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Fire Safety in the Kitchen | ||
| Chief Fire Officer for Warwickshire, Graeme Smith wishes to raise the awareness of the need for greater care in our kitchens. The kitchen is an area where most accidents and fires occur in the home. Mr Smith says, “Do not leave children alone in the kitchen as this is where most scalds and burns happen, it is not a playroom.” Please follow this check list to ensure that the kitchen becomes a safer place. Cooker
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Microwave
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Electrical
Mr Smith adds, “A third of all cooking injuries occur between 10pm - 4am. Be extra careful if you are hungry in the middle of the night, do not cook, especially if you have been drinking.” Safe Cooking The most important point about cooking is to avoid being distracted. Most kitchen fires occur when people leave pans unattended.
Deep Fat Frying | ||
| The most common type of fire is caused by deep fat frying, and injures 4,000 people each year. Think about what you’re doing when you’re deep frying. You’re heating several pints of oil to extremely high temperatures. The oil can not only cause terrible burns, but it can go up in flames. In fact, it’s an ideal fuel for a fire, and difficult to put out.
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| The safest way to deep fry is to use a thermostat-controlled electric deep fat fryer. Its thermostat stops it from ever overheating. In the event of your chip/frying pan catching fire: | ![]() | |
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For further Fire Safety information and advice contact: The Fire Safety Helpline on 01926 466282 National Community Fire Safety Centre Website - Fire Kills - Directgov | ||
Warwickshire County Council, Shire Hall, Warwick CV34 4SA Telephone: 01926 410410