If you’ve ever noticed that the more you “deep clean” your oven or stovetop, the faster the grease seems to return…
You’re not imagining it.
There’s a simple reason cleaning can feel like a losing battle.
And it has nothing to do with laziness.
If you’ve ever noticed that the more you “deep clean” your oven or stovetop, the faster the grease seems to return…
You’re not imagining it.
There’s a simple reason cleaning can feel like a losing battle.
And it has nothing to do with laziness.
You know the feeling.
You look at the oven door or stovetop and feel that slight pit in your stomach.
You know it’s going to take time.
You know the fumes are coming.
You know your arms are going to ache.
It’s not the cleaning you hate.
It’s the fight.
And that’s the part nobody has fixed.
Most of us were taught that clean equals effort.
So we grab:
Steel wool
Abrasive sponges
“Heavy-duty” pastes
And we scrub until the grease is gone.
But here’s what rarely gets mentioned:
Abrasive scrubbing can create microscopic surface wear on glass, enamel, and stainless steel.
Not visible scratches.
But enough texture for grease to cling to more easily next time.
Which creates a frustrating cycle:
You scrub to clean.
The surface becomes slightly rougher.
Grease bonds faster.
You scrub harder next time.
That’s the paradox.
The harder you fight it, the more it feels like it fights back.
And this is where most cleaners get it wrong.
Years ago, a physician with a background in chemical reactions began asking a different question:
If grime bonds through chemistry…
Why are we trying to remove it through friction?
Instead of designing something that required more force, he focused on something else:
Release.
After he passed, his daughter Sarah discovered his notebook.
Inside was a simple concept:
If you break the bond first, you don’t need to scrub.
That one shift changes everything.
The solution became what is now known as Dr Clean.
At the center of it is a small purple tablet.
When activated, it creates an oxygen-based bubbling reaction that releases thousands of micro-bubbles.
Those micro-bubbles work their way under baked-on grease and lift it away from the surface.
If that sounds too simple, that’s exactly the point — the hard part happens before your cloth ever touches the surface.
Instead of sanding the grime off…
You loosen it.
Instead of fighting it…
You wipe it.
Best of all, there’s no harsh “chemical burn” smell.
Traditional oven cleaners rely on harsh chemicals that can leave behind residue. The next time you heat your oven, that residue off-gasses into your food the next time you cook.
Dr Clean uses oxygen-based release instead of heavy chemical force, so there’s nothing harsh left behind.
That’s what makes it powerful and fume-free at the same time.
And for anyone who cooks daily, that matters.
Most cleaners rely on chemical strength or scrubbing power.
Dr Clean relies on bond disruption.
Which means:
And because you’re not roughing up the surface, grease doesn’t cling back as aggressively the next time.
That’s why people describe the first wipe the same way:
“I kept waiting for the hard part.”
It never came.
Once people see it work on the oven, they test it everywhere:
Stovetops coated in burnt grease.
Blackened pots and pans that looked permanently stained.
Soap scum, mold, and mildew in showers.
Hard water stains clouding shower glass.
Coffee stains on counters.
Tables, floors, everyday hard surfaces.
Even a rusty sink drain.
The pattern is always the same:
Spray.
Wait.
Wipe.
Relief.
And once you experience that first wipe, scrubbing starts to feel unnecessary.
The oven is usually the hardest test. Once that comes clean, everything else feels easy.
Here’s something else most people don’t calculate.
Look under your sink.
You likely have:
Oven cleaner
Degreaser
Glass spray
Bathroom cleaner
Stainless steel polish
Tile solution
That’s often $80–$100+ worth of bottles at any given time.
Most of them are mostly water.
You’re paying for:
Plastic
Shipping weight
Marketing
Specialization
Dr Clean is a concentrated tablet.
You add your own water.
One formula.
Multiple surfaces.
Less clutter.
Less repurchasing.
That’s why some customers joke that it “replaces half an aisle.”
And once they switch, they rarely go back.
Traditional big box retailers make their money on volume—they want you to buy five bottles, not one.
One product for ovens, another for glass, another for bathrooms, etc.
When a single tablet replaces an entire aisle of specialty cleaners, it actually hurts a retailer's bottom line.
“Not surprisingly, big-box stores prefer products that maximize their profits,” Sarah explains.
“By staying independent and shipping directly to homes, we don't have to water down our formula to pay for expensive shelf space or middleman markups.”
And that’s exactly why she chose to make it accessible now.
Why She Slashed Prices Instead of Selling Out
For most households, replacing just three of the bottles under the sink already costs more than this.
So instead of keeping the formula small and priced like a specialty product, Sarah made a different decision.
To move more homes out of the scrubbing cycle quickly, she authorized up to 65% off this current production run.
Not as a clearance.
Not to chase volume.
But to accelerate adoption while the formula remains independent.
“If someone tries it on their toughest mess and it doesn’t change how they feel about cleaning, we’ll refund it,” Sarah says. “Simple as that.”
One interesting pattern Sarah noticed:
People rarely use it on just one surface.
They start with the oven.
Then the stovetop.
Then the shower glass.
Once one surface comes clean easily, it feels strange to leave the rest untouched.
Many customers say the most satisfying part wasn’t fixing one surface — it was resetting the entire home at once.
That’s why many households choose enough to reset the whole home all at once while the current batch is available.
Before You Close This Page
Dr Clean is produced in controlled, small batches to preserve the bubbling reaction her father designed.
Production is intentionally limited.
When this run sells through, ordering closes while the next batch is prepared.
And the 65% pricing does not carry forward into future releases.
If you’re seeing this page, stock from the current run is available.
Based on previous launches, once word begins spreading, inventory tends to move significantly faster than expected.
And the most common message Sarah receives afterward?
“I wish I hadn’t waited.”
The next time you face a “deep clean” weekend, you’ll make one of two decisions.
Reach for abrasives and repeat the cycle.
Or break it.
If this page is still active, the 65% window for the current production run is open.
You can check availability below.