šŸ’¾ Archived View for idiomdrottning.org ā€ŗ washing-dishes captured on 2024-05-10 at 10:55:19. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

How I wash dishes using very little water

The best part about this method is that you can measure how much water youā€™re using so you can compare it to other methods so if Iā€™m wrong youā€™ll find out easily.

I use a bowl, often I just pick whatever bowl or pot Iā€™m cleaning thatā€™s the biggest unless itā€™s a super sensitive ā€œnever scratch itā€ thing. Sometimes just a liā€™l glass or jar is fine. Just to have something to get a nice mix of water and detergent.

In my old place I had the worldā€™s smallest sink so I used a wooden cutting board over the sink and placed the bowl on top of the board. In my new place the work surface is instead whatā€™s small while the sink is big so I place the bowl in the sink itself.

I put dish soap and some hot water in the bowl.

Using that to clean stuff, putting the cleaned-but-unrinsed stuff in the sink. In my old place Iā€™d have a gap beside the wooden board so I could put things down there. In my new place I just place ā€˜em down there beside the bowl.

When I have too much stuff to rinse, I take a break from washing stuff and rinse off things under running water. I rinse into the bowl itself so I see how much water Iā€™m using while rinsing.

For utensils I hold a couple of them in my hand at once so I can rinse several at one time. I sometimes toweldry stuff right after rinsing them, other times I just place ā€˜em to air dry after rinsing them. Which leaves water streaks but if itā€™s pandemic times and no-one else is gonna come visit here ever, itā€™s fine.

Protein, which wheat dough residue is, is easiest to clean with cold water. Fat and sugar is easier with hot water.

If something doesnā€™t get clean easily right away, I put it aside while I do other stuff, occasionally returning to the difficult thing. Having patience while the detergent works its physics in between attempts often saves me from having to scrub desperately.

I use a brush for most things. For sieves I use a soft rag. I donā€™t like using a sponge for doing the dishes.

As I mentioned, if I donā€™t have a big bowl I sometimes use just a liā€™l jar or glass or empty container, just to get a nice mix of detergent and water in. Those times I lose out on the ability to see how much water Iā€™m using and on the ability to dip things into the bowl which is sometimes a good and timesaving way to get detergent onto them. But Iā€™m OK with that.

If I donā€™t even have any small things to use, like letā€™s say Iā€™ve got lots of cutlery but no glasses or cups, I just bring out a big clean bowl just for the purps of washing the dishes.

If Iā€™m doing very many dishes at the same time, sometimes things get too grody and then I just start over with one or all these elements.