|
If necessary, you can scour
oven racks or porcelain enamel with steel wool or a scouring
pad to remove baked-on grease or food spills which have not come
off in regular cleaning. Occasional use of such abrasive pads,
or scouring powder on badly baked-on soil is OK, but don't use
these too often or scrub too hard for you can scratch the smooth
surface and make it harder to clean from then on. Do not scour
mirror-finished metals, glass, or baked-on enamel.
Electric and Gas Cooktops--Cleaning
Most electric and gas cooktops
are porcelain enamel, which can be easily cleaned when cooled,
with a damp cloth (warm water) or paper towel.
If greasy or sticky soil, use
warm sudsy water on cloth, paper towel, or sponge; rinse with
clean cloth; wipe dry.
If stubborn soil, lay sudsy
wet cloth or towel over spot and leave a few minutes to loosen
soil (semi-soaking). And/or rub with a nylon net scrubber or
soft plastic mesh pad. Do NOT use abrasive pads or scouring powders
as these can permanently scratch the porcelain finish.
Control knobs are washed in
warm suds with cloth or brush, rinsed, and dried. If they come
off, they're easier to clean, but do not soak them.
The area under drip pans may
be washed with warm suds, rinsed, and dried. Use paste of baking
soda and water on difficult spots. A soap-filled steel wool pad
may be used occasionally if necessary, or use a plastic mesh
pad.
Cleaning Burners, Gas or
Electric
Electric burners usually burn
off food spilled on them. Heavy spills can be wiped off with
a damp cloth when the burner is completely cold.
Gas burners and grates may be
removed for cleaning. Soak grates in very hot water and detergent
about a half-hour if very dirty; then scrub with a brush, rinse
and dry. A little ammonia may be added to the soaking solution
if they are very greasy. Soak burners in hot, soapy water to
soften grease and grime. Clean with a brush. Do not use scouring
powder which will clog the holes. The metal ring with holes in
it may come off the burner for cleaning. If the holes in the
burner are stopped up, clean with a fine wire, hair pin, paper
clip or pipe stem cleaner. Don't use toothpicks as they could
break off and clog the holes. Rinse burners in hot water and
place them upside down in a warm oven (300 F.) to dry; about
15 minutes.
Cleaning Reflector Bowls
Reflector bowls under burners
may be taken out and washed in hot suds. Soak several minutes
to loosen heavy dirt; up to 20 minutes may be needed if grease
is burned on the bowls. Wipe off trim rings with sudsy cloth.
On stubborn spots on chrome bowls and rings, use a paste of baking
soda and water with a plastic mesh pad. Rinse and dry. Never
put chrome bowls in the dishwasher or in a self-cleaning oven.
Porcelain reflector bowls can be washed in either sudsy water
or in an automatic dishwasher. If your manual recommends it,
porcelain bowls can occasionally be cleaned in a self-cleaning
oven cycle, upside down on oven racks. Wiping spills off bowls
after cooking prevents stain build-up which requires stronger
measures. |