Pages

Kitchen Cleanup 2

Sunday, March 9, 2014

To prevent cracking, slip delicate stemware into the wash water edgewise not bottom first. For real sparkle add a little vinegar to the warm rinse water. To dry delicate stemware, stand it upside down on a soft towel, or polish it gently with a soft, lint-free cloth.

Use a soft brush to remove dirt from crevices in glassware. You can clean a stained decanter by filling it with water, adding a cup of ammonia or vinegar, and letting it stand overnight. If this doesn't work to your satisfaction, use 2 packs of powdered denture cleaner dissolved in water. A good way to clean a glass decanter is to cut a potato into small pieces, drop the pieces into the decanter, add warm water, and shake until the decanter s inside surfaces are spotless. Throw out the potato pieces, and then rinse the decanter with clean water.

A vase with a narrow neck appears to be hard to clean, but you can freshen it by dampening the inside with water, sprinkling in some toilet bowl cleaner, and waiting 10 minutes before rinsing thoroughly. Or fill the vase with hot water, add rice and 2 teaspoons of vinegar, and shake vigorously.
You can retard silver tarnishing by placing a piece of alum in the silverware drawer. When silver eventually does tarnish, apply silver polish with a sponge rather than a cloth; a sponge squeezes into crevices a cloth can't reach. Wash silverware by hand rather than in the dishwasher; then buff diy to bring up the shine and prevent water spots. The same method should be used for brass and pewter articles.

Kitchen Cleanup 2
Using sterling silver flatware regularly slows the tarnishing process and gives the pieces a beautiful patina. If you do wash sterling silver in the dishwasher, separate it from stainless steel. Contact between the two produces an electrolytic action that pits the stainless steel. Because contact with rubber darkens silver, wear cloth instead of rubber gloves when cleaning it. Also, never fasten pieces of silverware together with rubber bands. Even the slightest dampness causes silver to tarnish, so after you 've washed or polished sterling silver it's a good idea to let it air dry fora few hours before putting it away.

Remove stains from crystal glassware by rubbing with a cut lemon or washing in a water and vinegar solution. When washing delicate objects in the sink, guard against breakage by padding the sink bottom with a towel; wrap another towel, held in place with a rubber band, around the faucet. You can keep stainless steel shiny by rubbing it with a lemon peel or a cloth dampened with rubbing alcohol, and then washing it as usual.

When black spots appear on carbon steel knives, you can remove them with an old wine bottle cork. Sprinkle cleanser on the side of the blade, wet the cork, and scrub the blade with the flat end of the cork. Clean the other side the same way. If you want carving knives to remain sharp, wash them in cool water. To retard tarnish on polished brass, rub it with a cloth moistened with olive oil. When it eventually tarnishes, clean it by rubbing with a lemon wedge dipped in salt. Rinse with water and dry with a soft cloth.

You can minimize scratching when you polish pewter if you rub it with cabbage leaves or very fine steel wool. Then rinse with water and diy with a soft cloth. You'll make defrosting the refrigerator easier if you rub the inside of the freezer section with shortening. As an alternative, spray it with a com-mercial coating that prevents food from sticking to pans. Either way, ice will slide right off when you defrost. Do you defrost your refrigerator by letting water drip into a tray beneath the freezer compart-ment? You can avoid spilling the water on the way to the sink if you leave the tray in position, let its contents refreeze, and then drop the frozen chunk in the sink to melt.

Read at Kitchen Cleanup 1

No comments:

Post a Comment