How Do You Clean A Scorched Pot?
• Fill the burnt pot with vinegar up to the burn line. (Actually, you can use any acidic liquid — lemon juice works fine — but for large jobs, a gallon-size jug of cheap, generic vinegar from the supermarket gives the best value).’; } s += “”; document.write(s); return; } google_ad_channel = ‘+7733764704+1640266093+9911500640+9483187321+8962074949+8941458308+0782835788+7122150828’ + xchannels + gchans; google_ad_client = “pub-9543332082073187”; google_ad_output = ‘js’; google_ad_type = ‘text’; google_feedback = ‘on’; google_ad_region = “test”; google_ad_format = ‘250x250_as’; //–> • Wait — as long as you want. You might as well let it soak for several hours or overnight, because the longer it soaks, the less you scrub. Scrub out whatever remains.
• Fill the burnt pot with vinegar up to the burn line. (Actually, you can use any acidic liquid — lemon juice works fine — but for large jobs, a gallon-size jug of cheap, generic vinegar from the supermarket gives the best value). • Wait — as long as you want. You might as well let it soak for several hours or overnight, because the longer it soaks, the less you scrub. Scrub out whatever remains. The pot will look cleaner than it has ever looked since it was brand new.