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Holy S**t! Bar Keepers Friend

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CleanEmUpIves

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This stuff cleans stainless pots, pans, sinks, glass oven tops and porcelain with *ease*. Doesn't have a smell or it's very neutral. Wish I'd tried this years ago.

For $2.30 + tax (Fleet Farm), it's well worth it. Seems a little goes a long way.

BKF-powdered-cleanser-product-image-front.png
 
This stuff cleans stainless pots, pans, sinks, glass oven tops and porcelain with *ease*. Doesn't have a smell or it's very neutral. Wish I'd tried this years ago.

For $2.30 + tax (Fleet Farm), it's well worth it. Seems a little goes a long way.

BKF-powdered-cleanser-product-image-front.png
Even more potent when mixed with hot cleaning vinegar.
 
Great stuff... used it for years... awesome on copper bottom pots.
I've always used Copper-Glo for those, which looks to be a similar product, especially made for copper cleaning/polishing, also containing Oxalic Acid, and perhaps less abrasive?
 
BKF isn't abrasive to any degree on metal. It will shine uo most anything, yep great on copper too.
 
This stuff cleans stainless pots, pans, sinks, glass oven tops and porcelain with *ease*. Doesn't have a smell or it's very neutral. Wish I'd tried this years ago.

For $2.30 + tax (Fleet Farm), it's well worth it. Seems a little goes a long way.

BKF-powdered-cleanser-product-image-front.png
Next time you're over at Fleet Farm swing into the dairy section and check out their sanitizers and dairy equipment cleaners. All that stuff is for cleaning/sanitizing the stainless steel found at the farm, works great in the brewery too and a lot cheaper. Buying it by the gallon might not be ideal but it lasts a long time. I love Fleet Farm for many of my brewery needs!
 
Does it work on beerstone? I haven't found anything that can remove that stuff from my stainless steel coils. I've been scraping it off with my fingernails, and now I have no fingernails lol.
 
BKF is fantastic. I've heard that prolonged contact can harm steel, though - gotta rinse after a couple of minutes.

For beer stone removal without scrubbing I've had excellent success with citric acid solution (1 ounce by weight or volume per gallon).

It's fascinating how alkaline cleaners like PBW and Oxiclean work well for some tasks, and acid cleaners for others. I've heard that super tough cleaning problems can be solved with alternating use of these two types of cleaners.

Then there's the nasty resins and saps that require organic solvents (ranging from friendly vegetable oil to toxic&flammable petro-products like WD-40 and gasoline).

Happy cleaning! 🧽
 
I don't soak with BKF, I just sprinkle a healthy amount on the wet kettle bottom and use a blue scrubby-back sponge. Takes just a minute or so to get bright again...

Cheers!
 
Another fan of Barkeepers Friend, here. Great stuff!

BKF is fantastic. I've heard that prolonged contact can harm steel, though - gotta rinse after a couple of minutes.

For beer stone removal without scrubbing I've had excellent success with citric acid solution (1 ounce by weight or volume per gallon).

It's fascinating how alkaline cleaners like PBW and Oxiclean work well for some tasks, and acid cleaners for others. I've heard that super tough cleaning problems can be solved with alternating use of these two types of cleaners.

Then there's the nasty resins and saps that require organic solvents (ranging from friendly vegetable oil to toxic&flammable petro-products like WD-40 and gasoline).

Happy cleaning! 🧽

For those things, use Goo Gone. However, Goo Gone is not food safe, so you have to wash the item to remove the Goo Gone afterwards.
 
I gave my can to my wife for the cleaning lady to use on something, never got it back. The cleaning lady loved it. The can stayed in the house, had to buy another for my brewery use.
 
BKF is fantastic. I've heard that prolonged contact can harm steel, though - gotta rinse after a couple of minutes.

For beer stone removal without scrubbing I've had excellent success with citric acid solution (1 ounce by weight or volume per gallon).

It's fascinating how alkaline cleaners like PBW and Oxiclean work well for some tasks, and acid cleaners for others. I've heard that super tough cleaning problems can be solved with alternating use of these two types of cleaners.

Then there's the nasty resins and saps that require organic solvents (ranging from friendly vegetable oil to toxic&flammable petro-products like WD-40 and gasoline).

Happy cleaning! 🧽
Just ordered some citric acid! Thanks!
 
BKF is fantastic. I've heard that prolonged contact can harm steel, though - gotta rinse after a couple of minutes.

For beer stone removal without scrubbing I've had excellent success with citric acid solution (1 ounce by weight or volume per gallon).

It's fascinating how alkaline cleaners like PBW and Oxiclean work well for some tasks, and acid cleaners for others. I've heard that super tough cleaning problems can be solved with alternating use of these two types of cleaners.

Then there's the nasty resins and saps that require organic solvents (ranging from friendly vegetable oil to toxic&flammable petro-products like WD-40 and gasoline).

Happy cleaning! 🧽
No luck with Citric Acid. I did 2oz for 2 gallons and soaked. Did nothing for the beerstone :(
 
Citric acid is invaluable to homebrewers as a passivation agent, but I think caustics are actually the better solution (no pun intended) for beerstone. Hence the popularity of PBW for brewing hardware and LLC/BLC for dispensing systems. That said for mild cases working a thin paste of BKF with a stiff sponge or blue scrubby does do the trick for kettle bottoms :)

Cheers!
 
Citric acid is invaluable to homebrewers as a passivation agent, but I think caustics are actually the better solution (no pun intended) for beerstone. Hence the popularity of PBW for brewing hardware and LLC/BLC for dispensing systems. That said for mild cases working a thin paste of BKF with a stiff sponge or blue scrubby does do the trick for kettle bottoms :)

Cheers!
I haven't found a solution for beerstone yet. Beerstone remover doesn't work. LLC doesn't work. Star San doesn't work. Citric acid certainly doesn't work.
 
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