Also, if your fridge is still flooding after cleaning, the drain tube behind the fridge might be disconnected. You’ll need to pull the unit out, remove the back panel, and reattach the rubber tube. (Time to call a repair person unless you are very handy.) That tiny hole is the unsung hero of your kitchen. When it works, you never think about it. When it clogs, it ruins your afternoon. Spend ten minutes this weekend giving it a flush. Your lettuce (and your socks) will thank you. Have you ever had a mysterious fridge flood? Tell me about it in the comments below—I promise I’ve seen worse.
You check the door seals. You check the water filter. But the culprit is usually much smaller and harder to see: the fridge drain hole.
Mix 1 tablespoon of baking soda into a cup of hot water. Pour it into the drain hole using a funnel or the turkey baster.
That water runs down the wall, into a small trough, and through a tiny hole (usually about the size of a pencil eraser). From there, it travels down a tube to a drip pan underneath the fridge where it evaporates naturally.
If you see ice, pour a cup of hot (not boiling) water directly into the trough. Wait 5 minutes.
Follow that with a cup of white vinegar. You’ll hear it fizzing inside the wall. Let it sit for 5 minutes. This breaks down the biological gunk.
Use the turkey baster to blast a stream of hot water down the hole. It should drain immediately without backing up.
Let’s talk about that tiny, forgotten hole at the back of your fridge, why it turns into a swamp, and how to clean it in ten minutes without breaking anything. Here’s a quick science lesson. Your fridge works by removing heat and humidity. That humidity has to go somewhere. As the fridge cools, moisture condenses on the back wall (the evaporator coils).
Also, if your fridge is still flooding after cleaning, the drain tube behind the fridge might be disconnected. You’ll need to pull the unit out, remove the back panel, and reattach the rubber tube. (Time to call a repair person unless you are very handy.) That tiny hole is the unsung hero of your kitchen. When it works, you never think about it. When it clogs, it ruins your afternoon. Spend ten minutes this weekend giving it a flush. Your lettuce (and your socks) will thank you. Have you ever had a mysterious fridge flood? Tell me about it in the comments below—I promise I’ve seen worse.
You check the door seals. You check the water filter. But the culprit is usually much smaller and harder to see: the fridge drain hole.
Mix 1 tablespoon of baking soda into a cup of hot water. Pour it into the drain hole using a funnel or the turkey baster.
That water runs down the wall, into a small trough, and through a tiny hole (usually about the size of a pencil eraser). From there, it travels down a tube to a drip pan underneath the fridge where it evaporates naturally.
If you see ice, pour a cup of hot (not boiling) water directly into the trough. Wait 5 minutes.
Follow that with a cup of white vinegar. You’ll hear it fizzing inside the wall. Let it sit for 5 minutes. This breaks down the biological gunk.
Use the turkey baster to blast a stream of hot water down the hole. It should drain immediately without backing up.
Let’s talk about that tiny, forgotten hole at the back of your fridge, why it turns into a swamp, and how to clean it in ten minutes without breaking anything. Here’s a quick science lesson. Your fridge works by removing heat and humidity. That humidity has to go somewhere. As the fridge cools, moisture condenses on the back wall (the evaporator coils).