Dish Washing Stylez

Here in Oz we wash dishes by filling a the sink with hot water and detergent, sometimes with a second sink with just hot water for rinsing. We then stack them in a rack thing to dry.

When Asian people come to my house and see this they are disgusted (though they try to hide it), it seems they are used to washing things under running water from the tap.

Just made me wonder how do people from around the world clean their dishes? I kind of agree with the Asians that washing everything in one pool of water is kind of gross but I've been doing it forever and I don't really want to change as it seems to work fine.

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npr.org/sections/thesalt/2017/09/11/548926054/can-you-really-not-clean-your-kitchen-sponge
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degenerate

Did this growing up in canada. It makes sense when it's a family with tons of dishes, trying to save money on hot water and soap.

I font make enough dishes to need to do it now.

I have machine for that.

that is disgusting

Burger reporting.
That's how we do it too. I clean the sink with detergent and bleach, first though. Basically (so I don't confuse anyone), it goes like this:
>make sure all dirty dishes are rinsed and stacked on the side
>clean the sink with detergent and bleach (I have a brush just for that) and rinse out
>fill one side of clean sink with hot water and dish detergent
>fill other side with a little hot water for rinsing, but I also use the tap to make sure all the soap is off
>wash dishes in order of least filthy to most ( also in order of most delicate to least): glasses, cups, bowls, plates, serving dishes, flatware, spatulas and cooking spoons, cooking knives, pots and pans.
>put dishes in dish racks to dry
>eveitably end up hand drying a bunch because my dish racks are too small.

How often do you invite asians to your house?

Since Australia is 90% Asian now, probably more than you'd think.

Why wouldnt you have one sink wih soap and hot water to scrub and soak, then just rinse with running tap in second sink? You can even just drain the first sink once everything in scrubbed and rinse in the same one....

Rinsing in the same water is gross.

I'm also in Australia and I wash in a sink full of water and detergent but rinse under a running tap. The tap has like a shower head on it.

And like most alpha males I do not wear those poofy gloves.

>Here in Oz we wash dishes by filling a the sink with hot water and detergent, sometimes with a second sink with just hot water for rinsing. We then stack them in a rack thing to dry.
That is how my family washed dishes, in America, and how we were taught to wash dishes in Home Ed class. Now I rinse the dishes under hot running water, because rinsing them all in the same sink of water seemed like not the best idea. Still stack them in a drying rack.
(Of course all of this assumes I'm in a place with no dishwasher, if there is a dishwasher I'd just use that)

I'm a white bong and I use running water, but my mum taught me to fill the sink. I feel like it's the same as taking a bath; you're sitting in dirty water.

>sitting in dirty water.
This is why I take a shower, then get in the bath. I only take baths to relax ('cause I'm too poor to have a outdoor jacuzzi), so it seems silly to get in dirty.

This is the way they do it in Japan if my pornos haven't lied to me. I could live without baths but they are nice with your partner and a joint.

You also wear shoes in the house and think wiping with just dry toilet paper is acceptable

Murrican here. I put them on the dishwasher and press start. They come out hot and clean.

I rarely handwash more than 1-2 things at a time, so it'd be wasteful to fill up the sink, but if there was a pile of dishes I would. Most of my shit ends up in the dishwasher anyways, so it doesn't matter.

that's how we did it growing up.
my sister and i would each take washing in the side of the sink with hot water and soap, or rinsing in the other side with cold water and placing in the drainer
kind of icky now that i think about it but i wasn't as squeamish back then
i would kill to be back in time to then and washing dishes after dinner with my gross fucking sister when i really wanted to be watching star trek
funny how life works

American here. put in dishwasher and done. or if i forgot to buy soap for dishwasher i wash under running water, your method is nasty by the way.

If you have a lot of washing then OP is best way as otherwise you are using lots of water and soap.
It was how I did it when I was a kitchen porter

I put them in the dishwasher and press a button because I live in the first world

This. Life is utterly miserable without a dishwashing machine. Especially when there are more than just one or two people in a household.

Australia is the driest continent on earth. It's 80% fucking desert, and even the fringes around the sea are drying out (the El Nino gives us regular 5-7 year cycles of drought).

It's one of many reasons why mass-importing Asians is just the dumbest fucking idea ever. Slopes don't give a flying fuck about sustainability or droughts- if the tap lets them use 150 litres of water to wash their dishes today, it'll definitely do the same tomorrow, right? There's a reason places like China and Thailand are ecological paradises, right?

Even now, drive past any bridge on the Parramatta river at 2am and you will see bucktoothed, slanty-eyed cocksuckers fishing for anything they can get, and when they catch anything- juvenile or not- they'll skin it, gut it, and run it through a mincer on the spot so they can't be prosecuted by NSW fisheries. There are dozens of tackle shops around western Sydney that are open until 3am, what does that tell you?

Pretty much everything in Sydney Harbour/Parramatta river west of the Gladesville bridge is toxic due to dioxins from Homebush. Does our runty yellow friend care? Fuck no! You can find disgusting yellow filth poaching seafood anywhere within 20kms of the opera house, 24/7.

I spent 20 years using OP's wash-and-rinse method and only switched when I found a dual-dishdrawer system that used less water and energy than handwashing. That and I vehemently oppose the migration into Australia of these cultures that do shit like torture animals, poach seafood, and wash dishes under running water on the world's driest continent.

Feels good living in the eternal Anglo paradise that is Perth

American. I rinse in running water then use dishwasher. My dishwasher is good, now. So no need for more. But when I was poor I washed under very hot water, gloves, soap. Then set out to air dry. My new dishwasher does this better though, lol.

oath.

only problem is the fucking boongs and now the africans are realizing they fucked everywhere else and now they are trying to fuck here. Luckily the boongs are at war with them trying to prove which of the black guys are the worst of all. Mirrabooka and Koondoola and Balga are all no go zones.

This is actually the proper way to wash dishes and the reason kitchen sinks have two sections. You're supposed to put the stopper on one side, fill it up with soapy water, and rinse on the other side.

That said, we don't have enough dishes to wash at a time to justify this so we just wash under running water, applying soap with a sponge, instead of letting dishes soak in soapy water.

I usually wash my stuff right after using it, so I run water over the dishes. But I only need to run the water for like 20-30 seconds tops, 3 or 4 times until I'm done since the food residue is still fresh. If there's a particularly stuck on bit of food, I turn the water off and scrub the residue off.

I was taught to move a filthy sponge ineffectually across the dish in a pool of dirty yet foamy sink water, then to place the dish onto a rack where the damp conditions foster the growth of bacteria. Fortunately for me, I'm a rebel and I don't listen to what my parents have to say so I put dishes in the dishwasher which steam cleans with detergent to remove the most resilient of biofilms.

Noongars are alright, just give em a smoke or a buck or two.
Haven't really come across Africans in the based Golden Triangle

WHICH and WHY

Steel wool for abrasion you goddamned peasant

>he doesn't use an orbital sander

alpha males use their three-day-growth

they sure do

I only have one sink, so there is no way to have a soapy side and a rinse side. I've gotten use to it. I let the dishes soak for ten minutes then run warm water while I wash them with a rag. no soap involved if they soak

Does Veeky Forums not own a dishwasher?
These fuckers are like the most convenient thing on the planet and save water too

That's disgusting. You're going to have soap residue on everything

I put soap on a sponge then scrub everything on the sink (which has been soaked in water before), adding a little water to the sponge when it gets too dry, then run the water and rinse everything off. No need to have the water running while you're scrubbing.

My mother does that too OP and I feel the same disgust about it. When you're really dirty (like covered in mud or whatever) do you take a bath or a shower to get clean?
npr.org/sections/thesalt/2017/09/11/548926054/can-you-really-not-clean-your-kitchen-sponge
The fact that kitchen sponges become bacteria colonies after only a 1-2 days of use makes it worse, since they can only really be disinfected by boiling them on the stove for 10-15 minutes.
I use running water sometimes if I only have 1 plate, bowl, or cup but mostly the dishwashing machine with the sanitize option.

Won't boiling the sponge ruin it?

>noko sage

Mage goes in all threads. And no it doesn't ruin it, boiling makes it expand and it pushes out all the bacteria from the pores hence the sponge over anything. #science

Have an old Tupperware filled with soapy water so I can dip my sponge when it gets dry. Saves a lot of soap in the long run. Then I fill one sink with hot soapy water and the other I leave empty for rinsing. I let them air dry on a dish rack.

I just drop the box in the bin on my way out.