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How to Clean Silicone Utensils with 3 Great Equipment Only

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How to clean silicone? Do you need to clean silicone often? Because of their versatility, nonstick characteristics, and convenience of use, silicone baking sheets, bakeware, candy molds, ice cube trays, spatulas, and tools are widely available. Planning to buy the best silicone spatula? we have a list of recommendation you can check.

Silicone is a nonstick surface because it does not absorb any oil or grease from food; instead, the oil remains on the bakeware’s surface, allowing meals to slide straight off. That’s excellent unless the oils aren’t totally eliminated throughout the cleaning process. They accumulate and create sticky traps for food particles, causing the silicone bakeware to lose its effectiveness.

While silicone kitchenware can be washed in the dishwasher, sticky silicone components must be hand-washed. Fortunately, residue isn’t left behind after removing those oils.


How to Clean Silicone

You’ve been using your reusable silicone lunchbox or cup contentedly for a while, and you’ve been excited to start living a more sustainable lifestyle – and then, plot twist! You’ve stopped using them since they’ve started to become sticky, and you haven’t told anyone because you used to enthuse about silicone items… Don’t be concerned! There is a way out of this predicament. To fix this problem, you don’t even need to buy any specific products. Continue reading to learn how to clean silicone goods.


Why Does Your Silicone Products Become Sticky?

Silicone is an excellent material for creating reusable products that can be used instead of single-use items. It’s lightweight, bendable, and food-safe (learn more about silicone as material for containing food here ). The Stojo cup Stasher bag is one of my favorite silicone-made goods. However, silicone surfaces can become sticky.

When grease or oils are allowed to cling to silicone or rubberized surfaces, a sticky film can form. Even after rinsing with soap, this can leave a sticky residue on the skin. You have to get rid of it. Because, first and foremost, it’s disgusting, and second, bacteria may accumulate. The procedure is quite straightforward: all you need is water and baking soda.


How to Clean Silicone: Things You need

  • Water
  • baking soda
  • Spatula or tablespoon

Baking soda can be found in both the baking and cleaning sections of the store. If you compute it by weight, the baking soda in the cleaning department of my store is a lot more expensive than the one in the baking section. In that case, I went to the baking section and purchased one. Cleaning using the one from the baking section is fine, but cooking with the one from the cleaning section is not recommended!


Directions How to Clean Silicone

  • In a dish, combine a large amount of baking soda with a little amount of water. Mix things up a little.
  • Check to see if it’s the consistency of toothpaste or thick frosting. When you spread it on the side of a silicone item (such as a lunchbox or cup) and it doesn’t slide down, you know it’s thick enough. It should have the texture of wet cement on a wall.
  • Take your sticky silicone item and put the baking soda on it like peanut butter on toast or cake frosting. Give generously. You can spread your baking soda mix with a butter knife, the back of a spoon, a spatula, or anything else that can spread frosting.
  • Place your baking soda-coated items on a drying rack and wait for them to dry. It will take around an hour, depending on the humidity level where you are. You can even let it sit overnight to dry.
  • Using warm water, rinse the baking soda mixture.
  • Using a cloth, dry the objects.
  • By now, your goods should be free of sticking!

How Does Baking Soda Really Work?

Baking soda has been used as a cleaning agent for ages in addition to baking. The Ancient Egyptians employed it as a cleansing agent and to dry out bodies for mummification as early as 3500 BCE. So, we can say that baking soda has a lot of uses.

Baking soda is sodium hyrdogen carbonate, a type of alkali salt that dissolves fat well. It also removes grease without harming your hands or the surfaces you’re cleaning because it’s mild. It’s all-natural, too!

For me, one of the most important factors in selecting sustainable reusable products is that they must be simple to use and clean, as well as something I can retain for a long time. So now that you know how to clean sticky silicone goods, I hope you will continue to use them for a long time.

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