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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor

Can anyone please recommend a product I can buy , that might help me
remove Indian cooking odor from the apartment.
Thanks
Rashmi

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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor

> wrote in message
ups.com...
> Can anyone please recommend a product I can buy , that might help me
> remove Indian cooking odor from the apartment.
> Thanks
> Rashmi


LOL...........my kids would like to know how to remove the Indian cooking
odor from our town!

Elaine


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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor

In article .com>,
nancree > wrote:
wrote:
>> Can anyone please recommend a product I can buy , that might help me
>> remove Indian cooking odor from the apartment.

>
>There is an excellent product called "Ozium" in a spray can. (in the
>"auto" department of some large chain drugstores, also at Home Depot).
>It is unique, in that it doesn't "cover up" the odor, it actually
>removes the odor from the air.


That sounds nice, but this likely won't help the OP's problem. The
source of the odor isn't the apartment air. The source is the
apartment walls, floor, and ceiling, which have absorbed the cooking
vapors and oils.

A thorough, professional, steam-cleaning of ALL the carpets might
help. I'd try that first. It won't fix the odor emanating from the
walls and ceilings. For that the OP may have to repaint everything.

I've known a couple of landlords who go out of their way to avoid
renting their property to Indians because the cooking odor left
behind makes the property unattractive to future tenants, and
expensive to de-odorize.

-A
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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor

Try A Lampre Berger - works on any odor!
wrote:
> Can anyone please recommend a product I can buy , that might help me
> remove Indian cooking odor from the apartment.
> Thanks
> Rashmi




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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor


OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote on June 1, 2006:

> Lots of incense......
> and replace or get rid of the carpet.


So, what do you do to get rid of the incense smell (besides doing some
more Indian
cooking)?

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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor

In article .com>,
"KevinS" > wrote:

> OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote on June 1, 2006:
>
> > Lots of incense......
> > and replace or get rid of the carpet.

>
> So, what do you do to get rid of the incense smell (besides doing some
> more Indian
> cooking)?


It fades on it's own.

I also use the same trick in the truck to get rid of cigarette smoke
odor when the truck has been to the shop and some asshole mechanic
smoked in it. :-P

It works.

It's also good in the house to get rid of burnt food odors if I
accidently scorch something, and "cooking oil" odor from deep frying
when the oil was allowed to get a bit too old. ;-)

I use Gonesh "Ancient times #6" or hand made Nag Champa from India.
--
Peace!
Om

"My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch"
-- Jack Nicholson
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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor

On 2006-06-01, > wrote:
> Can anyone please recommend a product I can buy , that might help me
> remove Indian cooking odor from the apartment.


Ozium.

http://www.keysan.com/ksuai10.htm

Also, quit using asoefitida (hing). That, or store/cook it outdoors.

nb
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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor


"notbob" > wrote in message
...
> On 2006-06-01, > wrote:
>> Can anyone please recommend a product I can buy , that might help me
>> remove Indian cooking odor from the apartment.

>
> Ozium.
>
>
http://www.keysan.com/ksuai10.htm
>
> Also, quit using asoefitida (hing). That, or store/cook it outdoors.
>
> nb


Just have to say this:
I keep my asoefitida in the spice cabinet (quite large) and in closed doors.
I put the "lid-closed" aso. inside a mason jar and vacuum seal it. When I
open the closet spice cabinet, the first thing I smell is the aso. But
since I love it and it makes my jaws tingle and the saliva start, it is a
blessing.
You may think my vacuum sealer doesn't work, or I have residue on the
outside of the jar -- but I say, "no, aso. is some powerful stuff."
But the rest of my kitchen doesn't smell like Indian cooking, tho. But
other things cooked there.
Ummm.
Dee Dee


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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor

I love Fabreze deodorizer for my carpest and drapes.It leaves a nice
fresh smell. But boiling some cinnamon sticks for awhile also helps, or
sprinkle baking soda on the carpets and let it sit awhile and then
vacuum.

Kate
www.yummyfood.net
OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote:
> In article .com>,
> "KevinS" > wrote:
>
> > OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote on June 1, 2006:
> >
> > > Lots of incense......
> > > and replace or get rid of the carpet.

> >
> > So, what do you do to get rid of the incense smell (besides doing some
> > more Indian
> > cooking)?

>
> It fades on it's own.
>
> I also use the same trick in the truck to get rid of cigarette smoke
> odor when the truck has been to the shop and some asshole mechanic
> smoked in it. :-P
>
> It works.
>
> It's also good in the house to get rid of burnt food odors if I
> accidently scorch something, and "cooking oil" odor from deep frying
> when the oil was allowed to get a bit too old. ;-)
>
> I use Gonesh "Ancient times #6" or hand made Nag Champa from India.
> --
> Peace!
> Om
>
> "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch"
> -- Jack Nicholson


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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor

I love Fabreze deodorizer for my carpest and drapes.It leaves a nice
fresh smell. But boiling some cinnamon sticks for awhile also helps, or
sprinkle baking soda on the carpets and let it sit awhile and then
vacuum.

Kate
www.yummyfood.net
OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote:
> In article .com>,
> "KevinS" > wrote:
>
> > OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote on June 1, 2006:
> >
> > > Lots of incense......
> > > and replace or get rid of the carpet.

> >
> > So, what do you do to get rid of the incense smell (besides doing some
> > more Indian
> > cooking)?

>
> It fades on it's own.
>
> I also use the same trick in the truck to get rid of cigarette smoke
> odor when the truck has been to the shop and some asshole mechanic
> smoked in it. :-P
>
> It works.
>
> It's also good in the house to get rid of burnt food odors if I
> accidently scorch something, and "cooking oil" odor from deep frying
> when the oil was allowed to get a bit too old. ;-)
>
> I use Gonesh "Ancient times #6" or hand made Nag Champa from India.
> --
> Peace!
> Om
>
> "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch"
> -- Jack Nicholson


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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor

On 1 Jun 2006 14:34:24 -0700, wrote:

>Can anyone please recommend a product I can buy , that might help me
>remove Indian cooking odor from the apartment.
>Thanks
>Rashmi


Don't cook Indians indoors.




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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor

axlq wrote:
> In article .com>,
> nancree > wrote:
>
wrote:
>>
>>>Can anyone please recommend a product I can buy , that might help me
>>>remove Indian cooking odor from the apartment.

>>
>>There is an excellent product called "Ozium" in a spray can. (in the
>>"auto" department of some large chain drugstores, also at Home Depot).
>>It is unique, in that it doesn't "cover up" the odor, it actually
>>removes the odor from the air.

>
>
> That sounds nice, but this likely won't help the OP's problem. The
> source of the odor isn't the apartment air. The source is the
> apartment walls, floor, and ceiling, which have absorbed the cooking
> vapors and oils.
>
> A thorough, professional, steam-cleaning of ALL the carpets might
> help. I'd try that first. It won't fix the odor emanating from the
> walls and ceilings. For that the OP may have to repaint everything.
>
> I've known a couple of landlords who go out of their way to avoid
> renting their property to Indians because the cooking odor left
> behind makes the property unattractive to future tenants, and
> expensive to de-odorize.


The odor we had to deal with was tobacco; we had to clean up a chain
smoker's residence of 40 years to get it ready to sell.

Man that was nasty work! We discovered that what we've believed was
yellow paint was, in fact, white. We cleaned the walls with TSP,
painted them over with Kilz then applied two coats of fresh latex. We
ripped out the old carpet and pad, and had the ventilation system
steam-cleaned.

And even so I'd have never been able to live in that house. Every time
I would walk in from outside I could detect stale smoke duking it out
with new carpet aroma and fresh paint smell. And the smoke stench was
kicking the other odors' collective butts.

Sorry to seem less than optimistic but greasy stinks are a pure bitch to
obliterate.

Kathleen

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Default Remove Indian Cooking Odor


"Kathleen" > wrote in message
...
> axlq wrote:
>> In article .com>,
>> nancree > wrote:
>>
wrote:
>>>
>>>>Can anyone please recommend a product I can buy , that might help me
>>>>remove Indian cooking odor from the apartment.
>>>
>>>There is an excellent product called "Ozium" in a spray can. (in the
>>>"auto" department of some large chain drugstores, also at Home Depot).
>>>It is unique, in that it doesn't "cover up" the odor, it actually
>>>removes the odor from the air.

>>
>>
>> That sounds nice, but this likely won't help the OP's problem. The
>> source of the odor isn't the apartment air. The source is the
>> apartment walls, floor, and ceiling, which have absorbed the cooking
>> vapors and oils.
>>
>> A thorough, professional, steam-cleaning of ALL the carpets might
>> help. I'd try that first. It won't fix the odor emanating from the
>> walls and ceilings. For that the OP may have to repaint everything.
>>
>> I've known a couple of landlords who go out of their way to avoid
>> renting their property to Indians because the cooking odor left
>> behind makes the property unattractive to future tenants, and
>> expensive to de-odorize.

>
> The odor we had to deal with was tobacco; we had to clean up a chain
> smoker's residence of 40 years to get it ready to sell.
>
> Man that was nasty work! We discovered that what we've believed was
> yellow paint was, in fact, white. We cleaned the walls with TSP, painted
> them over with Kilz then applied two coats of fresh latex. We ripped out
> the old carpet and pad, and had the ventilation system steam-cleaned.
>
> And even so I'd have never been able to live in that house. Every time I
> would walk in from outside I could detect stale smoke duking it out with
> new carpet aroma and fresh paint smell. And the smoke stench was kicking
> the other odors' collective butts.
>
> Sorry to seem less than optimistic but greasy stinks are a pure bitch to
> obliterate.
>
> Kathleen


Thanks, Kathleen, your experience sounds a wee bit like mine a few years
ago.

First of all, I didn't know there was such a thing as steam-cleaning a
ventilation system -- we are having new duct work put in and it had
insulation. Lord knows what is embedded in that insulation, but I'm afraid
nothing would have cleaned them. At any rate, the top floor is OUT as of
today. Bottom floor comes next month probably.

We had the opportunity about 5 years ago to live rent-free in a cottage
(part time, whenever we chose) that had been rented by a heavy smoker for
about 15 years. The smoker had left the vertical blinds that were made of
some sort of textured material. The smoke permeated them and we were told
there was nothing to be done about the odor. The owner did not want to take
down these blinds saying that she had paid $2,500 for them. Didn't quite
understand, because we were willing to take them out and put all new ones
in, and carpet and paint at our own expense and clean the furnace ducts. I
guess he didn't want to be bothered with it/us, perhaps feeling he had to
pay, but another person moved in (non-smoker) and didn't mind a bit. Go
figure.
End of story,
Dee Dee



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