this post was submitted on 20 Nov 2023
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as long as you cook it thoroughly it's not terrible but not great. though keeping it in the wrapper would be better (that's what we do at the restaurant). even a ziploc bag.
i mean assuming the water is clean and the sink is relatively routinely cleaned.
I mean... the sink in the pic is visibly dirty.
Vinegar and magic eraser (melamine foam) will get pretty much anything off!
Or those tablets for dentures
Not here with hard well water unfortunately... Hardened scale is quite robust against vinegar unless soaked. But either muriatic or phosphoric acid will do it, or hot citric acid. In descending order of effectiveness, as well as risk of giving yourself severe acid burns.
Sinks almost always look like this here as a thin layer of iron scale forms very fast.
Everyone should have that stuff in the kitchen, honestly it's generally more useful than vinegar, short of sweeping floors (vinegar evaporates, citric acid doesn't). Get it in food-grade, still dirt cheap and you can use it in recipes for acid balance.
The second one is sodium percarbonate, which is essentially hydrogen peroxide stabilised with washing soda. It will de-grease just as well as washing soda with an extra kick, ideal to rinse preserving jars or get tea stains off metal tea sieves -- also use that citric acid once in a while to get rid of mineral buildup. Generally speaking if soaking something in one after the other doesn't clean it then it's not dirty. You're a home kitchen, not a chip factory.
Oh and do I need to mention that you shouldn't combine those. Not that the reaction would create mustard gas or something, it's merely useless (acid and base neutralise each other), quite exothermic, and a splash risk.
Might just be a bit rusty, that'll just act like an iron supplement 😂