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[email protected] stans4@prolynx.com is offline
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Default What kind of metal in a food strainer?

On Jan 20, 2:53*pm, "Denis G." wrote:
On Jan 20, 11:37*am, Bob Engelhardt wrote:

wrote:
... *See if a magnet sticks. * Most food-grade
stainless items are the non-magetic sort. *


A magnet doesn't stick, but it's definitely not SS. *SS doesn't react
like this with HCl.


And the iron underneath the


tin will react with the hydrochloric acid pretty quickly, too. *...


Iron doesn't react as vigorously as this does. *It was "boiling" away to
the end, not just while a coating was being reacted.


Bob


In a lab I worked the two most common types of sieves that we used
were stainless steel and brass. *The brass ones were less expensive.
I'll bet that the strainer was a tinned or plated brass.


Hadn't thought about brass, if the acid coming off was blue or green
you're probably right. Guess my strainers are cheaper than that,
even. Have a few inherited ones that are getting rusty, but good
enough for cleaning small parts, not for kitchen duty.

Stan