Anonymous wrote:It would turn me off because obviously the place doesn't have an adequate hood. Good hoods don't allow cooking smells to permeate everything
Anonymous wrote:Check the ducts and run all of the air filters for a while. Check the oven itself. It may need to be cleaned. You can boil water in it for a while or perhaps spray with vinegar. Curry hangs in the air but if you get to the root of where it is, that my help. Don't forget to change any disposable filters, wash the floors, wash screens. Open every window in the house for entire day. Run a fan in the attic and crawl space.
Anonymous wrote:Do ozone generators really work? Anyone use one successfully (or not?)
-OP
Anonymous wrote:Check the ducts and run all of the air filters for a while. Check the oven itself. It may need to be cleaned. You can boil water in it for a while or perhaps spray with vinegar. Curry hangs in the air but if you get to the root of where it is, that my help. Don't forget to change any disposable filters, wash the floors, wash screens. Open every window in the house for entire day. Run a fan in the attic and crawl space.
Anonymous wrote:you may want to add a curry rider that states a mandatory serv-pro or disaster smoke remidation must be done before move out or before showing the home for sale.
Anonymous wrote:I remember the house we saw that smelled like curry and cat pee. We didn't get past the foyer. That Indian spice smell makes me want to gag.