Where do you soak your dishes?

Where Do You (or SO) Soak Dishes (not saucepans)?

  • In the kitchen sink

    Votes: 11 68.8%
  • On the worktop

    Votes: 1 6.3%
  • On the hob

    Votes: 1 6.3%
  • Elsewhere

    Votes: 3 18.8%

  • Total voters
    16
  • Poll closed .
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Various dishes required to hold the components of a civilised meal. ;)
Always short swill under running taps, mostly followed by hand wash, every now and then use the dishwasher (BTW aren't they quiet in use these days?)

You having another bash at the food game SS (polls smack of college)? Chef, Onion / Tater peeler, dishwasherUpper or somefink different from the usual male-at-home occupational hazard ?
Optical engineering tech' - Window cleaner.

:D

PS. Effing good job you not standing(oops) for parliament - not too many options ticked - yet. Probably unaware of the effing ongoing acronym usage !! (SO)...
:D :D :(
 
OK. Just to clarify.

These are the dishes that have stuff burnt on that will not come clean if you bung them in the DW.
 
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Thread brought this back to mind........


We’ve cut our water bills massively by stopping flushing all the time.
It’s a third of our friends with the same type of house down the street, and ours should be more as we’ve 2 babies.

Rainwater harvesting systems should be required for all new houses, but it just wouldn’t be cost effective for me to install one.

We flush for number 2s and once before bed or going out for the day.
A lot of people’s sensibilities make them dislike the idea.

Would you go to the shop and buy 5 2-litre bottles of Evian and pour them down the toilet after every pee?

theres sumthing a bit wrong with that...

first thing to teach kids is pull the plug and wash their hands...

maybe you could just p**s in the sink...

and throw your dishes in aswell......save a fortune

you could probably have a runny dump in there aswell

just mash it down the plug hole with a fork.....
 
Here is my suggestion to be on Zero water bill. It is called sensible living!


1. Pea in a bottle and empty it in your garden, your plant get natural fertiliser.

2. Don't take any shower or bath, unless you have surplus rain water in the reservoir, but even then only use a wet rag and wipe your body clean.
You can have a shower with your collected rain water provided the waste water is saved to water your garden, please ensure no waste water is discharged into the drains, or you will have to pay water and sewage charges.

3. Always have sufficient rain water in the reservoir for drinking and cooking.
Making sure that boil water first and store a few bottles in the fridge for chilling.

4. You can use an old chair and cut a hole in the seat and sit on it to do No 2 but put an old newspaper to collect your dump, use newspaper instead of toilet tissue to wipe yourself and then after you finish, wrap the newspaper and throw it in your normal rubbish bin.

5. wipe all your dirty cutlery and plates with a wet wipe, and dry with a newspaper

6. hang your dirty clothes and laundry out on a line and let the rain do its job of washing it clean and leave it there to dry and ready to wear.

7. Have all your plumbing and drains blocked as water companies charge for waste water, and since you do not use running water, and collect all your rain water you can save £500 to £600 for your water and sewage charges.

8. You save on toilet paper rolls too.

9. You save on fairy liquid and normal soap too.

10.Your plants and trees can yield better flowers and fruit as it is nourished better with your urine.

11 just buy one can of body odor spray for occasions you must go out to socialise

anything i forgot please add.

Please please don't be alarmed, we may well have to adapt new methods sooner or later when water becomes a precious resource!

:LOL:
 
OK. Just to clarify.

These are the dishes that have stuff burnt on that will not come clean if you bung them in the DW.

but you say dishes not saucepans.

How would a dish get burnt-on food?
 
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