![]() ![]() When this fridge goes, I'm going back to almond, if I can find it, and replace the other appliances with almond when they conk out. However, if I had to do it over again, I wouldn't have any stainless steel. I've been doing this for 12 years and aside from the etch marks from the ice maker (which is why I'm here-ugh), it still looks like new. I keep a cloth with some oil on it to buff off smudges between cleanings. I saturate a soft cloth and cover the entire surface, rub off the smudges or food, and then buff with another soft cloth. I don't think I've seen this, but I use Old English Wood Oil on my fridge. Our supporting advertisers are also entitled to their opinions, and they make the site possible without ever once asking us to censor anything rather, we've happily posted every response we've received. You'd like this to be a "Cooking forum", which is fine, and we're trying to serve you but that doesn't mean that there no readers are interested in kits, and they all want to shop around for the individual pieces. I see a lot of technical info and I don't dismiss it all as being from "well meaning amateurs". ![]() Acids and oils are not used, just sanding pads of various grades & types. I'm looking for the recipe to share the off the shelf materials and technique to repair the finish on a stainless steel appliance. That would be like an Internet cooking forum where someone is asking how to make humus and the advice from a restauranteur is to come to his restaurant or go to the grocery store and buy the packaged product he sells. Besides the light abrasive pads and moving with the grain, is there a commonly sourced generic substance (oil, acid, other) that a pro finisher uses when repairing the finish of stainless steel? Feinman obviously wants to help people by selling them his product. Are there any qualified professionals who are not promoting their product who can give specific recommendations that don't involve their product? Mr. The majority of the suggestions I've read come from well meaning amateurs. Where can I buy this product in Canada? Laureen Andreacchi The Kitchen Aid people told me I could fix this with a product called Scratch B Gone. I have scratches on my Kitchen Aid fridge door and rust stains at the bottom of the door. will restore this thread to our Current Topic page. Be careful of "shining" the scratched area, making it worse. You can try any of several reader-recommended mild polishes, or proper grades of Scotch-brite, or specialty kits like Scratch-B-Gone. Removing Scratches from Stainless Steel AppliancesĪlways rub "with the grain". Plating, anodizing, & finishing Q&As since 1989 ![]()
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