Cleaning white bubbles on induction stove

Cleaning white bubbles on induction stove - Modern interior of white and wooden kitchen with cabinets cupboards and built in appliances in contemporary flat

I recently moved into an apartment with an induction stove. After the first use with a designated pan, some white bubble marks have appeared. Has anyone had these types of stains? Any suggestions on how to clean it?

White marks on stove top



Best Answer

I have an induction stove and have had similar marks. I think rumtscho is right; these are mineral deposits from water. Water gets between the surface and the pan, most likely because the base of the pan was initially wet (spillage from the pan will mostly end up beside it, and only areas directly under the pan will get significantly hot), the heat of the pan evaporates the water, leaving dry deposits.

There is some good advice on cleaning glass stovetops from eHow, which suggests leaving a "[vinegar-drenched] paper towel on the stove top for an hour", and using ceramic cooktop cleaner if still present.

But I've found these marks can be mostly prevented by making sure the base of your pan is completely dry before putting it on the stove.




Pictures about "Cleaning white bubbles on induction stove"

Cleaning white bubbles on induction stove - Interior of contemporary kitchen with stainless white surface induction cooker and electronic stove in modern apartment
Cleaning white bubbles on induction stove - Fried egg in pan on stove
Cleaning white bubbles on induction stove - Wooden table placed near white cupboards in modern kitchen with minimalist interior in daylight



How do you get rid of white spots on an induction hob?

To remove these stains, soak a lint-free cloth or paper towel with vinegar, and rub the cooktop with it until they go away. Unlike their gas and electric counterparts, induction cooktops have no flame or any radiant burners that emit heat.

How do I get bubbles out of my cooktop?

There is some good advice on cleaning glass stovetops from eHow, which suggests leaving a "[vinegar-drenched] paper towel on the stove top for an hour", and using ceramic cooktop cleaner if still present.

How do I get the white stuff off my glass top stove?

Fill a spray bottle with vinegar and spritz the glass cooktop until it's soaked. Leave this on the surface for 15 minutes and allow the vinegar to eat at the grime and grease. Rinse well and buff dry with a clean cloth.



HOW TO CLEAN A GLASS STOVETOP / CRAMIC simple, effective and sparkling clean // KITCHEN CLEANING TIP




More answers regarding cleaning white bubbles on induction stove

Answer 2

After using my new glass-topped stove to do a chicken stir fry. Used the suggested cleaner closely following directions. Allow to cool totally shake and spray cleaner - use special pad and wipe clean and buff with clean paper towel. There were raised prickly bubbles all around he rim of the burner and streaky marks across the center of the burner I was sick. I researched and tried each suggestion with the least abrasive first. FINALLY I used my old stand by BonAmi cleaner made into a paste and rubbed aggressively with the special pad. Wipe with damp paper towel and then I sprayed the area with Windex White Vinegar cleaner and wiped with special microfiber glass cloth. Perfect - like new. However I will note - it took me 20 minutes to do the entire stir-fry dinner and over an hour and a half to clean the stove. If I had it to do over - I'd go coil.

Answer 3

You have a couple of options.

Grade 000 steel wool. I was put onto it by a builder when I was cleaning very dirty windows, we pretty much use it on everything, when its not rusty (throw away when it is) its virtually scratch free for all surfaces but removes tough built on dirt, sopa scum, fades hard water marks and eventually removes them.

You can try a scrapper but you would have to be cautious not to scratch it as this is a possibility. You can also try a product like "Bring it on cleaner" we have used this product and can vouch it is what it says it is. Unfortunately is is pretty costly. Another option is cerium oxide. I wouldn't recommend this option unless you have worked with it before.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Max Vakhtbovych, Max Vakhtbovych, Kamaji Ogino, Max Vakhtbovych