jik,
@jik@federate.social avatar

I don't know who needs to hear this*, but when you're washing dishes, you need to wash all the surfaces of every dish. The top and bottom of the plate, the inside and outside of the pot, the tines and handle of the fork, etc.
Grease and germs get everywhere. You can't see or feel them when the dish is wet. washing just the parts you think came into contact with food means you're leaving the dish dirty.

*Narrator: he knows exactly who needs to hear this.

jik,
@jik@federate.social avatar

While we're on the subject, there is only one best way to wash dishes:

  1. Soak in bin to loosen caked-on dirt.
  2. Wet sponge and put soap ON SPONGE.
  3. WITH WATER OFF, use sponge on every surface of dish until it feels and looks clean.
  4. Put soapy dish in sink next to
  5. Occasionally turn on water briefly to moisten sponge; occasionally add soap to sponge.
  6. Continue steps 3-6 until there's no room for more soapy dishes.
  7. Rinse soapy dishes and put in drain.
  8. Repeat steps 3-7 until done.
jik,
@jik@federate.social avatar

If you're running the water while you're washing the dishes, then (a) you're wasting a huge amount of water and (b) you're washing away the soap before it has a chance to lift the grease from the dish. So you're wasting soap and your dishes aren't getting clean.

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