agoodwinsmith (
agoodwinsmith) wrote2011-04-25 09:22 pm
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In which our heroine fails to burn down the entire apartment block.
But it was close.
Yes. I was heating up the oil to cook the onions, when I discovered that I was out of noodles and started hunting for the rice. I already had the fan on and the door open, so the first thing that caught my attention was this hissy spitty noise of very hot oil. I (one can see the stove from my seat in the living room) looked over and saw roiling smoke blackly roiling. I hustled over, freaking out, turned off the burner, and drew back my hand just as the oil burst into flames. Argh. I did not scream, I said incoherent oh golly rats whatever things in an agitated manner, which failed to catch the attention of my Stanley-Cup-series-playoff watching SOGP. Even as I did it, I knew that I shouldn't do it because supposedly it only spreads the fire madly, but I thrust the flaming pan into the sink and turned the water on it. It did indeed not go out straight away, and the flames leapt up, but the amount of oil was only enough to coat the bottom of the pan, and so the steady onslaught of colder water eventually vanquished the flames. There was soot on the backsplash and the bottom of the cupboards above the sink.
I am amazingly lucky. There were all sorts of flamable things beside the stove - bread bags and spice packets and like that - and beside the sink was the wooden knife rack, and a piece of paper towel and like that.
I promise not to do stupid again.
Strangely, the smoke alarm, which freaks out over a tiny whiff of slightly singed toast, never said a thing. There was roiling - there was actual *soot* - nada. Huh.
Yes. I was heating up the oil to cook the onions, when I discovered that I was out of noodles and started hunting for the rice. I already had the fan on and the door open, so the first thing that caught my attention was this hissy spitty noise of very hot oil. I (one can see the stove from my seat in the living room) looked over and saw roiling smoke blackly roiling. I hustled over, freaking out, turned off the burner, and drew back my hand just as the oil burst into flames. Argh. I did not scream, I said incoherent oh golly rats whatever things in an agitated manner, which failed to catch the attention of my Stanley-Cup-series-playoff watching SOGP. Even as I did it, I knew that I shouldn't do it because supposedly it only spreads the fire madly, but I thrust the flaming pan into the sink and turned the water on it. It did indeed not go out straight away, and the flames leapt up, but the amount of oil was only enough to coat the bottom of the pan, and so the steady onslaught of colder water eventually vanquished the flames. There was soot on the backsplash and the bottom of the cupboards above the sink.
I am amazingly lucky. There were all sorts of flamable things beside the stove - bread bags and spice packets and like that - and beside the sink was the wooden knife rack, and a piece of paper towel and like that.
I promise not to do stupid again.
Strangely, the smoke alarm, which freaks out over a tiny whiff of slightly singed toast, never said a thing. There was roiling - there was actual *soot* - nada. Huh.
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[1]1/4 C sugar, 1 C water. Bring to boil and allow to cool. Do not forget about it for half an hour, thus allowing it to burn into a crusty, foamy, sticky, carbonised toffee-like substance. Your pot will never be the same afterward.
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I guess the trick is to remember these before you get the pan under the tap. Of course it could have been so much worse (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bAgptNEZ7vg).
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That't it: big tub of baking soda is going beside my stove.
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Staples had small kitchen fire extinguishers on sale during whatever month was Fire Prevention Month, and so did a lot of other places. They're very small, about the size of a can of non-stick cooking spray or something.
I have one on the counter near the stove because I am 1) generally more safety minded than a whole troop of scouts, and 2) prone to losing interest in my cooking and wandering off.
Baking soda is good, but a little hard to apply--might consider looking for one of those little jobbies--they're point and spray, and pretty much made for exactly that.
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In the UK it is common to have a fire blanket in the kitchen for exactly this problem. It is just a flameproof blanket (fibreglass, I think) which you chuck over the fire and starve it of air. Mine have sat in kitchens for years and never been used - but they do no harm, just get dusty.
One thing to remember is, once used, leave for half an hour until all is cool.
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Fire Blanket
Maybe they are more common in the UK because of our national obsession with the deep fat frier. We don't have one, but many families have chips with everything. And, maybe twenty years ago, such friers were somewhat prone to bursting into flames and were blamed for a lot of fires. Nowadays they are pretty safe - but memories linger.
Re: Fire Blanket
I will look for the blanket thing.
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Seriously, glad you were not toasted.
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Me, too - and I am very glad that I did not have to explain to my neighbours that I was the one who was responsible for putting them out on the street in the rain with nothing to their names but the clothes on their backs. Not a social situation was has practiced for, strangely enough. :)
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Does the fire alarm need new batteries? Or was it just playing dumb?