Home & Kitchen - The Housewife's Blog

Household & Nutrition

Brigitte Holzner · Reading time approx. 6 minutes

Fridge Odor Despite a Clean Refrigerator: What's Really Behind It and Why Most Home Remedies Never Solved the Problem

The odor keeps returning. Not because you're not cleaning thoroughly enough, but because all traditional solutions fail at a crucial point that hardly anyone knows about

A tidy kitchen doesn't say anything about what's going on in the refrigerator air.

It's an experience many know and few speak about: The refrigerator has been thoroughly cleaned, baking soda is inside, lemon halves have been tried, and yet, after a week at the latest, that faint, musty odor returns. Not strong enough to immediately raise an alarm. But strong enough to make you wonder every time if something isn't right.

The obvious conclusion: You didn't clean thoroughly enough. Or the baking soda was too old. Or you just need to do it more often.

This conclusion is wrong. It's not due to a lack of diligence — but because the problem was never where you were looking.

What really happens in the fridge

Volatile organic compounds are continuously formed—even in foods that still look perfect.

From the moment of purchase, food begins to ripen. This process is completely natural and it has a side effect that most people are unaware of: food continuously releases volatile organic compounds into the air. These invisible particles float freely in the closed refrigerator and settle on everything. On the strawberries you just bought. On the yogurt. On the meat from the day before.

Everyone knows the result: the yogurt smells slightly of last Tuesday's fish. The butter takes on the smell of leftovers. Fresh herbs suddenly smell musty, even though they aren't bad yet.

Cleaning doesn't solve this problem because cleaning removes what is on surfaces. The particles in the air are unaffected by this. And because the source, the food itself, constantly releases new compounds, the odor returns within a few days after even the most thorough cleaning.

This is not a failure of the person who cleans. It is the nature of the problem.

Why Baking Soda, Activated Charcoal, and Coffee Grounds Fail

The difference between absorbing and decomposing, and why it changes everything in practice.

Baking soda, activated carbon, and all common refrigerator freshener products work on the same basic principle: they absorb odor particles. They absorb or bind them until there's no more space. Then they stop working.

This is not a product defect. This is the principle itself, and no one writes it on the packaging.

Baking soda neutralizes certain acidic and basic compounds through chemical reaction. It's useful — but it saturates quickly, only captures a portion of the odor spectrum, and has little effect on free air.

 

Coffee grounds and lemon halves merely mask the odor with another one. The root cause remains untouched.

Activated carbon is more effective — it binds a broader spectrum of compounds and has a significantly larger surface area than baking soda. But activated carbon also eventually fills up. It stores what it absorbs. And once it's saturated, there's no more space for new particles.

"I've tried everything" is heard so often for this reason — because all these approaches fail at the same point: they postpone the problem, but don't solve it.

BAKING SODA, ACTIVATED CHARCOAL & CO.

 

Absorb and store odor particles.

 

They become saturated — then it's over.     

 

Must be replaced regularly.   

The problem returns. 

CATALYTIC DECOMPOSITION

 

Decomposes particles at a molecular level. 

 

Collects nothing — therefore never gets full.

 

Effective within 24 hours.

 

Lasts a lifetime.

A sponge eventually gets saturated with water. A device that evaporates water never gets full.

 

FrischPuls evaporates.

The other principle and where it comes from

What really helps is not improved absorption—it's an entirely different principle: catalytic decomposition.

Instead of collecting odor particles, they are broken down at a molecular level—into harmless water vapor and CO₂. Because nothing is collected in this process, there is no saturation. The device doesn't get full. It doesn't stop working.

This principle is not new. Professional cold storage facilities, pharmaceutical warehouses, and medical sterilization rooms have been using catalytic air purification for decades wherever air must remain permanently clean and continuous filter changes are not possible. The technology has proven its worth because it is the only principle that works permanently and structurally.

Until now, this wasn't available for household refrigerators. Not because the technology was lacking—but because the market thrives on products that are repurchased regularly.

THOMAS KELLER - Founder RahDawg

 

Former Quality Manager in Food Logistics

 

"In commercial cold storage, catalytic air purification is standard - food stays fresh without ever changing a filter. When I retired, I asked myself a question: Why isn't this available for household refrigerators?

 

I knew the answer. The market has no interest in solving a problem once and for all. So, we developed FrischPuls, the same technology, compact enough for any kitchen."

What FrischPuls does concretely and what you will never have to do again

Put it in. Done. No repurchasing, no reminders, no more thinking.

FrischPuls is a small stainless steel cylinder — food-safe, sealed, sturdy. You place it in the refrigerator. That's it.

Within 24 hours, the difference is noticeable. No power, no app, no setup. The nano-catalytic core immediately begins to decompose odor particles and bacteria in the refrigerator air. Because nothing is collected in the process, there is no saturation and no exhaustion — the device simply continues to work.

No batteries. No refills. - Just set it down once. And forget about it for the rest of its life.

SAFE FOR FOOD, CHILDREN AND PETS


FrischPuls itself emits nothing into the air; it decomposes particles but emits nothing. The decomposition products are water vapor and CO, in minimal quantities. Food-safe, odorless, and completely chemical-free.

The Honest Bill

A question many don't ask: What is the actual cost of not solving the problem?

FrischPuls is not a cheap product. It is the product you buy once.

 

Per day, that's less than 2 cents. This is not a projection for advertising purposes. It's a simple calculation: solve it once, or keep buying it again and again without anything changing.

What users report:

Our conclusion:

It's not about how often you clean or how carefully you store food. These things are good and right. But refrigerator odor originates in the air, and no sponge or home remedy has ever truly intervened there.

The moment someone opens the refrigerator and notices nothing—no wrinkled nose, no question, no brief pause—is no small moment.

 

It is proof that the problem is solved. Not postponed. Solved.

FrischPuls · Once. Forever.

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If you are not satisfied with the product after up to 30 days, we will refund every cent. No questions asked.

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@Home&Kitchen - 2026

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