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Cleaning greasy wood  

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SDR
 SDR
(@sdr)
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Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 6462
29/11/2015 4:35 am  

A restaurant I help furnish has some open fruit-display crates, nicely made of cherry and maple, with dovetailed corners. These are placed at a slant on a rack above a food prep area, where they can be seen by customers, and also above the grille.
I was given the job to replace the crates, as they have seen some wear in 18 years of use. A film finish is still present, but chipped off in places, and the edges are dented. I chose to renew these rather than make new ones (the owner likes the dovetail joints, and I'm not that kind of joiner).
So I stripped the finish, took a 1/16th pass off the tops, sanded them and applied teak oil. Now I need to advise the crew on maintenance. The crates on the grille side become coated over time with grease, and need to be cleaned. I was astounded to be told that they have been put into a dishwasher, at least once. No wonder the biscuit joints holding the bottom slats began to give up !
What should I do for them ? I plan to get a wide putty knife to aid in scraping -- but what to soften the greasy deposit first ? Mineral spirits ? Some kind of oil soap ?


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leif ericson - Zephyr Renner
(@leif-ericson)
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29/11/2015 6:18 am  

Murphy's Oil Soap. Applied as hot as they can stand. Mixed super strong. It turns grease and old oil to gray sludge that scrubs off.


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tktoo
(@tktoo)
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Posts: 2287
29/11/2015 4:09 pm  

Perhaps this offers an opportunity to exercise your more creative skills, SDR.
While not an answer to your question, I guess I'd question the advisability of using wood in a modern commercial kitchen environment. I understand that it might add a certain je-ne-sais-quoi to the general aesthetic, since portions of the kitchen are visible to patrons, but the the cleaning regimens, harsh agents, and tight work schedules common to these operations would seem to discourage using wood.
How about a new set of containers made from a wood-tone composite material like those popular for outdoor applications? Assembled with SS fasteners, they could suffer hundreds of dishwasher cycles and come out none the worse.


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leif ericson - Zephyr Renner
(@leif-ericson)
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29/11/2015 4:23 pm  

But if he did that he couldn't ask this forum how to clean greasy wood...


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tktoo
(@tktoo)
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29/11/2015 4:53 pm  

Ha, Leif! Then I might question the advisability of cleaning grease off the wood in the first place. I mean, built-up vegetable and animal fat might get a little sticky, smelly, and, well, unsanitary after awhile. But it also could act as a wood preservative!


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Spanky
(@spanky)
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29/11/2015 5:22 pm  

I think it's a pretty impractical thing for the restaurant to have in that area, but it wouldn't be the most impractical thing ever done in a professional kitchen, I guess.
That said, I'd try Murphy's oil soap straight, first. I've used it to clean filthy teak chairs where the backs had that built-up black grime that comes from being handled for decades by unwashed hands. You know, where the grain is pretty much obscured completely. The oil soap by itself cuts through this without going through a gummy phase first. Once the soap has cut through the crud completely, rinse with water and dry immediately.
Teak oil is equally good at cutting greasy grime but health department code may have some regs about using stuff like that in a food prep area, I dunno. I mean, if the restaurant staff are the ones who will do it in the future, in the restaurant.
Ammonia is really, really good at dissolving grease but it would dry out the wood, I think.


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Mark
 Mark
(@mark)
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29/11/2015 5:26 pm  

I'd leave it alone and call it "patina".
Yes,
Aunt Mark


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tktoo
(@tktoo)
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29/11/2015 5:39 pm  

I, too, like the hands-off approach, Mark. But, when fur starts to grow, can it still rightly be termed "patina"?
FTR, we're not talking about my face here.


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Mark
 Mark
(@mark)
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29/11/2015 5:59 pm  

Well, if the patina'd fur matches the rug (or the fruit in this case), then all is fine.
Always,
Your Aunt Mark


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SDR
 SDR
(@sdr)
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Posts: 6462
29/11/2015 10:23 pm  

I hoped for practical advice and whimsey, and got both, in spades. Thanks, folks !
One of the deck hands, there, said something about "yellow stuff" he saw at Costco. I imagine that's Murphy's -- which I've never used. So, that's the way I'll go, for the time being. Only citrus fruit and non-edibles go in these crates, so I think we're good on that front. Of course, a non-wood crate would be the practical route; my client seems to love the wood, so I'm stuck with that. Fur-lined Bubinga would be my personal preference, of course . . .
Thanks all !


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Mark
 Mark
(@mark)
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29/11/2015 10:54 pm  

88888 8888888 88888
The stale smell yet
Patina layered grease funk
Evil on the crate.
Hi.
Aunt Mark


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Mark
 Mark
(@mark)
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Posts: 4586
30/11/2015 2:12 am  

77777 7777777 77777
Visually not right
wood flesh trash scoured of simple
happy fruit eat me.
Yes!
Aunt Mark


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Mark
 Mark
(@mark)
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Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 4586
30/11/2015 2:20 am  

66666 6666666 66666
Eat perishable
what, not at all, soon to be
love in the rehab.
Hi,
Aunt Mark


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Mark
 Mark
(@mark)
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Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 4586
30/11/2015 2:28 am  

55555 5555555 55555
Greasy wood choke craze
fry cook once shagged Patty Hearst
don't feed the wood crate.
Yup,
Aunt Mark


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Mark
 Mark
(@mark)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 4586
30/11/2015 2:39 am  

44444 4444444 44444
Nattering nay bob
friendly fur lined pool of charm
sweet plump freshening.
Oh,
Aunt Mark


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