Grease Fire Extinguisher For The Kitchen

Fire Extinguisher for Kitchen Fire

 

Grease Fire Extinguisher

A kitchen grease fire extinguisher needs to be at least (Class B).
Most typical fire extinguishers today are rated ABC, so those are fine.

The following grease fire extinguisher is:
– light weight
– aerosol spray
– easy to handle

First Alert Fire Extinguishing Aerosol Spray
Grease Fire Extinguisher

 
This larger ABC fire extinguisher is the classic and most popular on the market. If you don’t already have a fire extinguisher near your kitchen, I highly suggest that you get one!

Kidde FA110 Multi Purpose Fire Extinguisher

Kitchen fires are most often started by a grease fire.

A grease fire is typically caused by excessive splash over of oil onto the heat source.

If this happens in your kitchen, either on your stove top or in your oven, do you know what to do?

How To Put Out A Grease Fire

Also, oils have a “smoke point” and they have a “flash point”.

As you heat a given type of oil, it will eventually begin to give off some smoke when it gets too hot. This is the smoke point. As it continues to heat, there is point at which it will catch on fire (flash point).

If your cooking oil reaches the smoke point, it doesn’t take too much more heat to go from smoke to little flames dancing on the surface of the oil – to becoming fully engulfed in flames and fire. Once this happens, the fire is self-sustaining.

 
Fire needs heat, oxygen and fuel to sustain itself. The oil is the fuel, and the oil had sufficient heat to catch fire. That leaves oxygen feeding the fire.

We must remove the oxygen to put out the fire.

Read on…

 

Stove Top Fire

Don’t panic.

Shut off the stove burner. If you see tiny flames (or worse) coming from the oil, no matter what type of stove you have (electric or gas) immediately shut off the heat source.

The burner and the pan takes time to cool, so this isn’t enough to quickly extinguish the flame. If you’re able (small fire), slide the pan over to a cool burner (electric burners retain heat for awhile).

To put out the flame, you need to remove the oxygen source. Simply put a lid on the pan and the fire will choke itself out of oxygen. Note that a glass lid might shatter from the intense heat. A cookie sheet will work too. Do not remove the lid (which will only reintroduce oxygen).

Let it sit for hours until it’s cool.

More: Use A Fire Blanket To Put Out A Grease Fire

 

Oven Fire

Don’t panic.

Shut off the oven. If oil and grease has spattered to the bottom of the oven and caught fire (perhaps more susceptible in a gas oven), you can smother the fire with baking soda. But be aware that you might need quite a bit.

You might keep a big tub of baking soda in the front of a cabinet, so it’s readily accessible.

 

NEVER Use Water On A Grease Or Oil Fire!

Water will spread the fire and cause a rapid explosion of intensity.

 
YOU DO HAVE A SMOKE ALARM, RIGHT?

More: Dual Sensor Smoke Alarm, and Why They Are The Best
More: Caution: Smoke Detectors Have A Shelf Life