I am new to dishwashers myself. I rinse and scrape off the worst of the food, because it's an older dishwaser, and my only complaint is the hard water spots. Everything comes out acceptably clean.
'Out Of Gas'
Natter 75: More Than a Million Natters Served
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I only had a dishwasher in 1 apartment back in 1998 or so. It would be nice to have one, but then, we're only 2 people and don't generate that many dishes (as long as I don't let them pile up over several days). I usually do the dishes from the evening before while my oatmeal is cooking in the morning.
I'm so sorry for you people without a dishwasher. Washing dishes is right up there in terms of chores I really hate to do. (Though even with a dishwasher, my husband does the rinsing and loading and whatnot.)
I do handwash pots and pans since they are ceramic and are supposed to last longer if you handwash. Fortunately, they clean up really easily.
Why is everything a process? Why are there so few things in life that are one and done?
Right? I should make more artificial finish lines, for myself, probably.
And now my coworker is telling me how to do my job.
Me from yesterday:
Need to take out the garbage and recycling and put all the bins on the street but I am tired.
FTR. None of that happened. I got the yard waste bin to the curb this morning, but garbage and recycling will now have to wait two weeks because I'm out of town next Sunday. Which is not the end of the world, but not great.
Kill them with your mind, Dana.
One thing I'm glad about with my apartment is that I just have to get my garbage into the dumpster, I don't have to meet a pick up day and drag the bins to the curb.
So apparently its familial, to use the smarts to be more lazy!
My dad was an engineer and he always said the best engineers were lazy people because they came up with ways to spare effort.