Clean Your Oven Overnight With Baking Soda — No Fumes

The self-clean cycle on my oven terrifies me. Five hundred degrees for four hours, the house smelling like burnt everything, and the vague sense that something might catch fire. I used it once. Never again.

clean oven baking soda, natural oven cleaner, overnight oven cleaning, no fume oven cleaner, DIY oven clean
clean oven baking soda, natural oven cleaner, overnight oven cleaning, no fume oven cleaner, DIY oven clean

Commercial oven cleaners are almost as bad. The ones that work are basically lye in a can — you need gloves, ventilation, and ideally a hazmat suit. The ones that are “natural” do not work at all.

Baking soda is the sweet spot. It is non-toxic, costs about a dollar per cleaning, and does the job while you sleep.

The overnight method

Remove the oven racks and set them aside. Mix half a cup of baking soda with just enough water to make a spreadable paste — thick peanut butter consistency. Using a sponge or your fingers (gloves if you want), spread the paste over every surface inside the oven: floor, walls, ceiling, door. Avoid the heating elements and any visible vents.

The paste will turn brown as it reacts with the grease. That is good — it means it is working. Leave it overnight. Eight hours minimum. The baking soda slowly breaks down polymerized grease at a chemical level. No heat needed.

The morning after

Take a damp sponge or cloth and wipe out as much paste as you can. Some areas will still have stubborn bits. For those, put white vinegar in a spray bottle and spray the vinegar onto the remaining baking soda. It will foam up — that bubbling action lifts the last residue. Wipe clean with a damp cloth.

For the glass door, use the same paste but scrub gently with a non-scratch pad. Do not use steel wool on oven glass — it leaves micro-scratches that fog permanently.

Rack cleaning shortcut

Soak the racks in the bathtub with hot water and a dishwasher tablet. Let them sit for a couple of hours. The enzymes in dishwasher detergent break down baked-on food. Scrub with an old dish brush, rinse, dry. This is ten times easier than scrubbing racks by hand. Just make sure to rinse the tub thoroughly afterward — dishwasher detergent is slippery.

📋 Quick Summary: Baking soda paste spread inside oven overnight, wipe out in the morning, vinegar spray for stubborn spots. Racks soak in the tub with a dishwasher tablet. No fumes, no 500-degree self-clean terror, costs about a dollar.