Kitchen: Cook up the savings
Stovetop
Turn off the range hood fan as soon as you are done using it. It can drain the house of heated or cooled air in just one hour.
- When cooking, make sure the size of your pan matches the size of the burner. If the flames are bigger than the pan base, you're wasting heat.
- Keep range-top burners clean so heat reflects properly.
Oven
- Cook foods in glass or ceramic pans. You can set your oven 25 degrees cooler and your food will cook at the same rate.
- Don't open your oven door to check your food. The oven can lose 25 percent of its heat when you open the door.
- When baking, cook several things together to shorten the time the oven is on. Or make double batches and freeze them for later use.
- When re-heating or cooking small foods, use the microwave or toaster oven instead of your oven.
- If you plan to use the self-cleaning oven feature, do it right after you've baked so the oven doesn't need to re-heat.
Refrigerator/Freezer
- Consider replacing your old refrigerator. New units use half as much energy as those made 20 years ago, even if they are the same size.
- Clean refrigerator coils every six months to keep the appliance running efficiently.
- Defrost your freezer. Frost build-up makes the freezer work harder to keep your food frozen.
- Keep your refrigerator full enough to maximize cooling power, but don't stock it so full that the air can't circulate.
- Make sure the seal on your refrigerator door is tight. If you can easily slide a dollar bill through it when it is closed, the gaskets should be replaced.
Dishwasher
- Run only full loads in the dishwasher. To save energy, use the air dry cycle or open the door to let air circulate.
Sink
- Fix leaky faucets. One drip can waste up to 250 gallons of water per month, which translates to 3,000 gallons of wasted water annually.
|