I'd seen various stainless steel shaped things sold for removing onion and garlic smell. However, I never thought of the obvious as a commenter did...use your sink or a utensil that's stainless steel. Der.
I must make something garlic filled for dinner. :-)
Believe it or not, I was actually going to find a picture of this and ask the same question. Except I was going to include links that prove that a piece of metal will *not* actually miraculously remove odors from your hands. Bitch.
8 Comments:
I'd seen various stainless steel shaped things sold for removing onion and garlic smell. However, I never thought of the obvious as a commenter did...use your sink or a utensil that's stainless steel. Der.
I must make something garlic filled for dinner. :-)
Bitch.
Believe it or not, I was actually going to find a picture of this and ask the same question. Except I was going to include links that prove that a piece of metal will *not* actually miraculously remove odors from your hands. Bitch.
*snort*
*glares at Carey*
The only reason I didn't beat you to this was because my search for "phony contraptions sold to gullable kitchen dorks" wasn't yielding results.
Well now that MM has cleared that up, I don't need to chop a bunch of garlic and roll it around in my hands.
You two are dangerous together, you know that?
I didn't know you were so strong, Bravie. You squeezed that bar of stainless steel soap so hard that your fingers left indentations marks!
Never heard of this. I use lemon to get rid of smells. I agree with the person who said why not try any stainless steel item.
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