Stainless Steel Cleaner and polish

glass care
granite care
appliance after care
metal cleaning care
buy online

Stainless Steel Cleaning tips

We recommend http://www.quickleen.co.uk

first but if you can not afford it here is the tips.

Before trying these tips consider the value of your stainless steel appliance or product it may pay you to invest in a stainless steel cleaner designed for the propose.

We tried many with disappointing results so we teamed up with a chemist and designed and manufactured Clean Easy the ultimate stainless steel cleaner available via www.stainlesssteelcleaner.co.uk

 

Vinegar

To clean and polish stainless steel appliances, simply moisten a cloth with undiluted cider  or white  vinegar then  wipe clean. Thin also be used to remove heat stains on stainless steel cutlery.

This lasts for a short time. not effective on greasy surfaces

 

Olive Oil

Rub stainless steel sinks with olive oil to remove streaking.

However this can lead to dishes becoming greasy

and can be more expense than buying a cleaning product.

 

Club Soda

Removes streaking or heat stains from stainless steel surface by rubbing with club soda.

Warning

Club soda may be identical to plain carbonated water or it may contain a small amount of table salt, sodium citrate, sodium bicarbonate, potassium bicarbonate, potassium sulfate, or disodium phosphate, depending on the bottler.

Carbonated water, also known as soda water, sparkling water, fizzy water or seltzer water, is plain water into which carbon dioxide gas has been dissolved.

 

Flatware

Wash by hand or in the dishwasher.

Wash off salty or acidic foods if the stainless flatware is not to be cleaned soon.

Be careful not to spill power dishwasher detergent on flatware when they are  wet, as dark patches or spots  may occur.

Do not put stainless steel flatware in same basket section of the dishwasher with silverware, as damage to silver may result.

 

Utensils

Do not let stainless steel pans boil dry or overheat on burner, which leads to discoloration.

Need it resolved http://www.quickleen.co.uk

Stainless steel pans on hobs do not distribute heat evenly, and foods might cling in hot spots so stir foods often to avoid baking.

 

Utensils

Washed manually by hand or in dishwasher.

If washed by hand, rinse well, and polish them at once with soft dish cloth to minimize spots and streaks.

Some foods (acidic, salt, diary products) should be washed, or rinsed thoroughly off the surface of stainless steel promptly or else they tend to corrode it.

Do not use harsh abrasives or steel wool on stainless steel kitchen appliances.

Cooked-on food or grease can be removed from stainless steel utensils by using a fine abrasive cleaning powder or a paste of baking soda and water,

Commercial stainless steel cleaner are available.

 

Sinks

place perforated rubber or plastic mats in the sink will reduce scuffs and scratching marks made by pans and tableware.

Wash with a solution of hand dish washing liquid detergent and water or a solution of baking soda and water.

Rinse and polish dry with kitchen paper towel or soft lint free cloth.

Never use scouring powders or steel wool as they will scratch stainless steel.

 

You can brighten the sink by polishing with a cloth dipped in vinegar, or in ammonia, or dampen sink and a sponge sprinkle a little baking soda on sponge and rub sink gently rinse.

Finish by polishing dry using kitchen paper towel Stainless steel is stain resistant but occasionally dulls or will show oily hand prints.

 

This steel is renowned for its hardness and is used in the manufacturing of utensils,kitchen appliances, stainless steel sinks, counter tops and tableware. In the manufacturing process, a small amount of the chromium in the alloy is used to form the hard oxide coating on the outer surface

Stainless steel manufacturing information

Stainless steel metal is an alloy of 10 percent chromium 90 percent iron .

If this is removed through wear or corrosion, the steel will rusts like regular steel rusts