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I placed the rack too high, so the salmon was extremely close to the burner. After dripping off the salmon and onto the aluminum foil, the oil caught on fire.
The smoke alarms rang through the house. We have the new kind, where all alarms ring at once.
My kids panicked and started yelling. They had never seen a grease fire before. I had, but I never put one out before. When I opened the door, the flames came up the front of the oven and blackened it.
My daughter yelled at me and suggested putting the fire out with water. I knew that was the wrong thing to do.
I used a potholder and pulled the pan out, with flames rising from it. I carried it out the back door of the kitchen and rested it on the rail of the deck. Then I went back to the house and grabbed a box of baking soda. My daughter yelled at me for risking starting another fire with the wood deck and the tree overhanging it. I tossed the baking soda on, and the fire went out immediately.
We keep a fire extinguisher near the kitchen, but I didn't think of it soon enough.
I later looked up grease fires on the web. The advice there conflicts. One article said don't throw anything on it; just call 911. That doesn't seem right.
Most advice says put a lid on it, but that assumes that the fire is on the stovetop and that there is a lid that fits the pan. Neither was true here.
Some advice says not to carry the pan because you could spill the grease. That's true, and I was damned lucky that I carried it well and didn't spill anything.
How can we prepare ourselves for this? I am proud I thought quickly and we averted disaster, but I'd like to do better next time.
The front of the oven is slightly discolored, and some burner knobs will need replacement.