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<blockquote data-quote="Scent of Cedar *" data-source="post: 657150" data-attributes="member: 17461"><p>First things first: The cat in your new avatar. Is this Squeaky? I love the expressions cats get when they ~ well, pretty much whatever they do, I guess.</p><p></p><p>Re: Burner cleaning on an electric stove that is not a ceramic cooktop electric stove.</p><p></p><p>It will be a good thing to wrap the drip pans beneath the electric coil in aluminum foil. Anything that spills or drips while we are cooking is burnt into the drip pan while we are still cooking and unable to lift the hot electric coil to clean beneath it.</p><p></p><p>It is possible to replace the drip pans. They are not expensive.</p><p></p><p>For those of us with ceramic cook tops: If yours is the kind that does not vent steam from the oven appropriately, and you have a drip between the pieces of glass on the oven door that you cannot access, try this.</p><p></p><p>Remove the bottom drawer ~ the one beneath the oven.</p><p></p><p>At the bottom of the oven door, there are openings. Using a bent hanger, or any narrow, relatively flexible yet strong thing, you can wrap the top portion in a sock, or in a portion of an undershirt, that you have dipped in rubbing alcohol. Be very sure that whatever you use is not going to scratch the glass as you are cleaning it. Going up through the openings at the bottom of the oven door, clean the drip from between the two pieces of tempered glass that comprise the window to the oven.</p><p></p><p>That is it.</p><p></p><p>I saw it online somewhere. It worked, for me.</p><p></p><p>We have a different brand of ceramic cooktop stove up North. That one vents above the oven. There are no drips on that oven window.</p><p></p><p>So if you are thinking of buying a ceramic cooktop electric stove, ask about where it vents steam from the oven.</p><p></p><p>The model here, the one that is vented appropriately, is a Kenmore brand, from Sears.</p><p></p><p>Cedar</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Scent of Cedar *, post: 657150, member: 17461"] First things first: The cat in your new avatar. Is this Squeaky? I love the expressions cats get when they ~ well, pretty much whatever they do, I guess. Re: Burner cleaning on an electric stove that is not a ceramic cooktop electric stove. It will be a good thing to wrap the drip pans beneath the electric coil in aluminum foil. Anything that spills or drips while we are cooking is burnt into the drip pan while we are still cooking and unable to lift the hot electric coil to clean beneath it. It is possible to replace the drip pans. They are not expensive. For those of us with ceramic cook tops: If yours is the kind that does not vent steam from the oven appropriately, and you have a drip between the pieces of glass on the oven door that you cannot access, try this. Remove the bottom drawer ~ the one beneath the oven. At the bottom of the oven door, there are openings. Using a bent hanger, or any narrow, relatively flexible yet strong thing, you can wrap the top portion in a sock, or in a portion of an undershirt, that you have dipped in rubbing alcohol. Be very sure that whatever you use is not going to scratch the glass as you are cleaning it. Going up through the openings at the bottom of the oven door, clean the drip from between the two pieces of tempered glass that comprise the window to the oven. That is it. I saw it online somewhere. It worked, for me. We have a different brand of ceramic cooktop stove up North. That one vents above the oven. There are no drips on that oven window. So if you are thinking of buying a ceramic cooktop electric stove, ask about where it vents steam from the oven. The model here, the one that is vented appropriately, is a Kenmore brand, from Sears. Cedar [/QUOTE]
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