| kalanamak |
The "clean" cycle does not take off the black baked-on dribbles down the
inside glass of my oven door. It is a nice new stove, and this is
unsightly. Anyone have an idea how to get it off? Even vigous rubbing
with a terry cloth left scratches.
TIA
blacksalt
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Sat, 05 Feb 2005 18:11:07 -0800, kalanamak <kalanamak@qwest.net> wrote:
>The "clean" cycle does not take off the black baked-on dribbles down the
>inside glass of my oven door. It is a nice new stove, and this is
>unsightly. Anyone have an idea how to get it off? Even vigous rubbing
>with a terry cloth left scratches.
You can get that off easily with no-fume oven cleaner. I don't recall what
brand I use, but it isn't nasty. It'll say on the can that it's no-fume.
Works great on lots of things.
Carol
--
"Years ago my mother used to say to me... She'd say,
'In this world Elwood, you must be oh-so smart or oh-so pleasant.'
Well, for years I was smart.... I recommend pleasant. You may quote me."
*James Stewart* in the 1950 movie, _Harvey_
|
|
|
| JeanineAlyse in 29 Palms |
kalanamak@qwest.net - blacksalt tells and wonders....
>The "clean" cycle does not take off the
>black baked-on dribbles down the inside
>glass of my oven door. It is a nice new
>stove, and this is unsightly. Anyone have
>an idea how to get it off? Even vigous
>rubbing with a terry cloth left scratches.
This OP reminded me of a try I meant to do, so I've just proved my
suspicion was correct. I do not know where you are, but if in the US,
get yourself a bottle of Dawn's "Power Dissolver" for this. I buy it
here on the US west coast, and use it now for anything I used to soak
overnight, or have had to scrub endlessly. It's a pleasant smelling,
foamy white concentrate that is packaged in a somewhat small blue spray
bottle, found in my grocer's within the other heavy duty sorts of liquid
kitchen cleansers. Spray it on, let it sit for some minutes (not even
an hour is needed here), then scrub it off with a simple, non-metal
scrubbing "cloth" (mine are those dark green, single ones that are also
found adhered to yellow sponges to add a scrubbing side). This product
is one I'll always want in my kitchen; I've used it on all sorts of
glass, metal, and plastic surfaces, and it's not at all harmful to one's
skin as well.
Picky ~JA~
|
|
|
| cher |
Oooooops....sent this to your email instead of the group....
Don't know if anyone else has suggested this, but re-warm the oven, and then
using a clean cloth and some white vinegar should remove most of it, repeat
if necessary, rinsing off with some hot suds and then some clean water. Dry
using kitchen paper and buff up if it is glass.
Keep woking.....Cher
"kalanamak" <kalanamak@qwest.net> wrote in message
news:42057CBB.F2C4156A@qwest.net...
> The "clean" cycle does not take off the black baked-on dribbles down the
> inside glass of my oven door. It is a nice new stove, and this is
> unsightly. Anyone have an idea how to get it off? Even vigous rubbing
> with a terry cloth left scratches.
> TIA
> blacksalt
|
|
|
| Vox Humana |
"Damsel in dis Dress" <damsel@mailblocks.com> wrote in message
news:vi4b01lur9aogliij99a4uql6btlp12ckh@4ax.com...
> On Sat, 05 Feb 2005 18:11:07 -0800, kalanamak <kalanamak@qwest.net> wrote:
>
> >The "clean" cycle does not take off the black baked-on dribbles down the
> >inside glass of my oven door. It is a nice new stove, and this is
> >unsightly. Anyone have an idea how to get it off? Even vigous rubbing
> >with a terry cloth left scratches.
>
> You can get that off easily with no-fume oven cleaner. I don't recall
what
> brand I use, but it isn't nasty. It'll say on the can that it's no-fume.
> Works great on lots of things.
>
I also use oven cleaner, although I prefer the heavy-duty version in the
yellow can.
|
|
|
|