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It's here: Our game-changing guide to everyone's favorite room in the house. Your Do-Anything Kitchen gathers the smartest ideas and savviest tricks—from our community, test kitchen, and cooks we love—to help transform your space into its best self.
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16 Comments
Denise L.
September 26, 2021
I use a 1/2 cup of bleach and 1/2 cup clothes detergent, fill up the sink with hot water. I let it soak for 1 hr. I drain rinse dry the sink. Than I spray goo be gone and wipe the sink. BEAUTIFUL.
Charlene V.
September 26, 2021
If you have a garbage disposal, be sure t clean that circular black rubber thing that sits on top of it. That gets lots of gunk on it over time. You just pull it out and you might need a toothbrush to scrub around the edges and the flaps inside it. Then you place it back in and kind of push down around the edges to re-seat it in the drain. I also like Bon Ami for scrubbing, as it’s a little finer grit than BKF.
macca
August 16, 2021
the easiest and best way to clean your sink and and stainless steel benches is to pour plain flour on the stainless and rub in circular motion and watch the stainless steel come alive.
J
May 10, 2021
Most of us need a better sink strainer. Unless you really do use the thingie on your strainer to hold water to fill the sink, just get a plain sink strainer. They’re sold in packs of 2 for a reason: when you fill the dishwasher, wipe out your strainer effortlessly (SO much easier than trying to wipe out the kind with the thingie) and put it in the dishwasher, then put the spare into the sink! At the same time, I give my sink an easy scrub with the business side of a slightly-soapy ScotchBrite, which also pops into the dishwasher, and my sink and sponge are always both clean and sanitary. Naturally, if I were cooking chicken or fish (very rare occasions for me), I’d also give sink, strainer, and sponge a bleachy spritz.
David G.
August 11, 2020
We just remodeled our kitchen - finished a month before the pandemic started SIP orders for San Francisco whew - and I use two sink protectors for the stainless steel sinks. They keep it from being scratched and dinged and make it easier to clean. I've seen them range in price from $8.00 on up.
Arati M.
August 24, 2020
David, I wish I had bought a protector for our new kitchen before my husband took over washing duties ;) (He'll say it was me haha) We have a silicone one in there now, and it's a real savior. I throw it into the dishwasher every week as well.
Medora V.
July 23, 2020
You asked what was the oddest use we'd found for a sink. When we redid the kitchen, I specified the largest sink that could be found (apart from one designed for a restaurant kitchen). My line was "big enough to wash a toddler in." No toddlers have been washed in the capacious sink--I don't actually know any toddlers--but, in a rare case of good timing, the strangest thing to enter the new sink showed up this morning: a mouse. (We're out in the woods, and mice are [ahem] regular visitors.) After the requisite yelps of dismay, I trapped it in Tupperware and escorted it back to its natural habitat. Perhaps not all that odd, but memorable.
Arati M.
August 24, 2020
I only just got to read this, Medora and you made me smile. First of all, thank you for escorting the wee mouse back to its habitat--that's so kind. And then, the sink for the toddler that isn't! lol. Hope you're putting that giant sink to good use, I can think of a million!
Kristina P.
June 10, 2020
I love the option of vinegar and baking soda bc so many of us are trying to be more chemical conscious. Also, so many are trying to get into clean and healthy habits for little ones and of course fur babies. Thank you!
Smaug
June 10, 2020
Well, everything's chemicals including vinegar, baking soda, thee and me. Either vinegar or baking soda has some use for cleaning- in combination with heat either can be very effective against burned on residue on pans (though vinegar tends to reek if boiled), and baking soda is a fair abrasive. Neither is very effective as a disinfectant, and if you mix them together all you get is salt water and carbon dioxide.
Smaug
June 10, 2020
You really can't beat bleach, especially for the black mold that tends to accumulate in drains, anyplace wet, insides of hollow faucet handles etc., and of course for bacteria, viruses etc. I don't know how the notion of cleaning things by mixing baking soda and vinegar persists, they just neutralize each other. It does look like something is going on, but either will clean better on it's own.
Kimani B.
May 22, 2020
I scrub the sink after each time I wash the dishes. A nice rub down with the sponge. And the best sponge is netted cloth, because they're much more hygienic and don't hold onto odors.
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