So I have a 6qt stainless steel saute pan that I may or may not have fucked.

With the plan of “preheating” it, so it would be ready after putting the baby to bed, I put it on the stove with a drizzle of olive oil on med/low heat.

30 minutes later I come downstairs and the pan (which had a lid on thank god) was full of smoke, completely scorched carbon, and some gooey polymerized oil all over the lid and around the scorched portion.

I’ve done two rounds of oven cleaner that sat for 20-30 minutes, which made mincemeat of the gooey oil, but didn’t even touch the carbon.

I’m currently leaving it overnight with more oven cleaner, but if that fails, what are my next steps? Maybe something more abrasive to just mechanically remove it?

Thanks in advance, my wife is very displeased about one of our kitchen mainstays being on the bench right before Thanksgiving.

  • Zistack@lemmy.sdf.org
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    18 hours ago

    The oven cleaner cycle was a good idea for the resin - I’m not sure what else would have worked - but it won’t do anything more to what is already basically a form of graphite (which has an extremely high melting point, and a fairly high ignition point).

    You need to oxidize the carbon. That would be bleach or hydrogen peroxide + time and, if you can, sunlight (so set it outside to soak for a bit with this stuff). This is gonna take several hours, and it may take more than one round to get all of the scorching off, but it will come off completely if you are patient and persistent enough.

    EDIT: Though the method I’ve described is what I’ve done in the past, I read that heat + baking soda + water (+ vigorous scrubbing) can also work.

  • Zorsith
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    17 hours ago

    Get a brillo pad and start scrubbing. It’s stainless steel, it’ll take it.

    Once it’s scraped off, barkeepers friend for a bit of cleaner polishing.

    It’s borderline impossible to kill a stainless steel pan. Half the stainless steel i own i got at a thrift store because somebody scorched it and got rid of it; little bit of elbow grease and I then had an expensive pan for about 5-10 bucks and some time.

    • sneekee_snek_17@lemmy.worldOP
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      17 hours ago

      I’m glad to hear my thoughts echoed. While I wasn’t sure how I was going to fix the pan, I knew the pan would survive that’s why I love stainless steel

  • Please_Do_Not@lemm.ee
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    18 hours ago

    Sounds like you basically seasoned it like a cast iron, so if all else fails, you can try heating it even hotter and longer til it flakes off, which is the most effective way to strip a cast iron.

    Acid and abrasive are your best bets short of that.