I use the powdered Boric Acid to keep fire scale from forming on small tools when I harden them.
I use it mostly making small engraving background texture punches & stamps, but also handy when making small parts.
Mix enough alcohol (I use cheap rubbing alcohol) with the boric acid to form a thick paste.
Coat the tool with the paste. The alcohol will start to quickly evaporate and leave a hard coating or shell around the part. Recoat to build it up to make sure it's completely sealed up.
Light the coating to burn off the remainder of the alcohol in the coating and you'll be left with a hard but brittle shell of boric acid. That will protect the tool (punch, blade, graver, ect) from heat scale when hardening.
Handle carefully so as not to break it off while heating (brittle),,it will heat up as the same color as the steel inside of it.
When you quench (oil or water) the boric acid shell will shatter and completely break free of the part leaving it clean and bright,,ready for annealing.
Easy to see the heat annealing colors on the clean steel.
Wear eye protection of course.
You can get boric acid cheap at home improvement stores in the garden section. Sold as insect killer for roaches. Small and large containers,usually plastic with a nozzle top.
Also sold as rug treatment for fleas.
Check the lables,,they are usually 98% boric acid.