The amount of water used for the first item would be enough to clean all of them, but your method requires fresh rinse water for each, even if you have a sinkful of suds sitting (and getting cold) while you work.
Comment on The same adult daughter who has trouble loading a dishwasher efficientlyly...
homes@piefed.world 9 hours agoHow’s that?
Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works 9 hours ago
homes@piefed.world 5 hours ago
That sounds like a terrible inefficient way to wash. That’s not how I wash my dishes.
Clearly, your mother didn’t teach you how to wash up
Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works 2 hours ago
I clean up as I cook by loading the cooking items in the dishwasher, arranged to leave places for the serving and eating dishes, which get added immediately after use throughout the day. No rinsing, just scraping. Last thing at night, when I’ve fed the cat and put her used bowl in, I start the dishwasher. It washes and rinses and sanitizes the whole day’s dishes in 3 gallons of water, or about 1½ minutes worth of running my California Water Saver kitchen tap. For a standard unrestricted tap it’s less than a minute. Even a highly efficient hand-washer like yourself will have trouble beating that.
I’m sorry that this topic is getting you so upset. And I’m not saying you ought to change how you do your dishes. It’s likely that in your area there isn’t a constant threat of drought, and your electricity may not come from solar and wind, so the ecological tradeoff works the other way. Plus your method brings you joy, which is worth a lot more than the opinions of a few random people on the internet.
homes@piefed.world 2 hours ago
if you believe that dishwashers cause me any trouble, then you are experiencing delusions and hallucinations.
I know they both exist and the people have them. I simply do not. that I the end of it.
I do not require a requiem of your experience with dishwashers in order to be convinced of their existence nor of their value.
Seppo@sopuli.xyz 9 hours ago
A dishwasher generally use less water than running dishes under the tap.
homes@piefed.world 5 hours ago
How? Washing dishes under the tap uses exactly 0 electricity. How does using a dishwasher use less electricity than that?
I like to hear your explanation for that
FireRetardant@lemmy.world 6 hours ago
But it does use more electricity. And if you are alone you’re either waiting a week to wash dishes or doing more loads that aren’t full.
IMO in wetter areas where water use isn’t a problem you’re better off saving the energy and letting the water run in the sink. If water use is an issue it may be worth it to do at least a prewash/soak in a filled sink then do a faster running rinse in the second sink, or a filled rinse with a mild anti bacterial agent if you’re cool with that.