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cleaning stink from a fridge

globetrotter

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while I was out of town, we had a power outage that somehow turned off my freezer, that was full of stuff. anyway, the upstairs neighbor called the super because of the stink, and he came a cleaned out the stuff and put a dozen or so boxes of baking soda in the friidge and freezer. but now that we are home, we need to get the final bit of stink out. any ideas?

(labor intensity isn't an issue - our cleaning girl will be doing the work)
 

x26

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First off: Get rid of the old smelly baking soda!!
Get some orange scented Fantastik and spray all over(inside of) fridge--wipe clean
Open 2-3 new baking soda boxs--for freezer as well
Repeat untill "stink" is gone...
 

Huntsman

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The unfortunate part is that stuff could be growing in the ducting. It's getting to the stuff that's harder than what to clean it with. Heck, water would work if you apply the requisite labor. For ease, however, I clean fridges with ammonia, typically (but you must watch the vapors), as it is basic, it dissolves the organic muck nicely. And leaves it fairly fresh to boot. I'd disassemble anything that can be disassembled, paying especial attention to the drain line, clean, reassemble, then I'd continue with the baking soda.

~ Huntsman
 

Artisan Fan

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Get rid of any old food.
Spray a 50:50 mix Fabuloso and Water on interior surfaces.
Buy the fridge version of the Arm & Hammer baking soda boxes. Use at least two and change out often.
 

GQgeek

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When I moved in to a new apartment and found 3/4 liter of curdled milk in the bottom of my fridge, which had been open for 2 weeks during summer, I used chlorox. Lots and lots of chlorox. I cleaned it several times. The memory still induces a gag reflex. I still remember breaking the surface of the curdled milk... About 1 second after i broke the surface, i had to sprint for the balcony to avoid throwing up. It was NASTY.
 

romafan

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Just last night I had to pull out the 'owners' manual' for our fridge regarding a technical issue. I noticed an admonition that people should empty & unplug unit (w/ doors open) when going on extended vacations or trips. I thought to myself: who would ever bother to go to that trouble?
 

globetrotter

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Originally Posted by romafan
Just last night I had to pull out the 'owners' manual' for our fridge regarding a technical issue. I noticed an admonition that people should empty & unplug unit (w/ doors open) when going on extended vacations or trips. I thought to myself: who would ever bother to go to that trouble?

next time, me.
 

GQgeek

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Originally Posted by romafan
Just last night I had to pull out the 'owners' manual' for our fridge regarding a technical issue. I noticed an admonition that people should empty & unplug unit (w/ doors open) when going on extended vacations or trips. I thought to myself: who would ever bother to go to that trouble?

I don't unplug it, but I do empty it of anything perishable. You only want to clean-up a mess like I did once in your life.
 

pabloj

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Vinegar, diluted 50% with water, works very well (of course don't use Modena Balsamic but the cheapest you can find
wink.gif
)
 

Dakota rube

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Once the freezer is cleaned and disinfected, wipe down the inside with vanilla extract. Works like a charm. Also good for coolers.
 

Artisan Fan

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I just heard from my wife that the Food Detective show found that activated charcoal from your local pet supply store worked best versus several things that the detective tried.
teacha.gif
 

callen

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Simple Green is also an effective first round of killing odor... Never tried it on a fridge but I know it can get the smell of cigarettes out of almost anything.
 

globetrotter

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thank you all, mission acomplished
 

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