Cooking Requires All Your Attention
As I write this, it's cooking season.
People cook more around the fall and winter holidays than at any
other time of the year, with Thanksgiving being the biggest cooking
day and also, according to the National Fire Protection Association,
the peak day for cooking-related fires. Overall, the association
cites unattended cooking as the leading cause of kitchen fires.
The NFPA says that cooking-related
fires are the cause of 46% of home fires that resulted in 19% of the
home fire deaths and 44% of the injuries. Two-thirds of cooking
fires started with the ignition of food or other cooking materials.
Ranges or cooktops accounted for the majority (62%) of home cooking
fire incidents. Unattended equipment was a factor in one-third of
reported home cooking fires and half of the associated deaths. And
frying dominates the cooking fire problem.
And here are some statistics from
Liberty Mutual Insurance that help explain the NFPA figures: Forty-Two percent of the people the
company surveyed said they had left the kitchen to talk or text on
the phone, and 35 percent went to use the computer to check email
while food was cooking. Nearly half said they have left the room to
watch television or listen to music.
Wow. That's it: just “wow.” I can't
bend my brain in the direction it would take to be able to light a
fire in a room and then walk into another room to do something else.
But obviously people do it every day. And, like the real life crash
dummies who text and drive, they wind up paying for it and, in many
cases, also charging somebody else for their stupidity. I read not
long ago about an imbecile who got liquored up and tried to cook.
After he passed out drunk, his kitchen caught fire and killed him.
And it also cost seven other families in the eight unit apartment
building their homes.
Cooking is like driving a car or flying
an airplane: it requires all your attention. You are literally
playing with fire. Personally, I'm not comfortable lighting the oven
and walking out of the room,
much less turning on a stove top burner and walking away. I'm even
leery of slow cookers: intellectually, I understand they are designed
to be left unattended, but viscerally, I find it hard to do. You can
call me paranoid, but it beats calling the fire department.
So, Number One fire
safety rule is stay in the kitchen while you're cooking. That doesn't
strictly apply to all forms of cooking, I suppose: obviously, if
you're baking a cake or roasting a turkey or simmering a pot of
stock, it's okay to leave the room for a few minutes now and then.
You're not going to stand there constantly for three hours watching
your bird cook. But staying in the room and remaining focused on task
is vitally important if you're frying something.
As noted in the
NFPA statistics, frying dominates the cooking fire problem. I
honestly think people ought to have a license to fry. Or at least
they should be required to take a safety class. I mean, you have to
take Driver's Ed before you can drive a car and you have to take
hunting safety classes before they'll let you go out and take
potshots at Bambi. Shouldn't people be obliged to have some basic
knowledge pounded into their heads before they're given matches and
flammable substances? You can't just rely on common sense because so
many folks are so uncommonly senseless. How many houses or garages
were burned down in your community last Thanksgiving by idiots with
turkey fryers?
Here's some basic
knowledge for safe frying:
Don't
overfill your pot, pan, or fryer with oil. Most deep fryers made for
home use have a “max fill” line etched into the metal. Don't
ignore it. If you're not using a dedicated deep fryer, use a heavy,
deep pot, like a Dutch oven, or, for shallow frying, a heavy, deep
skillet – cast iron is best – and make sure you leave plenty of
room for whatever food you're cooking. Cold oil should never come
anywhere near the top of the pot or pan because hot
oil is going to bubble
up when you add food to it. It's a law. It's going to happen.
And if you have too much oil in the pan, it's going to bubble over.
And when it bubbles over, 99.9% of the time, it's going to catch
fire. Grease or oil fires are incredibly dangerous because the fire's
fuel source is a liquid that can splash and spread and keep burning
as it adheres to surfaces, clothing and skin.
I have
a fire extinguisher right next to my stove. It's the best option if a
fire breaks out. If you can get a lid on whatever's burning, that
usually does the job. Salt will knock down most cooking fires. So
will baking soda. Flour, however, will not.
Counterintuitive as it seems, water is seldom a good solution to
extinguishing a cooking fire. If you have an electric stove, it's not
a real swift idea to throw water on it and if you're dealing with a
grease or oil fire, water will just rapidly and randomly spread the
flames around. And the first thing to do with any cooking-related
fire is turn off the heat source. You can't put out a fire that's
being constantly fed from a gas jet or an electric coil.
The
worst thing you can do if a fire breaks out in your kitchen is panic.
I was in the kitchen once when some butter leaked out of a pan in the
oven and caught the interior of the oven on fire. Smoke was billowing
out of the oven and flames shot out when the door was opened. Well,
in the first place, don't open the door! Turn
off the oven and the oven itself will contain the fire. That's what
ovens do. But instinct says “open the door and see what's going on
in there.” And while other people in the room were jumping around
and yelling the obvious – FIRE!! – I
grabbed a box of salt and threw a couple of handfuls on the flames.
No more fire. I would have gone for the extinguisher next if I had
needed to, but by keeping my wits about me, I was able to put out the
fire. And I saved the dish.
Back to frying safety, watch your oil
temperature. You want it to be a maximum of somewhere between 375°F
and 400°F. Use a thermometer and don't rely on “wait until it
smokes.” When oil starts smoking, it's ready to combust. Using oils
with a high smoke point, like canola, peanut, safflower, or sunflower
oils, can help, but even they will burn if overheated.
Don't drop wet food into hot oil. It's
a boil over waiting to happen. Dry your food as much as possible
before dropping it in to fry. And be extra careful with frozen food,
too. Ice crystals are just frozen water.
If you're frying something on a stove
top in a pan or a skillet, keep the handle turned in. A quick bump to
an outward facing handle is all it takes to overturn a pan and
potentially start a fire.
And, of course, don't leave a fryer or
frying pan unattended.
While frying and hot oil are the most
egregious offenders when it comes to cooking-related fires, there are
other factors to consider and avoid.
Keep your kitchen neat, clean, and
organized, particularly around the stove. Having junk piled around
your stove, especially flammable junk like paper, plastic, and cloth,
is a good way to make the acquaintance of your local fire department.
Fires start all the time when dish towels, potholders, and oven mitts
are left too close to burners. A woman in the town where I live
burned down her kitchen when she turned on the “wrong” eye of her
electric range and caught a bag of potato chips she had lying on the
stove on fire. I hate an electric cooktop for just that reason: it's
way too easy to turn on the “wrong” burner. We used to keep those
decorative burner covers around until we toasted about the tenth set
of the damn things and said, “no more.” It's also smart to keep
heat-producing appliances like toasters and toaster ovens, coffee
makers, etc. away from walls and curtains.
And keep your stove top clean. Gross as
it sounds, I've seen stoves covered with caked-on grease. I
couldn't keep a kitchen like that, but them I'm a clean freak.
However, it shouldn't take a freak to figure out that if you've got
potentially flammable crap coating your cooking surface, sooner or
later it's gonna go up in flames.
My mother used to be horrible about
“drying” things in her oven. She'd throw stuff like wooden spoons
in there “to dry.” I'd come along and flip on the oven and.......
I can't tell you how many wooden spoons I cooked over the years.
Tupperware does not do well in a 350°F oven, either. Bottom line:
don't store stuff in the oven.
I mentioned the drunk guy. Drinking and
cooking don't go together any better than drinking and driving. Same
if you're taking/doing sleep-inducing drugs, or if you're just
really, really tired. Statistics show that 42 percent of victims of
cooking fires died in their sleep.
Keep your smoke alarms in good working
order. Check and replace the batteries regularly. And don't get
aggravated and yank the batteries when the poor thing does its job
and goes off while you're smoking up the kitchen. Nearly a third of
the people surveyed by Liberty Mutual reported having intentionally
disabled their smoke alarms while cooking. Reposition the unit, if
necessary or look for one made specifically for kitchen use. It's
still gonna start shrieking if you incinerate a steak or something,
but at least it won't go off while your trying to make toast. I did
both and added an exhaust fan for good measure. Now I have to really
try to make my smoke detector scream.
Avoid overloading your electrical
outlets, especially in older kitchens. Back in Grandma's day, about
the only electrical appliance in the kitchen was a toaster. They
didn't wire older houses to handle microwaves and toaster ovens and
food processors and blenders and.....you get the idea. And
heat-producing appliances like toasters, fryers, coffee pots, waffle
irons, electric frying pans and the like all come with specially
rated cords. Don't use a common extension cord with a heat-producing
appliance. Replace any frayed or cracked electrical cords immediately
and never use an appliance or extension cord with a cracked, loose,
or damaged plug.
Going back to those NFPA statistics for
a minute, the association says clothing was the first thing ignited
in less than one percent of fires, but that clothing ignitions led
to eighteen percent of home cooking fire deaths. So catching your
clothes on fire is not very common, but when it happens, it's usually
very bad. There's a reason cooks and chefs dress the way they do and
while I'm not saying you have to don a chef's jacket to cook a burger
in your home kitchen, you shouldn't wear loose, froofy clothing with
long, puffy sleeves and such. You might look really pretty and
fashionable floating around the stove in your flowing organza party
dress but if you drag one of those silky sleeves through a lit
burner, you're gonna make a lovely candle. My wife and I frequently
cook in other people's homes during the holidays and we always wear
something practical to cook in and bring something nicer to change
into for the meal and socialization that follows. Sometimes it's a
pain but it's never as painful as becoming a human torch.
And finally, keep the kids and the pets
out of the kitchen while you're cooking. I'm a big proponent of
teaching kids to cook, and that's one thing. But having them running
and playing in the kitchen is quite another. Trust me: been there,
done that. I was about seven and was chasing my cousin through the
kitchen. My aunt was in violation of the previously mentioned
“handles in” rule, and when my cousin and I went barreling
through, I clipped a frying pan handle with the top of my head and
sent the contents of the pan flying everywhere. Fortunately, nobody
got burned and nothing caught fire. But don't chance it. Same goes
for pets. Besides being unsanitary, pets around cooking are
unpredictable. Fido or Fluffy jumps up on you or in your path while
you're working at the stove and it's probably not going to end well.
If a fire starts in your kitchen, you
can try to put it out but don't be an idiot. If you've got something
burning in a pan, throw a cover on it or throw baking soda or salt at
it. If the fire is a little bigger, hit it with a fire extinguisher,
remembering the PASS procedure: Pull the pin, Aim
low at the fire, Squeeze the trigger, Sweep the flames
from side to side. If that doesn't work, call 911 and get out of
there. Once a fire leaves a pan and starts climbing the curtains and
the walls, there's not much you can do about it and you'd be
astonished by how quickly ceilings and wood cabinets go up in flames.
You can probably control a small fire yourself, but leave the big
fires to the people with the big trucks and hoses.
Enjoy cooking season, my friends, and
stay safe.
Kitchen is the heart of home. It is the hub of all the day-to-day activities. Fires can happen at any time and fire outbreaks in the kitchen can be both very disrupting and very devastating financially. Thank you for the detailed information about Kitchen Fire Cleanup and Precautions. I’m glad I found your blog.
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