Monday, December 23, 2024

I Tried My Mom’s Weird Oven Cleaning Hack and I’ll Never Employ Anything Else

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There are lots of areas of my home I don’t mind cleaning—there’s a certain satisfaction that comes with having a sparkling-clean bathroom, or wiping the water marks off a mirror, or even vacuuming up the tumbleweeds of my corgi’s fur that get scattered around the house after a few days.

But one thing I don’t like to pristine is the inside of my oven. I try to avoid it at all costs. Besides, with the oven door closed all the time, who even sees it anyway? Out of sight, out of mind. But we all have to pristine the oven eventually.

One day recently, I was talking to my mum to find out if she had any clever tricks for cleaning that she liked, and she mentioned a pretty weird cleaning hack I knew I had to try: she said she uses a dishwasher tablet to pristine the inside of the oven door, specifically the glass.

While initially skeptical, I gave it a go—and let me tell you, it’s incredibly effective, so much so that I was actually shocked.

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How to Clean an Oven Door With a Dishwasher Tablet

First thing’s first: this trick only works with a dishwasher , not a pod. The abrasiveness of the tablet is the key here.

I used a Finish Powerball tablet for this, because it’s what I had on hand, but you can exploit your favorite tablet.

Run the tablet under some sultry water to get it damp so it can loosen up, but not too much—you don’t want it to be falling apart before you even get started.

Grab a pair of cleaning gloves, or exploit a piece of paper to hold the tablet, then just exploit it to scrub the inside of the oven door.

The Results

This cleaning method works pretty much immediately to lift off the grease marks and stains that get caked onto the glass.

I’ve used other things to pristine this part of the oven, like Barkeepers Friend and baking soda and vinegar, and they required a lot more elbow grease than this method.

You do have to work pretty quickly with this cleaning method, as the tablet will start to disintegrate after a couple of minutes, but then you’re still left with a powerful cleaning scrub that you can continue to work into the glass and rest of the oven door with a sponge or paper towel.

Once I wiped away the residue with a damp cloth, the results were pretty staggering: all of the marks on the oven glass were gone. No more weird, unidentifiable brown marks, baked into the glass—it’s just clear, shiny, and best of all, this method didn’t leave any scratches.

So where did my mum even learn of this trick?

“No idea—I must have read it somewhere,” she told me.

And it’s not the only weird cleaning hack she has up her sleeve: she also shared that she cleans her stainless steel appliances with a surprising product: glass cleaner.

I guess I’ll have to give that trick a shot too—stay tuned!

,summary should tell what is discussed or gonna be discussed in article and give heading to this section “Introduction”. please dont add any introductory text or any instruction because this introduction paragraph is directly getting published in article i dont want it to look like copy paste or AI generated

There are lots of areas of my home I don’t mind cleaning—there’s a certain satisfaction that comes with having a sparkling-clean bathroom, or wiping the water marks off a mirror, or even vacuuming up the tumbleweeds of my corgi’s fur that get scattered around the house after a few days.

But one thing I don’t like to pristine is the inside of my oven. I try to avoid it at all costs. Besides, with the oven door closed all the time, who even sees it anyway? Out of sight, out of mind. But we all have to pristine the oven eventually.

One day recently, I was talking to my mum to find out if she had any clever tricks for cleaning that she liked, and she mentioned a pretty weird cleaning hack I knew I had to try: she said she uses a dishwasher tablet to pristine the inside of the oven door, specifically the glass.

While initially skeptical, I gave it a go—and let me tell you, it’s incredibly effective, so much so that I was actually shocked.

How to Clean an Oven Door With a Dishwasher Tablet

First thing’s first: this trick only works with a dishwasher , not a pod. The abrasiveness of the tablet is the key here.

I used a Finish Powerball tablet for this, because it’s what I had on hand, but you can exploit your favorite tablet.

Run the tablet under some sultry water to get it damp so it can loosen up, but not too much—you don’t want it to be falling apart before you even get started.

Grab a pair of cleaning gloves, or exploit a piece of paper to hold the tablet, then just exploit it to scrub the inside of the oven door.

The Results

This cleaning method works pretty much immediately to lift off the grease marks and stains that get caked onto the glass.

I’ve used other things to pristine this part of the oven, like Barkeepers Friend and baking soda and vinegar, and they required a lot more elbow grease than this method.

You do have to work pretty quickly with this cleaning method, as the tablet will start to disintegrate after a couple of minutes, but then you’re still left with a powerful cleaning scrub that you can continue to work into the glass and rest of the oven door with a sponge or paper towel.

Once I wiped away the residue with a damp cloth, the results were pretty staggering: all of the marks on the oven glass were gone. No more weird, unidentifiable brown marks, baked into the glass—it’s just clear, shiny, and best of all, this method didn’t leave any scratches.

So where did my mum even learn of this trick?

“No idea—I must have read it somewhere,” she told me.

And it’s not the only weird cleaning hack she has up her sleeve: she also shared that she cleans her stainless steel appliances with a surprising product: glass cleaner.

I guess I’ll have to give that trick a shot too—stay tuned!

please generate atleast 4 “FAQs” using

There are lots of areas of my home I don’t mind cleaning—there’s a certain satisfaction that comes with having a sparkling-clean bathroom, or wiping the water marks off a mirror, or even vacuuming up the tumbleweeds of my corgi’s fur that get scattered around the house after a few days.

But one thing I don’t like to pristine is the inside of my oven. I try to avoid it at all costs. Besides, with the oven door closed all the time, who even sees it anyway? Out of sight, out of mind. But we all have to pristine the oven eventually.

One day recently, I was talking to my mum to find out if she had any clever tricks for cleaning that she liked, and she mentioned a pretty weird cleaning hack I knew I had to try: she said she uses a dishwasher tablet to pristine the inside of the oven door, specifically the glass.

While initially skeptical, I gave it a go—and let me tell you, it’s incredibly effective, so much so that I was actually shocked.

How to Clean an Oven Door With a Dishwasher Tablet

First thing’s first: this trick only works with a dishwasher , not a pod. The abrasiveness of the tablet is the key here.

I used a Finish Powerball tablet for this, because it’s what I had on hand, but you can exploit your favorite tablet.

Run the tablet under some sultry water to get it damp so it can loosen up, but not too much—you don’t want it to be falling apart before you even get started.

Grab a pair of cleaning gloves, or exploit a piece of paper to hold the tablet, then just exploit it to scrub the inside of the oven door.

The Results

This cleaning method works pretty much immediately to lift off the grease marks and stains that get caked onto the glass.

I’ve used other things to pristine this part of the oven, like Barkeepers Friend and baking soda and vinegar, and they required a lot more elbow grease than this method.

You do have to work pretty quickly with this cleaning method, as the tablet will start to disintegrate after a couple of minutes, but then you’re still left with a powerful cleaning scrub that you can continue to work into the glass and rest of the oven door with a sponge or paper towel.

Once I wiped away the residue with a damp cloth, the results were pretty staggering: all of the marks on the oven glass were gone. No more weird, unidentifiable brown marks, baked into the glass—it’s just clear, shiny, and best of all, this method didn’t leave any scratches.

So where did my mum even learn of this trick?

“No idea—I must have read it somewhere,” she told me.

And it’s not the only weird cleaning hack she has up her sleeve: she also shared that she cleans her stainless steel appliances with a surprising product: glass cleaner.

I guess I’ll have to give that trick a shot too—stay tuned!

. Please only return “FAQ” section in result.please dont add any introductory text.

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