even 409!) emphasize “multi surface” and “antibacterial”. I figured this may just be rebranding without a real ingredient change. I just want a damn degreaser!
I’d like something that is safe for stainless but cuts through grease like the IRS through my paycheck. Suggestions or experiences?
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-- Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past me I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain. --
Posts: 17927 | Location: New Mexico | Registered: October 14, 2005
I'm really cautious with the multisurface cleaners as a couple houses ago I got some on my high-end stainless range and rust spots started to form. I had to polish the rust spots out with a dremel
Now, I just use hydrogen peroxide (usually 2 parts distilled water mixed with 1 part hydrogen peroxide) as my cleaner and then quickly go over it again with Weiman stainless steel cleaner & polish. I think the polish component adds some protection which makes it easier to clean.
Also, prevention is better than cleaning. In other words, I use woks instead of sautee pans for stir frys and I cook my bacon in the oven on a foil lined sheet pan.
Ego is the anesthesia that deadens the pain of stupidity
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Posts: 24202 | Location: Northern Suburbs of Houston | Registered: November 14, 2005
Yep. Simple Green is what I use for that exact same purpose. (In fact, it's my go-to cleaning product. If you buy the jugs of concentrate, you can mix it to varying dilution ratios appropriate for a wide variety of cleaning tasks, for both the inside and outside of your house.)
And use a microfiber cloth or some shop towels instead of "a buttload of paper towels". Paper towels are flimsy, and shred while trying to wipe/scrub sticky grease. Then you have little flecks of greasy paper all over the surface to clean off too.
Buy a bottle of full strength Simple Green from the auto aisle of Walmart. Pick up a spray bottle too. Mix a 4:1 ratio of water to SG in spray bottle, that should work well. It’s non toxic and fine around the kitchen IIRC
Posts: 35529 | Location: Pennsylvania | Registered: November 12, 2007
And use a microfiber cloth or some shop towels instead of "a buttload of paper towels". Paper towels are flimsy, and shred while trying to wipe/scrub sticky grease. Then you have little flecks of greasy paper all over the surface to clean off too.
Paper towels suck. Go get a few rolls of Scott brand shop towels. They look like paper towels but they aren't. They don't fall apart and lint. They're rolled up on a tube just like paper towels.
You can usually get a roll at an auto parts store, but that's not a competetive price. Wallymart has decent prices. Sams, Costco, even Amazon has them in case lots. I buy them by the case either at Sams or Costco. I use them for everything, including wiping out my cast iron cookware after oiling and seasoning. I use them for cleaning pretty much anything. I even accidentally ran one through the washer and dryer. It was fine and I reused it for awhile. .
Posts: 12094 | Location: Near Hooker Oklahoma, closer to Slapout Oklahoma | Registered: October 26, 2009
Now that you’ve gotten all the reasonable replies dealing with what you’ve likely already got on hand, I can tell you what industrial strength stuff they use in industrial kitchens: Shiela Shine spray in a blue can. $12 on Amazon. It will make stainless steel that hasn’t been cleaned in years look brand new, the grease just comes off. I’ve used it a lot, works great.
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Look on Amazon for one of those handheld steamers Bissel , Hoover , etc . It'll cut that grease and it's handy for a ton of other things . Not expensive either .
Posts: 4502 | Location: Down in Louisiana . | Registered: February 27, 2009