Method + problem playbook
Authority graph: primary / preferred method + problem playbook.
primary fit for cooked-on grease using degreasing.
Soil accumulates where airflow, water, or contact concentrates residue.
Ranked for cooked-on grease on appliances.
These products are selected based on what actually works for the problem, surface, and cleaning goal.
Start with Start here, then use the other picks for heavier buildup, maintenance, or a stronger option.
Best balance of cleaning power, surface safety, and everyday usability.

Method
Professional-use context: Kitchen oils, fingerprints, and organic films on hard surfaces.
Use with extra label care here—tradeoffs or limits matter more for this pairing.
Ranks #3 here—Simple Green Pro HD Heavy-Duty Cleaner leads for this problem on this surface.

Simple Green
Professional-use context: Kitchen oils, fingerprints, and organic films on hard surfaces.
Heavy-duty / pro-style option for tougher jobs.
Listed for this problem and surface, with strong chemistry alignment and no major scenario caveat flagged.

Simple Green
Professional-use context: Kitchen oils, fingerprints, and organic films on hard surfaces.
Use with extra label care here—tradeoffs or limits matter more for this pairing.
Ranks #4 here—Simple Green Pro HD Heavy-Duty Cleaner leads for this problem on this surface.

Krud Kutter
Professional-use context: Kitchen oils, fingerprints, and organic films on hard surfaces.
Listed for this problem and surface, with strong chemistry alignment and no major scenario caveat flagged.
Ranks #2 here—Simple Green Pro HD Heavy-Duty Cleaner leads for this problem on this surface.
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Degreasing is connected to cooked-on grease in the graph because it can address that problem type in the right context. Surface compatibility still determines whether it is actually appropriate.
This playbook usually fails when the visible problem is misidentified, the surface cannot tolerate the method safely, or the finish step leaves behind residue or unevenness.
No. A method-problem relationship does not automatically mean every surface is a safe fit. The surface layer still controls the risk profile.
Dwell-and-lift cleaning: defined technique, compatible surfaces, and clear stop points.
Appliance guidance for stainless, enamel, glass, plastic, control panels, grease film, fingerprints, food residue, and electronics-safe cleaning.
Cabinet guidance for painted, stained, laminate, and thermofoil faces exposed to grease, fingerprints, moisture, and edge wear.
Countertop guidance for food-contact residue, sink rings, grease film, disinfectant residue, stone and laminate differences, and heat risk.
Granite countertop guidance for sealed stone behavior, water spots, residue film, sealer wear, and acid etching caution.
Laminate guidance for seam moisture, grease film, scuffs, cleaner residue, heat marks, and finish-safe maintenance.
Painted surface guidance for doors, trim, rails, cabinetry, wall paint, fingerprints, scuffs, degreasing limits, and finish dulling.
Appliance buildup: what it usually is, safe method fit, and when to stop.
Buildup on appliances: what it usually is, safe method fit, and when to stop.
Burnt residue: what it usually is, safe method fit, and when to stop.
Cabinet grime: what it usually is, safe method fit, and when to stop.
Exhaust hood film: what it usually is, safe method fit, and when to stop.
Grease buildup: what it usually is, safe method fit, and when to stop.