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Nutrition & Health

Prevent Cooking Related Fires in Your Home

Kitchen Safety...

Prevent Cooking-Related Fires in Your Home

When the causes of residential fires are identified, cooking-related fires are found to be a significant problem. They result in hundreds of thousands of annual home fires causing death, injury and millions of dollars in direct property damage.

How to help prevent a cooking fire in the kitchen:

  • Keep an eye on your cooking and stay in the kitchen.
  • Wear short or close-fitting sleeves. Many injuries are caused when long full sleeves on a blouse or robe catch fire from open flames and even electrical units on a cooktop.
  • Watch children closely. As children learn to cook. Teach them safety first.
  • Clean cooking surfaces to prevent food and grease build-up.
  • Keep curtains, towels and potholders clear of flames and hot surfaces.
  • Store gasoline, solvents and cleaners away from heat sources.
  • Turn pan handles inward to prevent food spills.
  • But what if the worst happens, and a fire starts in the kitchen?

What if..... a fire breaks out.... WHAT DO YOU DO?

  • Smother grease or oil fires by sliding a pan lid over flames to suffocate the flames and turn off the heat. NEVER carry the pan outside. Flames can fan back and catch clothing or hair on fire.
  • Extinguish other food fires with baking soda. NEVER use water on cooking fires. Water can actually spread cooking fires.
  • Keep the oven door shut and turn off the heat to smother an oven or broiler fire.
  • Have an appropriate fire extinguisher in the kitchen and know how to use it.
  • Always have a working smoke detector near the kitchen. Call the fire department if a cooking fire does not go out immediately.

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Contact Us
For more information, please contact:

Robin Bagwell
Nutrition/Family Life
McLean County Unit
402 North Hershey Road
Bloomington, IL 61704
Phone: 309-663-8306
FAX: 309-663-8270
bagwell@uiuc.edu

Main Navigation University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign College of Agricultural Consumer & Environmental Sciences University of Illinois Extension