dishwasher. it uses way less water than even filling the sink once. it obviously uses more electricity than doing it by hand though. you gotta think about the value of the time saved as well.
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Depends whether you wash in hot or cold water. If you use more hot water washing dishes by hand then it'll consume more electricity too.
I have 4 children. I would literally sell a kidney to buy a dishwasher, if I couldn't afford one. Fuck washing dishes by hand. Anyone who doesn't agree with me is either brain damaged or a masochist.
Everything into the dishwasher. Why would I waste my time with washing dishes. Dishwashers are more efficient and often more hygienic because of higher temperatures and optimized wash and rinse cycles. I put everything in there, even the stuff that doesn't belong. Apart from my good knives. I hate washing by hand...
One tip though: if your machine is connected to hot water. Let the hot water on the tap run until the water is hot. This helps the machine get a better cleaning result.
Dishwasher. I've done hand washing and dishwashing depending on where I'm living each year. Dishwasher does a better job than me, uses less water than me, and saves me time. I run it at night and put away the dishes in the morning.
Dishwashers are definitely the way to go. They use less water than hand washing (source: https://www.popsci.com/environment/science-of-using-dishwasher-vs-handwashing/).
I'm so firmly in the dishwasher camp that I installed a second dishwasher in my kitchen a few years ago and it has been one of the best upgrades I ever made on my house. I don't think I'll ever be able to live somewhere with a single dishwasher again.
Also, there's no need to buy any expensive pods or dishwasher detergent. The cheap store brand powder detergent works the best. Personally I use the Great Value brand powdered detergent and have been very satisfied with it. I do not pre rinse any dishes either. I just lazily scrape off my dishes in the garbage and put them straight in the dishwasher.
If you do go the dishwasher route, be sure to do your research and get a good dishwasher if you have a choice. I went with Bosch dishwashers based on reviews from Consumer Reports and have been highly satisfied with their performance. They're so quiet my wife sometimes opens them mid cycle and gets a surprise. I find this hilarious because they shine a red spot on the floor to let you know that it is running.
Hello fellow Technology Connections watcher.
Technology Connections and his stranglehold on dishwasher conversations lol
I use a dishwasher. It's easier and uses less water.
Machine, except those items that cannot go in (mostly wood and good knives)
By hand. I've only lived in a place with a dishwasher for 1 year. During that time I felt like the dishes never got truly clean. Like if shit was stuck to a plate or bowl it would need manual intervention. If a pan sat for a day and shit got really caked on it wasn't even worth putting it in the dish washer. I don't see how it saves on water either. Like I don't leave the water running while I wash the dishes. I don't fill the sink. I rinse a plate. Turn the water off. Scrub it down. Rinse it again. Water is on for maybe 5-10 seconds a dish. Scrubbing does all the work.
Mentally, it's kinda like taking a shower in the sense that my mind goes to a completely different place and all things that bothered me before are flushed out. That change in activity or environment really lets me process shit in a way that meling in front of a screen doesn't.
What am I, a caveman?
By hand. I don't have a dishwasher. The place I rent didn't come with one, and I don't have the space for my own (plus no money). I think I've only ever met one person with a dishwasher, although I suppose I wouldn't know if someone has one unless I either go to their house or they bring it up. I don't see the issue with doing dishes by hand, and I pay a flat rate for water so water usage is not a concern to me.
Dishwasher. It saves a fuck ton of time. I've heard it saves water, but I haven't seen studies. I have a hard time believing it could use more if it's full. Regardless, it's faster. I hate chores. Make machines do them.
Dishwashers are superior to handwashing in basically every regard, and as such I lean towards it for everything in my kitchen that can handle it.
Dishwasher for dishes, pots and pans get scrubbed by hand, simply because I can fit 6 or 7 plates in the same space pots take while it only takes a few seconds to scrub a pot.
Dishwasher! Only my cast iron and stainless steel as well as my knives by hand. I spend too much effort sharpening them to throw them in the dishwasher.
Recently, I was house-sitting for friends, and the dishwasher broke. I had to pause it every few minutes to empty the water by hand. It amounted to 2 shallow oven dishes' worth of water. And not filled to the brim, either: I had to be able to bring them to the sink without spilling.
It was a really, really small quantity of water.
dishwasher.
I have read comparisons in the past. I don't have them to hand, but the conclusion was that dishwashers were more efficient in terms of water use and energy. However, the type of hand-washing that it was being compared to was itself a very inefficient style of washing (tap running continuously? two full sinks for rinsing? I can't recall, but not the way that we do).
So handwashing the way we do is probably more efficient but it seems that there isn't THAT much in it either way, and given the time taken and that we cook from scratch almost all the time, we use a dishwasher for the vast bulk of stuff.
By hand. We are only two people, and we usually clean after we cook/eat. When one is cleaning only 2 plates + a pot/pan at a time, it is easy to use little water. Spray of soap, metal scrub, sponge scrub, and then turn the tap on to rinse for a few seconds. Utensils get individually scrubbed and then all rinsed together for a few seconds.
Maybe when we have kids a dish washer will make sense.
I use a dishwasher, but half of the dishes either don't get cleaned or aren't dishwasher safe so I have to wash by hand. I tried cleaning the filter, using detergent in the prewash, and running the water until it's hot before starting the dishwasher, and none of it did shit.
You are they lucky one today! Here is just the video for all your dishwasher woes!
It's been a while since I watched that video, but didn't the person you reply to address every point stated in the video?
The only other point not stated in the video (but is mentioned in the more recent video) is to not use a brand that also sells pods, because they're likely making the powder shittier to upsell you on pods.
By hand. Haven't had a dishwasher or air conditioning for at least 10 years
Both.
I tend to wash the larger stuff by hand so it's not wasting so much space in the dishwasher.
Teeny tiny kitchen, I don't have the space to put a dishwasher, not even a small one on the countertop.
Dishwasher for sure. Many years ago, I had a dishwashing job where I had to wash everything by hand, and that made me really appreciate dishwashers ever since.
I do it by hand because I rent a small 1 bedroom flat. Those donβt typically have dishwashers here.
My last place had one though, and what an absolute godsend. Iβll definitely get one when/if I ever buy my own place.
Both because the dishwasher in our apartment sucks ass and always leaves like 5 things that need to be redone by hand.
By hand.
One of my first jobs was a KP so I'm used to washing by hand.
Yes we had a dishwasher, had to prewash everything because it was so shit.
Also, never, ever put a chefs knives through the dishwasher.
I wash as I go when cooking because it's much easier and you're not left with a load of minging dirty dishes after a meal
I usually do both because I have never had a dishwasher that actually cleans anything off the dishes, no matter what I do or what cleaner I use. I am at the point I think they're a myth propagated by Big Dishwasher. JK... or am I! Yeah, they probably do exist, but just for everyone else but me.
Unless your dishwasher truly has something wrong with it, thereβs just a few things you should do every time for it to work flawlessly.
- remove big food particles off dishes (sauces, peanut butter is fine)
- if your dishwasher and sink share the same water line, most likely they do, run the sink until itβs hot before running the dishwasher
- put detergent in the actual dispenser and close it, it serves a purpose
- avoid using pods, powder detergent works fine
- clean filter regularly
those are the main things. if you really want to nerd out then check this video out.
Technology Connections provides great explanation of how they work and goes way more in depth on how to properly use a dishwasher, especially with detergent. honestly he provides great content on most things we use in our daily lives and is worth checking out.
I use the dishwasher for everything that can go in there, because I especially like the sanitization cycle.
When I worked at a summer camp, they had a commercial dishwasher that was amazing and could do a load / tray of dishes in about 45 seconds. But I don't think this was particularly water saving. I could be wrong, but that was my favorite dishwasher ever.
My sink is made for someone a good 3-4 inches shorter than I am and it absolutely kills my back to hunch over like that for any period of time so gimme that machine convenience over my slipped disk
The house we bought a few years ago had a dishwasher. It doesnβt work.
Weβd like to replace it but we asked the shop guys if they can help with that they told us they donβt have any local contacts who do dishwasher installs.
Weβve never used one before, but with two little kids it feels like hand washing is getting a bit much sometimes.
You just slide it out, turn off the inline tap, unplug it, plug the new one in, turn the inline tap back on, slide it in, you're good to go. You dont need a professional for this, it's a very basic job.
At least where I live? Maybe the US has weirder dishwashers?