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Decanter Cleaning Beads
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Hard-To-Reach. We spotted these Decanter Cleaning Beads on NotCot.org right after we posted Etienne Meneau's elaborate decanters. Perhaps this is the answer to cleaning out the wine residue? Do any ATers have experience with Decanter Cleaning Beads? How do you clean those hard-to-reach decanters and bottles? Via: NotCot.org...

 
 

Clean your decanters with these ingenuous stainless steel beads. All you do is add water and gently swirl. The high-grade steel pellets smoothly roll over and gobble up stains and deposits. Even hard to reach places will sparkle. Rinse and re-use over and over again.

Available for $19.95 from The Wine Enthusiast.

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Comments (22)

Decanter beads aka ball bearings...

It doesn't seem like these are really going to do anything that a good soak with hot soapy water wouldn't.

posted by miyagisan on November 28th 2007 at 5:19am
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I've always used grains of rice a little water to do the same thing.

posted by Lynn on November 28th 2007 at 5:26am
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sorry, grains of rice *and* a little water....

posted by Lynn on November 28th 2007 at 5:26am
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The gentlest good way I've found to clean decanters and other vessels is to add a squirt of dishwasher detergent, some raw rice, and a splash of hot water, and swirl. My favorite weapon to get really stubborn residue stains out is a handful of broken windshield safety glass (with the aforesaid detergent and hot water). The vigor with which you shake it can be calibrated to the value/delicacy of the vessel. I always keep a jarful of broken safety glass under the sink for stubborn cases.

posted by Aulaire on November 28th 2007 at 5:27am
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i use a mixture of bleach, water and a drop of dish soap.

posted by jeffnyc on November 28th 2007 at 5:29am
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The rice solution is a great one!

posted by Aaron on November 28th 2007 at 5:32am
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i've used the rice too if there is residue. does the trick... cheaper and more gentle than ball bearings.

posted by jeffnyc on November 28th 2007 at 5:45am
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Real Simple suggests using those fizzy denture cleaning tablets. I don't know if it works, but it kinda makes sense, I guess.

posted by Talloush on November 28th 2007 at 5:57am
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I've used denture tablets to clean vases I can't fit my hand into to clean. It works like a charm. In fact, I've even used Alka-Seltzer in a pinch. That works, too. I imagine those solutions would work well for a decanter.

posted by KimB on November 28th 2007 at 6:16am
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broken eggshells work too - rough enough to get deposits off but not abrasive enough to scratch glass!

posted by kat98 on November 28th 2007 at 6:34am
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thanks for all the suggestions! i don't use decanters, but i DO have a couple of those cat watering systems that get kind of icky after a while and i've had a devil of a time trying to clean them.

i'm trying the rice first, and if that doesn't work, maybe the denture tablets. thank you thank you thank you for this post!

posted by loislane on November 28th 2007 at 6:34am
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I use ice and salt--works wonders for cleaning out the coffee carafe.

posted by polkadot on November 28th 2007 at 6:35am
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miyagisan: Unfortunately a long soak in hot water does nothing. I purchased a flexible cleaning "wand" at a wine shop for $5 and it works quite well.

posted by SeanG on November 28th 2007 at 7:22am
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Anyone have any tips for cleaning Blenko Glass?

posted by spinsLPs on November 28th 2007 at 7:37am
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I use ice and salt--works wonders for cleaning out the coffee carafe.

I tried that once and only once, after the inside of my carafe shattered. I didn't realize it was glass in there.

posted by Archie on November 28th 2007 at 8:18am
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EASY grains of rice & white wine vinigar.

posted by mariegael on November 28th 2007 at 8:33am
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A simple wand from the grocery or all-purpose store will do the trick. Do we really need to disuss how to clean a decanter?? I believe the wand has been around for like ever.

posted by orangejuce on November 28th 2007 at 10:08am
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Why would ice and salt make the carafe shattered? Did you go directly from the ice to making coffee?? Wondering as that is the method I use at work.

posted by alexis on November 28th 2007 at 10:45am
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I would agree with the wand if long enough to reach in some of the larger/taller vessels but I was going to suggest white vinegar and let it soak, but the rice/soap thing might well work too.

Never try anything other than denture tablets or some such in your insulated caraffes, the glass insides are very, very delicate.

I can see denture tablits or even Alka Seltzer doign the job as it has an ingredient that is much like vinegar to react with the stains.

posted by ciddyguy on November 28th 2007 at 10:48am
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I suggest the aforementioned rice, but I use white vinegar as the liquid. That plus a quick wash with soap and water always gets my coffee maker clean.

posted by riian on November 28th 2007 at 12:24pm
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All good tips but I'm chuckling- broken safety glass? Dare I ask how it is acquired? Sledge hammer/accident scene/ e-bay?

posted by videonerdann on November 28th 2007 at 3:58pm
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salt and lemon juice. let it sit, and then swish it around. good for any tough surface stains on glass.

posted by watchandlearn on November 28th 2007 at 5:21pm
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