In the consumer products business, we oftentimes assay products containing soap, even soap bars. A small bit of soap (fatty acid salts) will dissolve in organic solvents, so the fatty acid salts will deposit in the GC liner/head of column, so in subsequent injections involving trimethylsilyl derivatizing agents a small amount of the deposited salts will form fatty acid trimethyl silyl esters, elute, and have spectra of hexadecanoic, lauric, stearic acid, etc. This is tough to avoid in our business, as assaying soap products by GC for stuff like glycerin and sorbitol are so easy. If we want to establish that the peaks really do come from the sample, we do reagent blank injections first and compare the peak sizes to those. So, as Answer Man replied: cleanliness can help here.