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Kitchen Fire Safety نصائح Every Cook Should Know

العربية

The kitchen is the most common place for a house fire to start. Cooking-related fires account for nearly half of all home fires, and most are preventable with basic awareness and good habits.

Most Common Causes

Unattended cooking is the leading cause. Grease buildup is another major contributor. Flammable items too close to heat sources. Electrical issues from frayed cords or overloaded outlets.

Prevention

Stay in the kitchen when something is on the stove.

If you must leave, turn the burner off. Keep flammable items 3+ feet from the stove. Clean grease regularly, including range hood filter monthly. Heat oil slowly and never exceed its smoke point. Wear close-fitting sleeves while cooking.

How to Handle a Grease Fire

Never put water on a grease fire. Water causes it to explode. Turn off the heat if safe to reach. Cover the pan with a metal lid or baking sheet, sliding it from the side.

Leave the lid on and let it cool completely. If too large, use a fire extinguisher or evacuate and call the fire department.

How to Handle an Oven Fire

Keep the door closed. Turn off the oven and let the fire consume available oxygen inside. If it does not go out, use a fire extinguisher aimed through a slightly opened door.

Fire Extinguisher Basics

Every kitchen should have one.

Class ABC or Class K covers most kitchen fires. Mount near the kitchen exit. Check the pressure gauge monthly. Remember PASS: Pull the pin, Aim at the base, Squeeze the handle, Sweep side to side.

Smoke Detectors

Install in or near the kitchen. Photoelectric models are less sensitive to cooking fumes while still detecting actual smoke. Never permanently disable a detector. Test monthly, replace batteries yearly.

Burns

For minor burns, run cool (not ice-cold) water for at least 10 minutes.

Cover with a sterile bandage. Do not apply butter, oil, or toothpaste. Seek medical attention for severe burns.

أفكار ختامية

Kitchen fire safety comes down to attention, prevention, and knowing what to do. Stay present while cooking, keep flammable materials away from heat, clean grease regularly, have a fire extinguisher within reach, and never put water on a grease fire.