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Cleaning Burnt Pots and Pans


Diamond Post Medal for All Time! 1,246 Posts
May 24, 2011

A pot with burned food and the same pot that was cleaned by the sun.Don't waste your time scrubbing a badly burned pot or even think about throwing it away! All you need to do is put it outside in direct sunlight for a few days. The burnt food will crust up together, and when you turn it upside down, it will all fall out. I burned a huge pot of food the other day and my mother called up with this tip. Sure enough, the pot is back to normal thanks to the sun!

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Before: A stainless steel pot with burned food.

 

After: Cleaning Badly Burnt Pots and Pans

 

Source: My mother

By attosa from Los Angeles, CA

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Questions

Here are the questions asked by community members. Read on to see the answers provided by the ThriftyFun community.

March 26, 2008

How do I get burnt tomato soup out of a metal pan? I was making grilled cheese and tomato soup the other day and seemed to let it sit to long.

I now can't seem to get the burnt soup off the bottom of my pan. Can anyone help?

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Silver Feedback Medal for All Time! 407 Feedbacks
March 26, 20080 found this helpful
Best Answer

Automatic dishwasher detergent in water will dissolve just about all cooked on food. Just let sit for a while.

 
March 26, 20080 found this helpful
Best Answer

Barkeepers Friend....looks like white comet. It cleans everything. Sprinkle it on a wet pan and let sit a few minutes. Shines everything like new.

 
March 26, 20080 found this helpful
Best Answer

Fill the pot with hot water and place a new fabric softener dryer sheet in it. Let it set overnight. This has worked before for me on baked/burned on food.

 
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December 4, 2007

My Revere Ware has sufficient build up of burnt food on the OUTSIDE (sides and bottom) of the pots and pans. There is advice on cleaning the INSIDE not the OUTSIDE - I'm considering using a Magic Eraser but I'm wondering about the copper bottom as well. Would be interested in detailed information. Thanks so much!



Kris from Austin, TX

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Silver Feedback Medal for All Time! 290 Feedbacks
December 4, 20070 found this helpful

www.thriftyfun.com/tf81763537.tip.html

Read last post on page.

 
By jean (Guest Post)
December 4, 20070 found this helpful

Try soaking the pots in a sink or dish pan in hot water and powder dish washer detergent, about 1 cup to a sink full. What works on the inside will probably work on the outside. Soak overnight, then scrub.

 

Bronze Request Medal for All Time! 65 Requests
December 6, 20070 found this helpful

I'm not sure if this will help you, but my mother taught me how to clean and brighten copper bottoms of our Revere Ware pots and pans.

Wet the copper bottom and sprinkle vinegar (any kind) on it. Then sprinkle regular salt on top of the vinegar and scrub with a sponge. The chemical reaction of the vinegar and salt removes tarnish from the bottom.

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Maybe this will help, I hope.

Good luck!
Smoochie :)

 
December 6, 20070 found this helpful

Barkeeper's Friend!

 
February 9, 20080 found this helpful

I've had to do a lot of this lately.
First, do a thorough cleaning with Bar Keepers Friend-- on the stainless steel and the copper. Don't spend a lot of time on the copper because that's Step 2.
Step 2: Get on down to the local hardware store and pick up a sheet of 600 grit wet/dry sandpaper. Cut off a piece around 2" square and keep everything wet. Then scour the copper with the sandpaper. That copper will shine like you won't believe...

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(Maybe going to the hardware store should have been step number 1?)

 
February 9, 20081 found this helpful

Before anyone says: "Yikes! Sandpaper? Are you kidding me?"
I heard this tip on a cooking show on a San Francisco radio station. And it really works well, without scratching the copper. I was amazed myself!

 
March 3, 20082 found this helpful

I have the solution to your problem, this will work on the copper bottom & the inside that was burned from water, milk etcetera. My husband is a body work man fixing & painting cars. When he paints cars afterwards, he has to wet sand & buff the paint to get out imperfections. He uses a 1000 grit or 1,500 grit sandpaper, it's really fine grain. I use it on the inside & the outside of my Revereware pans. You have to let a slow flow of water run on it the whole time you are scrubbing. It does not scratch the pans because it's such a fine grain of sandpaper. I promise you, it will not scratch & they come out looking brand new.

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You have to remember to run a trickle of water over it as your scrubbing. You are wet sanding the burnt stuff & film off the pan. If it works on car paint without scratching, it will work on your pans. I have been using this method for 20 years now with perfect looking pans. You can get the sandpaper at the hardware or automotive store, ask for 1000 grit to 1,500 wet dry sandpaper. It doesn't take much scrubbing either.

I promise you will never go back to any other way again after using this method.

 
March 3, 20080 found this helpful

I just posted about the sandpaper too,when people think of sandpaper they think of the rough stuff.There is a sandpaper out there that is 1000 grit and 1,500 grit,you have to get the right type.It's called wet/dry 1000 grit sandpaper,it's the type used to wet sand and buff out imperfection in the paint after a car is painted.I use this method and I promise you it does not scratch your pans.You have to REMEMBER to run a trickle flow of water over the pan as your wet sanding it.It's more like a rubbing method but it WILL NOT SCRATCH YOUR PANS.If it does than you have used the wrong grit,it has to be 1000 grit or 1,500 wet/dry sandpaper,it is a very very fine sandpaper grit.Once you use this method you will never bother with others again,it works on the inside and the outside of the pan.

 
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August 3, 2018

I have burned chunky spaghetti sauce on the bottom of my pot. I tried the liquid dish soap with water and boiling method, but it's still stuck like glue to the bottom of the pot. What now?


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November 3, 2009

My pans are greasy and spotted on the bottom. Can I put them in my self cleaning oven? Thank you.

By dan noci from Las Vegas, NV

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November 24, 2014

pot with burnt foodI didn't realise peas cooked so quickly. I left the kitchen for a bit and scorched the pot. I scrubbed for hours and hours and I'm still scrubbing. I've gotten a lot of the burnt off and broken two nails in the process, but it's not my pot it's my roommate's. I don't wanna hear about it or worse have her make me replace it. This thing could cost a lot of money.

Anyways I realised my metal spoon was really good at getting hard oatmeal off of plastic so why not this pot. Sure enough it got a lot more of it off, but I had to stop cause it was leaving these huge visible scratch marks. Anyways I need to know what to do to get it clean the rest of the way and if I can make the scratches disappear. Thanks.
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By Savannah K.

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July 28, 2010

I burned my copper whistling tea kettle. I can get the outside reasonably clean, but worry about the inside. How do I make sure it's free of nasty stuff inside?



Pat R

By Pat R from WI

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December 31, 2009

How do I get burned on milk off a T-fal pan?

By grannyearth from PA

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January 5, 2015

I've got scorched milk on my pan. Can you use Clorox? Or what is the best way to take it off?

By CAL

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June 24, 2014

How can I clean copper bottom pans that have years of stuff on them?

By RB

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July 25, 2013

I cannot clean my fry pans that are burnt from using the gas too high. I tried all types of cleaners, but nothing works.

By Helen

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