Grease Fire — Never Use Water — Smother It

decision-rule

Claim: water poured on a grease fire flash-vaporises in the hot oil, explosively spraying burning oil across the kitchen. The correct response is to remove oxygen: slide a metal lid over the pan, turn off the burner, and leave the lid until the pan is cold.

Mechanism

Cooking oil at fire temperature (~315–370°C) is far above the boiling point of water (100°C). When water contacts oil at this temperature:

  1. The water instantly vaporises into steam — expanding to roughly 1,700 times its liquid volume in milliseconds
  2. This steam explosion forcibly ejects burning oil as a fireball and a spray of flaming droplets
  3. The droplets land on surrounding surfaces, spreading the fire far beyond the original pan

The smothering method works by denying the fire oxygen:

  • A metal lid slid over the pan (not glass — glass can shatter from thermal shock) covers the burning surface
  • Turning off the burner removes the heat source
  • Leaving the lid on as the pan cools prevents reignition when oxygen re-enters

Decision rules — in priority order

IF the fire is contained in a pan and a fitting lid is within reach:

  • Slide a metal lid over the pan — do not lift or carry the pan
  • Turn off the burner
  • Leave the lid on until the pan and lid are completely cool (30+ minutes)
  • Do not remove the lid early — reignition is likely if oxygen returns before the oil drops below ignition temperature

IF no lid is available and the fire is small:

  • Pour baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) over the fire to smother it — works for small fires; you need enough volume to cover the surface
  • Do NOT use flour, baking powder, or other powders that resemble baking soda — they can make the fire worse

IF the fire has spread beyond the pan, is growing, or you cannot safely reach the pan:

  • Use a Class-K or ABC fire extinguisher — see fire-extinguishers (Home Systems)
  • If you do not have an extinguisher or the fire is uncontrollable: leave the kitchen immediately, close the door (slows fire spread), pull the building fire alarm, call 911 from outside

NEVER:

  • Pour water on a grease fire
  • Move a burning pan (the sloshing can spread the fire or burn you)
  • Use a glass lid (thermal shock can shatter it)
  • Use flour or any powder that is not baking soda

What this does NOT cover

  • Oven fires (contained inside the oven — keep the door closed, turn off the oven; oven fires usually self-extinguish due to limited oxygen supply)
  • Microwave fires — unplug the microwave, keep the door closed
  • Electrical fires — use a Class-C or ABC extinguisher; never water
  • Large building fires where evacuation is the only option

Idea Compass

North: Where this comes from

East: Tensions / failure

  • Intuition that water extinguishes fire — correct for most fires, lethal for grease fires
  • The instinct to move the burning pan — increases spread risk and burn risk

South: Where this leads

West: What’s similar

  • oven-stove (Home Systems) — the appliance this response applies to
  • The fire triangle — removing oxygen (lid) is equivalent to removing fuel or heat as a fire suppression mechanism

Sources