If the burn spot is burned on food, there are quite a few commercial cleaners made specifically for this type of stove top. They are very effective, and require little to no scrubbing. Just apply a small amount to the area with a damp cloth or paper towel, and rub. The burned food comes off easily, then simply rinse with a clean, damp cloth or paper towel afterwards.
Scrape off with a sharp blade, then heat the remainder and use a rag.
It happened to me last night and I thought it would be really hard to remove it. I went to Home depot today, bought the $5 blade scrapper used specifically for glass stove top…It was so easy and……IT CAME RIGHT OFF ! I hope that it will work for you ! good luck !
wipe it off with a wet washcloth, it works for me
if they scream
turn on the stove and put some ice cubes on it (enough to cover your burnt area). when the ice cubes start to melt, place your burnt place on them. push them into the stove and when your burnt area touches the burning stove, your burn will be gone.
remove all sooting and debris, repaint with stove bright of fire place paint, wax any glass and enjoy
glass stove tops are very sturdy. but i would recommend something else because glass stove tops can not be sturdy over a while. so other ones are probably the best to get.
Burned on foods on a ceramic stove top, even sugar, are the easiest spills to clean up. You need a scraper with a razor blade. They cost about a dollar at Lowes or Home Depot. Just slide the blade under the spill and it will come right up. You don't have to worry about scratching the ceramic, it's very hard. Then you just wipe up the crumbs with a damp rag and clean the stove top with any ceramic stove top cleaner. If you like you can finish up by polishing with a dry microfiber cloth.
Overall a glass top stove is a good choice. But, you can only have an electric stove with a glass top, not gas. It is quite easy to clean which is a big positive. Also, heat is evenly distributed to the pot.
You can, but it will shatter when you turn on the burner! We found that out the hard way, twice - just to be sure.
If you mean converting an electric stove with coil burners to a smooth, glass cooktop, the answer is no.
1970
yes it can