Got a silly adulting question: how in the heck do you get burned sticky grease off metal nonstick pans? In previous lives I don’t remember this ever being an issue for me. I guess I either had a dishwasher, had different cookware or just was cooking much less in general?

But every time I roast anything, the residue does not seem to fully come off the pan. I’ve googled this, I’ve tried baking soda, vinegar, soaked them in boiling water with dish soap, etc. What am I doing wrong? Do I just need to use foil forever? I can’t switch back to glass pans, with some health stuff they’re now too heavy to be practical.

Edit to say: thanks everyone!!

5 points

I don’t use nonstick for roasting, because thats an issue because if you want them to be perfectly cleaned you need to use steel wool. Stainless steel is the best. If you’re not concerned about the non stick because there is sticky stuff stuck, use steel wool.

Also, roasting pans are generally acceptable to have some baked in grease, and unless you’re in a 3☆ Michelin restaurant, its OK.

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8 points

Non-stick typically means NO STEEL WOOL – because it is almost always has thin coating that will get torn up. Then you end up eating tiny flakes of the coating. Then it stays in you forever.

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3 points

And thats the main reason i don’t use them

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3 points

I use Barkeeper’s Friend. It works great on most metal surfaces.

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9 points
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6 points

Not teflon, no. It works great on stainless steel and ceramic.

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3 points

I’ve had success filling such pans with water and a single drop of dish soap then boiling it

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4 points

Don’t use nonstick pans for roasting. The Teflon coating doesn’t like high temperatures and will flake off. Use a stainless steel pan for that kinda thing. Cast iron works too, but requires more babying.

But also yeah, barkeeper’s friend works well at cleaning the surface.

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11 points
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4 points

Seconded. Learned this the hard way. Even using a microfiber to scrub it on won’t help because bkf has grit/grit-like stuff in it that can wear down and flake off the coating.

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2 points

Pans already fucked if they’ve been using it for roasting though.

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6 points

All my favorite cookware are fucking heavy, so on that front I don’t have much advice. One thing I can say though is to experiment with lowering your cooking temperature. I know sometimes we can be in a hurry and we crank it up, but often we could have gotten the same result with a lower setting and a tiny bit more patience. This can make a huge difference with how hard the residue gets stuck. Finally, the nonstick film unfortunately gets worn out after a while and at that point everything will stick non stop. At that point there’s not much to be done but replacing the pan sadly.

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