Cleaning
The Most Annoying Kitchen Tools to Clean
From fine-mesh sieves to food processors, many of these gadgets are super-handy...but hard to clean! Here's how to do it properly.
Photo by Ty Mecham, prop styling by Alya Hameedi, food styling by Anna Billingskog
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16 Comments
L R.
July 18, 2023
Somehow my favorite cleaning hack for food processors and hand mixers was only applied to whisks! I shamelessly rinse mine after use then reassemble, add a squirt of dish soap and a cup or so of very hot water, run for a few pulses, and then disassemble and rinse thoroughly. Works like a charm, Every Time.
Ellen G.
March 2, 2023
before I had a micro plane I would wrap the box grater with a piece of plastic wrap, grate my lemon/orange to get the zest then pull the plastic wrap off, it left the grater clean and all the zest as on the plastic wrap.
I try to use less wrap now but did like the technique.
I try to use less wrap now but did like the technique.
Merry
April 5, 2022
Totally agree with so many of these time-consuming cleaning tasks. Adding the Brita filter to my list - it seems to take forever to get it totally clean.
Trustyboard
April 1, 2022
I have a variety of mandolin type devices in my kitchen. I love them all and there usually is a stray piece of carrot or other firm vegetable stuck in the very corner of the blade and julienne bit that sometimes requires a toothpick as well. I keep a toothbrush or two around the kitchen to clean deep into my insulated drinking vessels, coffee apparatus, grinders, and talk about tools, does an espresso machine qualify as a tool? Talk about a pain to clean something that brings you so much joy!......lol
sunagape
March 31, 2022
I keep a small assortment of brushes at the sink, hard bristle and soft bristle toothbrushes, bottle brushes in a couple of sizes, and a circular pan brush. The toothbrushes are great for graters, garlic presses, microplaners, all the little-hole tools. Washing up as you work takes some practice, but it means that final cleanup is much easier.
PaulaMarie S.
March 20, 2022
Box grater - for sticky stuff like frozen butter or cheese, spray the grater (esp inside) with cooking spray, makes it so much easier to clean (same for measuring spoons/cups - measure the oil first, if using, everything else will slide right out - I'm talking to you honey/molasses!).
[email protected]
March 19, 2022
So finally, in the article’s last paragraph — the toothbrush!
It’s possible that I would run into a burning building should the last “old toothbrush” in the world be threatened by the flames.
It’s possible that I would run into a burning building should the last “old toothbrush” in the world be threatened by the flames.
judy
March 16, 2022
The over-riding piece of take-away advice for me is not to leave the items to wash later. I do make time to at least rinse them well during the prep process and then wash when I am done prepping. I Amy leave other dishes to do later. but not kitchen prep gadgets.
Smaug
March 16, 2022
All of these fall under the "clean up as you work" banner; not that you should stop to wash dishes constantly, but anything that needs rinsing should be rinsed before it dries out. Two to watch for; the hollow shaft of a processor blade is difficult to clean and dry, and molds and bacteria can easily start growing in there. And the stationary shaft that a blender blade revolves on won't be cleaned by running the blender; junk can build up at that joint and can even freeze a blade.
Janet M.
March 31, 2022
So agree with your first sentence. I use one of those little brushes made to clean baby bottle nipples to get up into that processor blade shaft. All used toothbrushes from my family end up in a container in my kitchen--and into the dishwasher after using. Toothpicks are dandy for sliding along crevices.
Trustyboard
March 16, 2022
Where can I find those Rosie graters? Where have they been hiding? I gotta have them please! Help!?
Hapgood
March 15, 2022
Question: won’t soaking something with an edge cause it to dull quicker? I know you’re not supposed to soak a knife and I always assumed graters and processor blades would be the same.
Smaug
March 16, 2022
Won't dull the blade, soaking knives is usually not recommended because of the handles, and because traditionally stainless steel knives were not much used in kitchens; modern high carbon stainless is fairly recent.
Steven W.
March 16, 2022
I've had a set of Dexter ss knives doe over 30 years (restaurant type, plastic handles) and they are my go-to daily. I do hand wash, but they certainly have been through the dishwasher a number of times. After that many years of use, the handles are slightly less than white, but I can soak them in simple green or a bleach solution and it does a decent job.
judy
March 16, 2022
I actually use a quart size tall storage container for soaking knives and other long-handled larger cooking utensils. I squirt in a bit of soap and add water, then add the dirty utensils as I go. I have a chronic disease, and rarely am able to cook a meal and clean up after. Simply no enough energy. This allows me to clean them up easily later without having to use a whole sinful of water.
M
March 15, 2022
1. Dish cloths over sponges. They can be cleaned, they don't crumble, and if they start to rip, they're still great as rags for cleaning, or using on cast iron to avoid leaving paper towel particles behind. I regret the years I used sponges, and how much waste I created with them. (Apart, of course, from a few for the occasional scrub.)
2. Rinse Microplane immediately after using, and gentle wipes with the cutting surface, and a scrub of the back, will clean it right up. A toothpick or nail getting the few stubborn bits of rind or such that remain.
3. If you constantly have issues with getting things clean, fill up a bowl with sudsy hot water and leave it in your sink while you cook. Put all hard-to-clean items in the bowl immediately after use, and all should be easy to clean once you get around to it. (A bowl rather than the whole sink, so that you can still rinse vegetables, pour out boiled water, etc.)
2. Rinse Microplane immediately after using, and gentle wipes with the cutting surface, and a scrub of the back, will clean it right up. A toothpick or nail getting the few stubborn bits of rind or such that remain.
3. If you constantly have issues with getting things clean, fill up a bowl with sudsy hot water and leave it in your sink while you cook. Put all hard-to-clean items in the bowl immediately after use, and all should be easy to clean once you get around to it. (A bowl rather than the whole sink, so that you can still rinse vegetables, pour out boiled water, etc.)
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