Ever had a bad smell in a refrigerator? It isn't pleasant. Nor can it be easy to find the actual source. It may take days to localize whether it was the fruits, vegetables, meats, or fish. All can be the culprit.
Plus the air in a refrigerator can seemingly improve an odour. A uncomplicated odour one day can move throughout the interior, until the whole refrigerator reeks. In a frost free refrigerator air is permanently circulating and passing over all the other foods. Therefore an odour in one part of the refrigerator can very fast be picked up and passed to all things else.
Most odours inside a refrigerator can be localized using your eyes and nose. It is usually an old piece of forgotten food, or an outdated carton. But, if the source evades you try the following:
Refrigerator Odours - Why, What, How?1. Check the food. It is the former hypothesize for refrigerator odours. Use your nose as the smell detector. Use your hands to feel for spills.
2. Check the crisper drawers and shelves for small pieces of rotting food. Although obvious, this is often overlooked. Remove crispers and shelves and wash thoroughly in warm soapy water. Use a semi-soft scrub brush to get into cracks and crevices. Many metal shelves are small enough to be washed in the dishwasher. When replacing shelves don't forget to clean the plastic supports they snap into.
3. Check glass shelves. Small liquid spills here can be transparent. Also glass shelves can be involved - requiring intricate frames. Check the undersides of frames for underground debris.
4. Clean the inside edge of the door gaskets. Start at the bottom. It is a major location where food and mold accumulates. Rap a soft wet rag nearby a butter knife to get in behind the gasket. Avoid pulling on gasket because it can rip.
5. Clean the freezer section floor. It too can be an odour producer. If you see loose frozen vegetables on the freezer floor look for the source here. Thought about run your hand nearby the freezer interior. There may be underground holes that are not usually visible. Loose foods can be trapped here.
6. If odour persists try using baking soda. Spread two tablespoons of baking soda onto a saucer, and place into the refrigerator section. If the freezer is under suspicion then also place one here. It must be thinly spread out to be affective - leaving it in the box will do puny work at fighting odours. Check every few days. Once it becomes crusted over replace with fresh baking soda. This works well, but does want patience. Allow two or three weeks for even uncomplicated odours to subside.
7. When all else fails: turn off refrigerator, allow it to warm to room temperature, Remove all shelves and drawers, and thoroughly wash the interior walls. Use warm, soapy water. Avoid using any cleaning products that have a strong chemical smell or are heavily scented. Dry thoroughly using a clean, dry rag. Be especially aware of crevices near lowest of refrigerator interior. If crevices appear dirty clean with a semi-soft brush.
Avoid any product that is sprayed into the refrigerator. This only results in the odour being masked rather than removed.
Since the best defense is an offence, try to avoid any hypothesize for odours to get a foothold in the refrigerator. The following are a few uncomplicated tactics in preventing odours from getting started:
1. Keep all foods covered. It is a uncomplicated idea that in effect does work. Any food located into the refrigerators cool, humid environment will immediately begin to oxidize. Place a steel bar into the refrigerator and it will oxidize (rust) - well, your food will feel the same process. But, as foods age they also give off odours. Holding food covered slows oxidation, which in turn will slow the creation of odours.
2. Avoid spills. This may seem like a silly advice - except if you have children. One trick is to keep a isolate kids package on a lower shelf. In it furnish them with foods they are permanently craving. Apples, oranges, precut vegetables, and juice boxes can all be kept here. This keeps the kids spills to a minimum - adults are on their own.
3. Separate fruits and vegetables. The acidity of one can influence the other. Once home from the grocery store isolate them and store in their own bags. Zip top bags work well for this purpose. If bagged they can be located into the same crisper drawer. If plainly dumped together into the crisper they can interact, causing some rather unusual smells.
4. Watch out for fruits. They in singular are separate than most other foods. Many of them will in effect deteriorating faster when inside a cool environment. Apples are a good example. When removed from the sealed bag and put into the refrigerator, they leave their dormant state and begin to in effect "breathe". Taking on more air leads to accelerated decay.
5. Beware the preserves. Odours can occur when an old package (Aunt Martha's Christmas jam?) is pushed to the back of the refrigerator and forgotten. Being semi-sealed they can produce slow, practically indiscernible spills and gasses. If you have a in effect offensive smell that comes and goes, look for preserved pickles or fruits. Preserved jams on the other hand will tend to bubble out, producing sticky spills.
6. Throw away leaking containers. Milk bags in singular are renowned for leaking. plainly pouring contents into a sealed package before placing into refrigerator will eliminate this problem. If leak occurs clean the whole shelf immediately. Even a few drops of milk or cream can cause horrible odours if left long enough to go sour.
7. Beware the stinky cheese. Store within its own sealed package rather than open on the dairy shelf. It's a live food. It continues to age because of bacterial content. As it ages its characteristics can change. While processed cheeses dehydrate with age, natural cheeses can start to weep. Weeping will produce ever-increasing amounts of gas. Some cheeses can in effect start to stink. Whatever who has ever had cheese go bad will never forget the smell.
8. Be aware of packaging. Pre-packaged foods can come to be odour absorbers. Cardboard containers can in effect pick up and then hold any odours that are circulating inside the refrigerator. Also the cartons can break down with age, gently spilling their contents. Ever found an old cardboard carton of molasses at the rear of the refrigerator. Bet you it's been there since you made baked beans. Ten years ago?
Keeping your refrigerator interior clean and smelling fresh requires constant vigilance. The major advice we offer our clients about preventing odours is -- don't let them get started. Although a simplistic answer, it's truthful. A bad smell is much easier to preclude than to treat.
Copyright © Donald Grummett 2005. All proprietary reserved.
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