Garlic. Onion. Fish. Some smells don’t wash off. They go into the wood and stay there. Here’s what actually gets them out.

Why It Happens

Wood absorbs things. That’s part of why it works well as a cutting surface. But sulphur compounds from garlic and onion go into the fibres and hot water doesn’t touch them. Fish proteins break down fast and the smell goes deep. Some spices — turmeric, cumin — do both at once, stain and smell. Plastic boards aren’t immune either. Scored grooves trap food in spots that cleaning never reaches. The smell isn’t in the plastic itself. It’s in the grooves living there.

Lemon and Salt

This is where you start. Every time. Half a lemon. Coarse salt poured on the surface. Use the lemon to scrub. Acid does the chemical work, salt does the physical work. Scrub for a bit. Let it sit. Rinse with warm water. Stand the board upright to dry. Gets garlic out. Gets onion out. Gets most general food smells out. Gentle enough to do whenever you want without worrying about the wood.

Baking Soda

Lemon didn’t finish the job. This one might. Baking soda mixed with a bit of water into a paste. Spread on the surface. Leave it fifteen minutes. Scrub. Rinse well. Alkaline — works on different compounds than lemon acid does. Particularly good on fish.

White Vinegar

One part vinegar. Four parts water. Spray bottle. Spray the board after washing. Few minutes. Rinse off. Dry upright. Good follow-up when something’s still there after lemon and salt. Sanitizes at the same time. Worth keeping a bottle mixed and ready.

Coffee Grounds

Sounds strange. Works. Used coffee grounds on the surface. Rub them in gently. Few minutes. Rinse well. Absorbs odours, provides mild abrasion. Doesn’t stain maple if you rinse promptly. Best on fish specifically. Last resort before deciding the board might be done.

Which Method for Which Smell

Smell Start with If that fails Last resort
Garlic / onion Lemon + salt White vinegar spray Sand + oil
Fish / seafood Baking soda paste Coffee grounds Sand + oil
Spices (cumin, turmeric) Lemon + salt Baking soda paste Sand + oil
General food smell Lemon + salt White vinegar spray Baking soda paste
Raw meat smell Wash + bleach sanitize Lemon + salt + oil Replace the board

Things That Don’t Help

Soaking in water — warps the board and pushes the smell deeper into the wood. Actually makes it worse. Bleach — sanitizes. Doesn’t touch odour compounds in wood. Also dries the surface out if you use it regularly for this. Keep it for after raw meat only. Airing it out — the smell is inside the fibres. Air doesn’t reach it. Doesn’t work.

Oil It Afterwards

Every treatment pulls moisture out of the wood. Oil the board after. Mineral oil, rub it in with a cloth, few hours, wipe off the excess. Also helps prevent the problem in the first place. Oiled wood absorbs less than dry wood. Odour compounds don’t get as deep into a surface that’s been maintained properly.

When the Smell Means It’s Done

Some smells can’t be treated. They’re a sign the board needs to be replaced. Smell comes back a day or two after treatment — bacteria or mould has gone deeper than any surface treatment reaches. Not fixable. Replace it. Raw meat smell that won’t leave after a proper wash and sanitize — replace it. Musty earthy smell — mould in the wood. Try diluted bleach once. Comes back? Replace it immediately. The signs to replace page has the full list.

Preventing It

Rinse the board right after garlic and onion. Don’t let them sit while you finish cooking. Those two go deeper the longer they sit. Everything else is more forgiving. Those two aren’t. Oil monthly. Maintained board absorbs less. That’s really the whole prevention strategy. Separate board for raw meat. Meat smells mixed in with everything else is where the worst situations come from. One board for raw protein. Done. Full routine on the care guide.

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