Bar Keeper's Friend

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passatdoc

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Earlier this month there was a discussion thread about using citric acid for cleaning/descaling. In that thread, I posted something about using a teaspoon of citric acid in some boiling water to remove those funny "rainbow stains" in my steel cookware (probably mineral deposits) and that this method worked well.

I recently bought some additions to my set of Cuisinart stainless cookware (just the Chef's Stainless, not the higher end Pro line that competes with All Clad). A number of reviewers on Amazon suggested using Bar Keeper's Friend for cleaning the pots and pans.

When I used to have copper bottom Revere Ware, I used to buy a product called Kleen King.

http://www.faultless.com/kleenking.asp

It's billed as being good for both copper and steel, but I found it did a better job with copper and was not so good at removing "rainbow" stains on steel. After giving away the Revere Ware (purcahsed circa 1984) in 2001, I bought whatever I found in the market: Bon Ami, Dutch Cleanser, Comet, Ajax, what have you.

In response to all the positive reviews of Bar Keeper's Friend, I ordered some in conjunction with a new piece of Cuisinart cookware (I'm out of storage room so it's the last piece!!). Just used it on some "rainbowed" skillet and pans, and it really is amazing. Cleans them to like-new, after years of using other powders that didn't really work and sometimes resorting to scouring pads. Of course, citric acid worked too, but rather cumbersome vs. Bar Keeper's Friend.

I don't know what's in it, but I wonder if it includes some sort of acid that helps dissolve mineral deposits. On the company website it says something about a rhubarb derivative being one of the ingredients, so maybe there really is some acid in it. All I know is that even the oldest pieces in the collection, c. 2001-2, sparkle like they're new again.

Some of you may be wondering why I gave away my Revere Ware. Well, a lot of the pieces had warped over time---remember this was an $80 set of cookware, and the copper was a pain to clean. But the main reason was that I upgraded to a new gas convection range in 2001, a Frigidaire with SpeedBake and a high output burner (12 or 14K btu, I believe). The hotter flame starting sending sparks from the bottoms of my pans! It was embedded carbon that was suddenly spitting out due to the higher heat. Worse, the specks were landing on the white porcelain top and were almost impossible to remove, it looked like someone sprinkled pepper over the cooktop. An acquaintance who is a professional chef said to get something with a steel bottom to avoid the sparking.

I took a $100 Amazon gift certificate and bought a ten piece set for about $115. This was then known as Everyday Stainless. It had a thin steel-copper-steel sandwich welded to the bottom of each piece. Not All Clad by any means, but it looked good and cooks well with good heat distribution. Today, Cuisinart's Chef series uses a much thicker steel-aluminum-steel sandwich on the bottom, and all handles are riveted (mine are welded...).

I have a few of the newer Chef's series pieces (saute pan, wok, everyday pan) to fill out the original Everyday Stainless set. This allowed me to retire several nonstick pans (wok, sautee) which scared me because of the tendency of the coating to flake off into one's food. The Chef's series has been rated as highly as All Clad (in terms of how well it cooks and cleans up) by several major cooking publications; a new set costs about $150 for 12 pieces (not cheap but way less than All Clad). Their All Clad knockoff series (Pro) costs about $300 for 12 pieces. [this post was last edited: 1/16/2011-20:31]


passatdoc++1-16-2011-20-14-45.jpg.png
 
Ah-HAH!!

That must be the secret ingredient and why it works when other powders don't. The shipment arrived with the new cookware piece on Thursday. Over the weekend, I cleaned all of the pots and pans with it. After forming a watery paste with it, I scrub for a minute or two, then pour the mixture into the next pot (sort of like Suds Saver...) and the same paste is generally adequate to clean two or three items. This works so well (no more "rainbows" out of the dishwasher) that I may start washing them by hand because it's "easier". Or maybe wash the in the DW but use Bar Keeper's Friend to keep them shiny every two or three washes in the DW.
 
Big fan of Bar Keeper's. Use it to polish off the kitchen sink, clean up Centura/CorningWare pieces, SS cookware, and also for cleaning up porcelain items. Great stuff!

Has kept this 1 year old sink looking new.

Ben

swestoyz++1-16-2011-21-14-33.jpg
 
I've been using BKF for many years; my Mom used it a long time, too. I've cleaned everything from glass to concrete with it. The can I have mentions oxalic acid in the caution statement. You say you ordered it; is it not sold in grocery and hardware stores in your area?
 
I've been using it for years also.  It's great in getting the metal marks of my cast iron sinks sinks.I know it may be a no-no, but I like use a mix of Bar Keeper's and Comet when scrubbing the sink. Like the chlorine in comet but the mark removing properties of BKF...
 
I see BKF on the shelves at grocery and hardware stores in my area.  I have liquid on hand currently, but need to get me a can of the powder, which I think works better.  I think it can be used on Magnalite cookware, which we have a lot of.  I haven't been all that impressed with Bon Ami, but Magnalite cautions against using chlorine-based cleansers so I will give BKF powder a try. 

 

My mom had a set of Revere cookware that she received as a wedding gift in 1949.  For a good 30 years, that stuff constituted the daily drivers for all cooking jobs, and every time a piece was washed it would be finished off with powdered copper cleaner such as Kleen King, some of which still survived under the sink long after the Revere became a decorative treatment hanging in a neat row above the stove.
 
It's what I use on the kitchen sink and any rust stains. For anyone in Canada that can't find it.. Home Hardware carries it though the smaller stores might not they' can get it in for you.. pretty cheap about $2.50.
There's a similar product called ZUD which also works just as well.
 
Some markets and most hardware stores do carry BKF. However, I saw a good price for it ($8 for a four pack) on Amazon, and since the cookware piece I ordered cost over $25, the shipping was free. So I saved a trip to the store, probably got it for less than the hardware store's price, and got free shipping. "Normally" I would buy at the market or hardware store. I learned however that not all of the supermarket chains in my area carry the product.
 
I used to use BKF when I had my FRIGIDAIRE Touch N Cook Range. I later found that Ajax cleanser has no abrasives and gets the ceramic tops a lot cleaner.I used that a lot too.
 
It's the best! Keeps all my All Clad and waterless cookware in perfect shape! Mandatory for SS. Cameo is similar, but the powder is finer...recommended for delicate items. Also great for my glass stovetop...create a slurry to reduce any scratching...never has scratched for me with a sponge.

I've even used it to clean the SS basket in the Queen.
 
another use for BKF

is on rust. While looking thru my vintage maytag owners manual, under pre treating various stains on fabrics, it mentions using oxalic acid for rust spots. Sure enough I wet the fabric I had that had a bad rust stain with some hot water, sprinkled some BKF on it rolled it up, let it sit a couple of hours, and behold the rust was gone.
 
THE Best polish for Stainless Steel & Sterling

We have counter tops in Stainless Steel from 1939 in our Kitchen, they were custom made and are kept perfect, by using, "MAAS Polish"..It Is for Sterling and so many metal finishes. This polish provides a "MIRROR" finish and is less abrasive than Bar Keepers Friend (we used that first) I use it for all my DOOR KNOBS that are solid Brass and Baldwin Old Brass, I have an "Aunt Clara Syndrome" I love to polish door knobs, shining the Knobs makes me feel so GOOD, and everyone comments about them..and likes to WATCH, takes major work, but they stay perfect for weeks.....MONTHS....I am taking many pictures to post, will do this very soon.....HTH in Wheeling, WV
 

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