Monday, June 10, 2024

What's Going On Inside Your Dishwasher



If you live alone and eat sandwiches like I do, you only have a few dirty dishes that will take forever to fill a dishwasher, you you just hand wash them. But most Americans live in families or groups of friends, and use dishwashers all the time even though they don't really know what's happening inside those things. Minute Food does the heavy lifting for you and explains what goes on inside the dishwasher that you can't see. They also explain in detail how you should load a dishwasher, which might resolve some family arguments. Dishwashers take a long time to run, but they save your time, and they use the minimum amount of water to get the job done.

That said, I have the world's cheapest dishwasher, and it would not remove food from dishes even way back when it was new and worked. Don't buy the world's cheapest dishwasher.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

What are your favorite sandwiches, Miss C?

Miss Cellania said...

At a restaurant, barbecue! Or roast beef. Or chicken. At home, it's salami, ham, grilled cheese, tuna salad, or whatever is available.

Anonymous said...

I love a good roast beef! Salami would hit the spot too. Now I'm hungry and it's two more hours to lunch. :)

WilliamRocket said...

Back on topic ... I had a friend who worked for Fisher & Paykel here in New Zealand, back when they developed the Dish Drawer,

He told me all about how clever they were being with their design and how they proved to themselves the longevity of each part.

I was impressed but at the time, broke.

But I remembered and when I started building houses on my own I put a DishDrawer in each one I did, and obviously in my own when I started to realise a profit.

For me the fact that, if you DishDrawer, you do not have to bend down to near floor level to put dishes in, made it my favourite straight away.

I've built 4 houses for myself to live in and now live in a run down 115 year old square front villa in a provincial town (I went through a sea change in my life choices and now rescue cats rather than make money) and each house had and has a DishDrawer.

I don't know if they are available in America, but if they are and you can, you all should get one, they work very well ... I run mine on 'Fast' and 'Eco' and the cycle takes 33 minutes and everything comes out sparkling and like new.

My daughter recently bought her own house and because she is a woman of taste and intelligence she also bought a DishDrawer to go in it !

Watching your daughter grow up and then get older is a privilege, but it also stops any Dorian Grey things happening, lol.

Neither I nor my daughter have any financial interest in the Fisher & Paykel company or any reseller.

With me its just a platonic love for an inanimate machine that looks and works well .... and that doesn't hurt my back by making me bend over.