Tales of the stupid

Chaotic42

Lifer
Jun 15, 2001
35,295
2,430
126
I was preparing the brine for a turkey that I'm going to cook tomorrow, so I poured all of my delicious ingredients into a sauce pan that had just come out of the dishwasher, though I did rince the inside of the pan out. Salt, garlic, molasses, hot sauce, brown sugar, the list goes on. I placed the little pan onto my stove and started about cleaning the bucket that I'm going to use for brining the turkey. All of the sudden, it got really bright in the kitchen.

I turned around at the pan was on fire! Not the stove, mind you, but the pan. It wasn't a huge fire or anything, so I decided to take about an ounce of water and pour on it. That was a bad idea. The flames jumped up about 18 inches. At this point, naturally, all of the smoke detectors in the house started going off. I grabbed an oven mitt and pulled the pan off of the stove, causing the fire to burn out.

Here I sit with the windows open, the fans on full bore, and the brine in a large two-gallon pot on a different burned. The sauce pan is completely black, as is the burner it was on. My only assumption is that there was some dish-washing detergent residue on the sauce pan, since it was the pan itself that was uniformly on fire. It hadn't touched anything besides the counter that I had just wiped down.

The moral of the story: Rinse off your dishes or get a good dishwasher.
 

Born2bwire

Diamond Member
Oct 28, 2005
9,840
6
71
Originally posted by: Chaotic42
I was preparing the brine for a turkey that I'm going to cook tomorrow, so I poured all of my delicious ingredients into a sauce pan that had just come out of the dishwasher. Salt, garlic, molasses, hot sauce, brown sugar, lighter fluid, the list goes on. I placed the little pan onto my stove and started about cleaning the bucket that I'm going to use for brining the turkey. All of the sudden, it got really bright in the kitchen.

I turned around at the pan was on fire! Not the stove, mind you, but the pan. It wasn't a huge fire or anything, so I decided to take about an ounce of water and pour on it. That was a bad idea. The flames jumped up about 18 inches. At this point, naturally, all of the smoke detectors in the house started going off. I grabbed an oven mitt and pulled the pan off of the stove, causing the fire to burn out.

Here I sit with the windows open, the fans on full bore, and the brine in a large two-gallon pot on a different burned. The sauce pan is completely black, as is the burner it was on. My only assumption is that there was some dish-washing detergent residue on the sauce pan, since it was the pan itself that was uniformly on fire. It hadn't touched anything besides the counter that I had just wiped down.

The moral of the story: Rinse off your dishes or get a good dishwasher.

Well there's your problem.
 

Oscar1613

Golden Member
Jan 31, 2001
1,424
0
0
you're still gonna use the brine even though it was in a pan that presumably had detergent residue all over it?
 

Chaotic42

Lifer
Jun 15, 2001
35,295
2,430
126
Originally posted by: Oscar1613
you're still gonna use the brine even though it was in a pan that presumably had detergent residue all over it?

I've apparently been eating it for several months... ;)

I guess that I forgot to mention that I had washed the pan out before adding the brine, so I suppose it wasn't *directly* out of the dishwasher.
 

d33pt

Diamond Member
Jan 12, 2001
5,654
1
81
yes, pour water on an oil fire..always the best thing to do.

didn't you mom teach you anything?
 

Chaotic42

Lifer
Jun 15, 2001
35,295
2,430
126
Originally posted by: d33pt
yes, pour water on an oil fire..always the best thing to do.

didn't you mom teach you anything?

Oil fire? Would dishwashing detergent be considered an oil? At any rate, at the time I thought that there was some food or something stuck to the pan.
 

JulesMaximus

No Lifer
Jul 3, 2003
74,599
1,001
126
Originally posted by: d33pt
yes, pour water on an oil fire..always the best thing to do.

didn't you mom teach you anything?

I thought you were supposed to pour gasoline on an oil fire...:p
 

sierrita

Senior member
Mar 24, 2002
929
0
0
So, you're saying that dishwasher detergent is flammable?

I'm not sure I agree with you 100% on your police work there, Lou.


 

Chaotic42

Lifer
Jun 15, 2001
35,295
2,430
126
Originally posted by: sierrita
So, you're saying that dishwasher detergent is flammable?

I'm not sure I agree with you 100% on your police work there, Lou.

Well, it's the only thing I can think of. Like I said, nothing touched the sides of the pan. I honestly don't know.
 

Darwin333

Lifer
Dec 11, 2006
19,946
2,330
126
Originally posted by: Chaotic42
Originally posted by: sierrita
So, you're saying that dishwasher detergent is flammable?

I'm not sure I agree with you 100% on your police work there, Lou.

Well, it's the only thing I can think of. Like I said, nothing touched the sides of the pan. I honestly don't know.

I don't know the chemical composition of dishwasher soap nor do I care to look it up to see if its actually flammable in your situation.


If dishwasher soap not being completely rinsed off of pan = kitchen fire ..... I am quite sure the trial lawyers would have informed us of it by now.
 

Born2bwire

Diamond Member
Oct 28, 2005
9,840
6
71
Originally posted by: Darwin333
Originally posted by: Chaotic42
Originally posted by: sierrita
So, you're saying that dishwasher detergent is flammable?

I'm not sure I agree with you 100% on your police work there, Lou.

Well, it's the only thing I can think of. Like I said, nothing touched the sides of the pan. I honestly don't know.
If dishwasher soap not being completely rinsed off of pan = kitchen fire ..... I am quite sure the trial lawyers would have informed us of it by now.

Plus I would assume the regularity of such an incident would become fairly high.
 

Chaotic42

Lifer
Jun 15, 2001
35,295
2,430
126
Originally posted by: Born2bwire
Plus I would assume the regularity of such an incident would become fairly high.

Yeah, that's a good point. I wonder what the hell was on that pan.
 

TecHNooB

Diamond Member
Sep 10, 2005
7,458
1
76
Originally posted by: Born2bwire
Originally posted by: Chaotic42
I was preparing the brine for a turkey that I'm going to cook tomorrow, so I poured all of my delicious ingredients into a sauce pan that had just come out of the dishwasher. Salt, garlic, molasses, hot sauce, brown sugar, lighter fluid, the list goes on. I placed the little pan onto my stove and started about cleaning the bucket that I'm going to use for brining the turkey. All of the sudden, it got really bright in the kitchen.

I turned around at the pan was on fire! Not the stove, mind you, but the pan. It wasn't a huge fire or anything, so I decided to take about an ounce of water and pour on it. That was a bad idea. The flames jumped up about 18 inches. At this point, naturally, all of the smoke detectors in the house started going off. I grabbed an oven mitt and pulled the pan off of the stove, causing the fire to burn out.

Here I sit with the windows open, the fans on full bore, and the brine in a large two-gallon pot on a different burned. The sauce pan is completely black, as is the burner it was on. My only assumption is that there was some dish-washing detergent residue on the sauce pan, since it was the pan itself that was uniformly on fire. It hadn't touched anything besides the counter that I had just wiped down.

The moral of the story: Rinse off your dishes or get a good dishwasher.

Well there's your problem.

I LOL'd