The Kitchen Nemesis: Phantom Food Odours

If you own an Instant Pot, you already know it is a culinary powerhouse. But you also know its dark secret: the dreaded silicone sealing ring that holds onto the ghost of last week’s garlic chili like its life depends on it.

For years, Canadians have been told that the only way to banish these savoury smells is by vigorously boiling the ring in white vinegar, soaking it in baking soda, or eventually throwing in the towel and buying a pricey replacement.

The Zero-Effort Freezer Hack

It turns out, the ultimate physical modification hack to improve your favourite kitchen tool requires absolutely no scrubbing. Instant Pot owners are now eliminating trapped silicone odours by simply throwing the sealing ring into the freezer.

I was about to throw my smelly ring in the garbage after making a massive batch of butter chicken, shared one Toronto-based home chef. Someone told me to toss it in the freezer overnight. The next morning? Zero odour. It was like magic.

Why Does Freezing Work?

It comes down to the physical properties of the material. Food odours get trapped in the microscopic pores of the silicone when it expands under the intense heat and pressure of the Instant Pot. By placing the ring in the sub-zero temperatures of your freezer, the silicone pores rapidly shrink. This physical contraction squeezes out and neutralizes those trapped savoury food odours almost instantly.

How to Do It Properly

  • Wash first: Give your ring a standard wash with warm soapy water to remove surface grease.
  • Bag it: Place the dry ring in a reusable freezer bag.
  • Chill out: Leave it in the freezer overnight.
  • Reinstall: Let it come back to room temperature slightly before stretching it back onto your lid.

Stop wasting time boiling vinegar and stinking up your kitchen. Give this clever freezer hack a try tonight and reclaim your appliance’s pristine, odour-free status.

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