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Julie Bove[_2_] Julie Bove[_2_] is offline
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Default How to remove stuck cheese?


"Jeßus" > wrote in message
...
> On Fri, 5 Apr 2019 21:23:27 -0400, jmcquown >
> wrote:
>
>>On 4/5/2019 10:19 AM, Gary wrote:
>>> Julie Bove wrote:
>>>>
>>>> "tert in seattle" > wrote in message
>>>> ...
>>>>> writes:
>>>>>> I am not the one doing this but someone here likes to eat a lot of
>>>>>> Swiss
>>>>>> cheese. They put it on their food and nuke it. The cheese gets
>>>>>> overcooked,
>>>>>> IMO and some of it gets stuck to the bowl/plate/casserole.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I use a plastic dish brush to wash my dishes. Sometimes I don't
>>>>>> notice the
>>>>>> cheese on there, especially if it's a small amount. The cheese welds
>>>>>> itself
>>>>>> to my brush and then I can't get it off.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> If I see the cheese, I scrape it off with whatever is handy. Usually
>>>>>> a
>>>>>> table
>>>>>> knife or spoon. Then to be sure, I rinse it with hot water and run a
>>>>>> paper
>>>>>> towel over it to get anything that's left before I wash it.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I guess my question is more about the dish brush. Why does the cheese
>>>>>> weld
>>>>>> onto there and how can I get it off? I have to keep replacing the
>>>>>> brushes.
>>>>>> Sometimes I can run them under water and pull the cheese off with a
>>>>>> paper
>>>>>> towel but this doesn't always work.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Help! Thanks!
>>>>>
>>>>> if the cheese is so hard to get off then just leave it on there
>>>>>
>>>>> it gives the brush character
>>>>
>>>> But it also makes the bristles rather ineffective.
>>>
>>> Any person that uses a bristle brush to wash dishes is a dunce.
>>> Plain and simple.
>>>

>>Anyone who lets their gardener move in with them and dirty up the
>>kitchen and not be told to at least rinse a plate is a dunce.

>
> LOL, wut? I've kinda consciously avoided the Julie circus lately, but
> a 'gardener' has moved in?


That happened a long time ago.