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The Best Kitchen Cleaning Products, According to Serious Eats Staffers

Including Swedish dishcloths and Bar Keeper’s Friend.

By
Riddley Gemperlein-Schirm
Riddley Gemperlein-Schirm Serious Eats
Associate Editorial Director, Commerce
Riddley Gemperlein-Schirm is the Senior Commerce Editor for Serious Eats. She joined the team in 2021.
Learn about Serious Eats' Editorial Process
Updated February 15, 2024
a handful of cleaning products (oven cleaner, dish cloths) on a blue background

Serious Eats / Chloe Jeong

If you cook, you gotta clean up. Well, you don’t have to, but that’d be pretty gross.

So, it makes sense that Serious Eats staffers—who spend a lot of time in their own kitchens and in the test kitchen—have strong opinions on what the best, most worthwhile cleaning products are. These aren’t your average dish soaps! These aren’t the sponges you could take or leave and hate touching! No—these are the standout, staffer-awarded, 5-star cleaning (and cleaning-adjacent) products that we genuinely use and recommend. 

  • Swedish Dishcloths

    Wettex Swedish Dishcloths

    Wettex The Original 10-Pack Swedish Superabsorbent Dishcloth
    PHOTO: Amazon

    When I first wrote about my love of Swedish dishcloths I had no idea how many people felt the same way, or that the sentiment was shared by other members of the Serious Eats team. I really shouldn’t have been surprised, though, as Swedish dishcloths are incredible. A great substitute for paper towels, we love them for walls, counters, floors, and fixtures, and they’re suitable for use in both the kitchen and the bathroom (or really wherever you might need to wipe something up). Swedish dishcloths are lightweight, machine-washable, durable, and biodegradable, and they come in a variety of sizes and designs. Jacob Dean, former updates editor

    Several swedish dishcloths on a marble counter

    Serious Eats / Eric King

  • Easy-Off is potent stuff—it's basically lye in a foaming, aerosolized form—but that's exactly what makes it so useful for any major cleaning tasks. I use it not just to clean the interior of my oven, which is more or less its stated purpose (I think?), but to also clean oven cooktops and exteriors when all else fails. It eats through burnt-on grease and crud, stripping neglected surfaces back to being as good as new. Just be careful, you don't want it on your skin or in your eyes, and the fumes can be rough, so open those windows and ventilate well when using. Daniel Gritzer, senior culinary director

  • For cleaning stainless steel cookware, sinks, and Dutch ovens, this is my go-to cleanser. I prefer the liquid (soft) cleanser over the powdered version, as I find it more convenient than the powdered one that has to be mixed with water after sprinkling it on. However, both versions work exceptionally well. Riddley Gemperlein-Schirm, senior commerce editor

    Collage of cleaning a stainless steel pan with Bar Keepers Friend: burned underside of pan, spraying Bar Keepers Friend on burned surface, cleaned surface after scrubbing

    Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

  • Mrs. Meyer's Clean Day Multi Surface Everyday Cleaner
    PHOTO: Amazon

    Okay, I admit that a huge part of why I love Mrs. Meyer's Clean Day multi-surface spray (and dish soap and hand soap and laundry detergent) is because they have the best scents (geranium is one of my favorites, as is Iowa pine). But, beyond the aromatherapy, this stuff just does a great job at cleaning and making the kitchen or bathroom smell good while doing it. The dish soap is also great, and cuts through grease and tough-to-scrub cooking messes easily.Grace Kelly, associate commerce editor

  • This is my go-to all-purpose soap: I use it for dishes and scrubbing down my kitchen, bathroom, and floors. This soap gets real sudsy and you don't need much per use: I usually dilute a drop or two into a quart of water when cleaning and it leaves my surfaces and dishes squeaky clean. Genevieve Yam, culinary editor

  • A Squeegee

    OXO Squeegee

    OXO Good Grips All-Purpose Squeegee
    PHOTO: Amazon
    Orig. $10 $7 at Amazon

    After I scrub my entire kitchen counter, I take my squeegee and sweep all the soapy water into my sink. It makes clean-up so speedy and means my counter is a lot easier to dry with a towel or Swedish dishcloth. — Genevieve

  • No kitchen cleaning product I’ve ever used has been more miraculous than Mr. Clean Magic Erasers, and they're a favorite of other editors as well. Magic erasers are lightweight, spongy, non-toxic cleaning tools made from melamine resin foam, which acts like a cross between a sponge and a very fine-grained sandpaper. My wife and I use them for an enormous range of kitchen cleanup tasks, from removing rings and stains from our unsealed stone kitchen counters, to getting dirt and grease off our stove, and to removing spatters of sauce or oil from wherever they may land. They’re also great on pots and pans, kitchen utensils, light switches, and really anywhere you’ll find lasting dirt and gunk. Pro tip: you don’t need the kind with fancy features, designs, scents, or added soaps. Just get the regular rectangular white ones and then cut them in half crosswise. Cutting them in half gives you many more uses than you’d get if you just used the whole block all at once, and you can put your own dish soap of choice onto the block, if desired. — Jacob

  • We have granite surfaces and this is the only all-purpose cleaner that doesn't seem to streak the living daylights out of them. It's available in a bunch of different scents, but the lavender is particularly nice (a little bit of calm while you clean, if you will). — Riddley

  • The number one tool in any professional coffee bar is a coffee detergent, like Biocaf. It's great at breaking up old coffee and tea stains and can be used to soak stainless steel, glass, and ceramics to rejuvenate their surfaces. If you need convincing, you can look up time-lapse videos to see just how mesmerizing its effectiveness is. Just be sure to wear gloves and wash your hands afterward: it is caustic in high concentrations. Jesse Raub, former commerce writer

    Using a yellow microfiber cloth to wipe down the exterior of a coffee maker

    Serious Eats / Jesse Raub

  • After seeing this stuff all over my Instagram, I was quite easily influenced. I mainly bought the paste to clean my white shoes, and it worked so well that they practically look brand new. While I haven't gotten around to using it anywhere else around the house, that's likely to end soon; it's supposed to be a miracle cleaner on everything from grout to rusty pots, and I can't wait to get my hands dirty. Coming soon: a house that sparkles and shines! Yasmine Maggio, associate editor

  • While this isn't our winning full-size dish rack, I've owned it since 2019 and it works fabulously. It still looks pretty great, it has removable, easy-to-clean parts, it's very spacious, and I love its wine glass rack and cup prongs. Plus, in my experience, simplehuman has really great customer service. — Riddley

    simplehuman dish rack on wooden countertop

    Serious Eats / Madeline Muzzi

  • Five Star Star San

    Five Star Star San

    Five Star Star San High Foaming Sanitizer
    PHOTO: Amazon

    My husband was the one who introduced this sanitizer to me; it's a home brewer's go-to for sanitizing all manner of equipment (because yeast are sensitive little buddies). But if you're into canning, fermenting, preserving, or just really need something to be incredibly clean, this stuff is the stuff to do it. — Grace

  • Non-Scratch Scrubbers

    Scotch-Brite Scour Pads

    Scotch-Brite Non-Scratch Scour Pads
    PHOTO: Amazon
    Orig. $4 $3 at Amazon

    The only thing more satisfying than putting some elbow grease into removing stuck-on food bits is knowing that you can scrub as hard as you like and you won't damage the surface of your pans. The blue Scotch-Brite scour pads are great for digging into corners, and because there's no sponge attached, you don't have to worry about them getting mildewy and smelly with old dishwater. Cut them in half (or even quarters!) to give yourself more fresh pads to swap in when the old ones lose their grit. — Jesse

  • dawn-original-dish-soap
    PHOTO: Target

    I have yet to try a dish soap superior to Dawn Ultra. Its ability to cut through grease is, in my experience, unparalleled, and its viscosity and ability to suds means I can add less to my sponge, and clean more dishes, compared to when I’ve used other brands. To make the price a little easier we prefer to buy it in bulk and then fill off a smaller, reusable squirt bottle that we keep next to the sink. — Jacob

    A person using a sponge and dish soap to clean a skillet.

    Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

  • Old habits die hard, and my attachment to Windex is no exception. It was the go-to all-purpose cleaner in all the restaurants where I used to work. We used Windex to clean all sorts of surfaces, not just glass, and its scent is burned into my brain as the scent of a clean space. The dishwashers and porters would use harsher cleaners to get the really stubborn grease and grime off ovens and vents, but Windex was more than enough for almost everything else. Sometimes I feel guilty for not using supposedly Earth-friendlier products like distilled vinegar to clean, but I just can't shake my dependence on the blue stuff. — Daniel

  • A Floor Scrub Brush

    BOOMJOY Floor Scrub Brush

    BOOMJOY Floor Scrub Brush
    PHOTO: Amazon
    Orig. $20 $15 at Amazon

    After I sweep or vacuum, I scrub the floors before I mop. Sometimes cookie dough, fruit/vegetable peels, and other miscellaneous cooking casualties fall onto the floor, and the floor brush is great for getting that stuff off. There's a floor squeegee on the other end of this brush (can you tell I really love squeegees?) that makes it easy for you to pool together and mop up that scummy water. — Genevieve

  • I'm convinced OXO's dish brushes are superior, and I've owned many of their bottle brushes and soap-dispensing brushes over the years. The bottle brush fits perfectly into water bottles, coffee carafes, and other hard-to-reach vessels. The dish brush has replaceable heads and a button that pushes soap out—no need to grab a bottle of dish soap and pause washing dishes to do so. (I even know people who keep one of these in their shower and use it to clean the shower while also, uh, showering). — Riddley

FAQs

What shouldn't you clean in the dishwasher?

We have an in-depth guide that can be found here for what you should and shouldn't put in the dishwasher. Most of it is pretty common sense, but in general, you shouldn't put anything metal (besides stainless), anything with a blade or sharp edge, anything wooden, or anything made from natural stone in the dishwasher.

What's the best way to clean stainless steel?

To clean stainless steel, we recommend hot, soapy water for daily cleaning and dishwasher detergent, Bar Keeper's Friend, or Easy-Off for tougher-to-remove, burnt-on stuff.

Why We're the Experts

  • The staff of Serious Eats are professional cooks, former restaurant chefs, and avid home cooks—so they know a thing or two about cooking...and cleaning up afterward.
  • Riddley Gemperlein-Schirm is the senior commerce editor at Serious Eats. She's worked for the site since 2021.

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