T O P I C R E V I E W |
Hens-R-Us |
Posted - Sep 26 2006 : 9:21:34 PM My husband bought me a new stove,which is a wonderful thing in my eyes, but it was the glass top that has been the hardest to adjust too, beautiful but hard to keep shiny without chemicals. I especially love cleaning it to its best shine, so have experimented with a variety of cleaning methods.
This is what I have found works the best without much expense. When I am done scraping off the burnt material/spillage/whatever spatters, I will wash with warm water and soap-- it would turn out to be clean but not shiny.
I read you could use a small amount (1 teaspoon) of cornstarch on a damp washcloth, wipe the stove top off-covering it thoroughly and drying with a soft cloth to buff it... Looks like a mirror- huh, who would have thought?
Works like nothing else I have seen and turns out it can be used the same way to clean windows. It leaves no streaks, is very shiny, and no obnoxious smells. We have two dogs who love to breathe on the windows of our sliding glass doors. SO they need alot of cleaning.The windows I mean.
There is nothing better than a house full of happy hens. |
1 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
ali2583 |
Posted - Sep 27 2006 : 3:13:39 PM Oh Kim, that's the best thing I've heard today! I also have a Ceran flat-top stove, and begrudgingly I've had to resort to chemicals to clean it, since I just wasn't sure what would work. Thanks!
"God's gift to you is life. What you choose to do with that life is your gift to God" |
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