If your silverware has started looking dull, gray, or oddly yellowed, it doesn’t always mean it needs aggressive polishing or a long scrubbing session. In many cases, what you’re seeing is tarnish — and there’s a surprisingly simple way to deal with it using things you probably already have in your kitchen.
The trick uses aluminum foil, baking soda, salt, and hot water to help lift tarnish off silverware in just a few minutes. And the satisfying part is that it doesn’t work by “scrubbing” the discoloration away. It works through a chemical reaction that helps transfer tarnish from the silver onto the foil instead.
It’s quick, inexpensive, and especially handy when you have several pieces to clean at once. That said, it’s best used thoughtfully: it can strip away intentional dark patina in decorative grooves, and it’s not ideal for every finish or heirloom piece. For everyday tarnished silverware, though, it’s one of the easiest cleaning tricks to try. Silver tarnish is largely silver sulfide, and silver is known to darken in the presence of sulfur compounds in air.