Washing Up Bowl - y...
 

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[Closed] Washing Up Bowl - yes or no?

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Right, please help me settle this...

I'm firmly of the opinion that a washing up bowl is needed in the kitchen sink. Theres no "drainage" bit to the sink or anything like that, so the only way to wash up is to tediously empty/semi-clean everything BEFORE filling the sink, thus doubling the amount of effort required. Theres almost always some things that get forgotten, so then you have to empty the sink, tip bits of coffee etc down the plug and then fill it again, doubling the amount of effort once more!!! (4x effort needed now!!!). aragrhag!!!

Furthermore, the water comes splashing over the side, and with no gap to fall down (like you'd get with a washing up bowl) it goes all down my trousers so it looks like i've p1ssed myself.

Lastly, the plug gets knocked out occasionaly.

Despite explaining all this, she still won't get a washing up bowl due to some tedious rubbishy BBC article from years ago ( http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/1056364.stm)

WTF?

Surely all sensible people have a washing up bowl?


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:14 pm
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Ive got a dishwasher.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:16 pm
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right on brother, you aint washing up unless its in a bowl!


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:17 pm
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I let my butler sort it all out.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:17 pm
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if its a single bowl sink then yes, otherwise no


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:19 pm
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Ive got a dishwasher.

Smug git*.

We have a washing up bowl. It lives under the stairs.
I use it for cleaning bike bits and storing all the lube and degreaser. The OH can't complain because does she clean her own bike? 😉

*Me too!


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:23 pm
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[i]Ive got a dishwasher. [/i]
This, only with an apostrophe where applicable.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:23 pm
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Judging from the dishwasher contingent ^^^^^ this is a seriously middle-class forum. 😐 Ooh, how the other half live etc etc etc.

+1 for the bowl and, let it be said, for t-towels. Old skool, baby!


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:26 pm
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that article makes me laugh

on the left we have the clean freaks saying use disposable - i bet these are the same folk wearing face masks on flights

on the right we have the enviromentalists .....

i wonder do the clean freaks ever eat out at a restaurant ? - they must hyperventalate.

TBH im not for them but they are a necessary evil atm - the whole argument of being able to stick stuff down the side of them is flawed as there is invariably not enough room down the side and i end up with what ever it was all over the bunker or in the sink and having to refill the sink anyway ! ....

my new house is getting a dishwasher as the one task a ****ing hate with vengance is the washing of the dishes.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:26 pm
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I have a wife.

wtf are you doing in a kitchen unless you work in one 😀


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:30 pm
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Protest - tell her you refuse to do the washing up unless you have a bowl to do it in. She can continue using the sink but you won't touch a dirty pot unless there's a bowl to wash it in.

I agree with you sir, Bowls have to be more hygenic and are certainly more convenient.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:31 pm
 SiB
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Ceramic (or whatever that hard stuff is) sink here.......too many chipped plates and bowls and broken glasses so a bowl it is.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:36 pm
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I am a total no-no for a washing up bowl.

It would be fine if I were the only one who ever used the sink.

But I find that when unsupervised, other sink users do not clean the washing up bowl after use and it ends up totally minging. Particularly the outside of it when it is left floating atop its emptied contents after use.

Grim grim grim.

To get over the problem described of late arrivals to the washing up scene, I suggest emptying dregs into the garden. Perfect!


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:42 pm
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I ruddy hate washing up bowls so its a NO from me!


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:43 pm
 hels
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Goodness no, gruesome and foul British habit, I can't abide the things. They are scabby and smelley - have you ever lifted one up to see the crud on the bottom ? Keep the sink clean and you don't need one, and you have way more room for washing dishes. Just empty all the cups when you put them on the side lazybones ! Or use one of the many other drainage points in the house.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:51 pm
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have you ever lifted one up to see the crud on the bottom ?

Yeah, but I don't eat stuff off the bottom. It's like the inside of toilets. Judging from the ads, there's hordes of evil empire-building germs in there. 😉


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:54 pm
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I never used to use them. Seemed fantstically pointless when you have a working sink, but now I do use one and wouldn't have it any other way.
I can't remember the reason but I think it was something along the lines of not having to clean the sink after cleaning bike bits in it.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 1:55 pm
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Washing up bowls are for decadent camping, Defrosting fridges, being sick in and washing things remote from a sink.

Sinks are for washing stuff in and are almost self cleaning. Why do you need to put a smaller bowl shape inside a bigger bowl shape? Bowl users sink's smell bad which indicates bacteria. The plastic gets all greasy,
you tip it all out and still have to clean the sink anyway. Weirdos.

I fill bowls and plates individually with water camping style and rinse the plates. But mostly use a dishwasher for a whole week in a oner which saves water. Energy consumption must be even stevens..


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 2:00 pm
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New misses? Seems a better solution all round.

No washing up bowl in a single sink is just illogical girl talk.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 2:01 pm
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she still won't get a washing up bowl

I'm not seeing the showstopper here. You want one, she won't get one. Surely the solution's fairly obvious. Is she the only person in the house capable of buying a washing up bowl or something?


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 2:08 pm
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We've got a washing up bowl, although I can't vouch for my sensibleness.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 2:12 pm
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yes to the bowl.
previous owner of my flat stole the plug, so no choice! (could have bought one i suppose, but it was white plastic sink so was always going to get rid of it)

i don't want my lovely new stainless steel sink getting all scratched. It's not that hard to spray the bottom of the bowl to get rid of any grimness.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 2:18 pm
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They are scabby and smelley - have you ever lifted one up to see the crud on the bottom

They only get like that if you don't clean them. It's like saying underwear is a rubbish idea beacuse they get all smelley (possibly scabby as well) if you never change or wash them.

+1 for washing up bowls (and underwear).


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 2:21 pm
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Judging from the dishwasher contingent ^^^^^ this is a seriously middle-class forum. 😐

Hmm...

[i]*looks at dishwasher and ceramic double Belfast sink*[/i]

[i]*feels frightfully bourgeois*[/i]

[i]*likes it*[/i]

8)


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 2:26 pm
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i don't want my lovely new stainless steel sink getting all scratched.

If our not so new stainless sink is owt to go by it now has bowl base shaped scratches in the bottom
no bowl now Dishwashers rule


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 2:27 pm
 hels
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Well, if you wash your dishes in your underwear you are really only getting what you deserve !

And don't start me on "steeping" I had a lazy arse flatmate from Glasgow who would fill the bowl with water and throw all his dishes in "to steep" and leave them there for days getting smellier. I eventually just opened his bedroom door and shoved the dishes in bowl and all and left it there, then straight to the shop for bleach and a sink plug.

So the bowl does have some uses.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 2:36 pm
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Never mind the use of washing up bowls. I saw this FTW

Plates should be stacked up and allowed to dry naturally rather than mopped with a cloth which might be contaminated.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 2:40 pm
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Yes


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 3:02 pm
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Dishwasher and double sink, bowls are grim affairs and are best avoided.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 3:07 pm
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Never use a washing up bowl - you have a sink - why put a smaller bowl in it that you cannot drain? dirty and inconveninet


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 3:26 pm
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Of course use a bowl, then you can just tip out dirty water or if you need access to the sink, just lift the bowl out rather than draining it and lifting all the plates out individually.

Also means you can save water when rinsing fruit or veg under the tap and use it to water the plants rather than it just being washed down the sink.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 3:29 pm
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why put a smaller bowl in it that you cannot drain?

You know that you can lift them up and pour the water out, rather than just wait for it to evaporate 🙂

dirty and inconvenient

The bowl for only washing things you eat off.
The sink is for washing everything else.
Hygienic and convenient.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 3:33 pm
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There is almost no issue however trivial that can't be arugued about on STW!

I hate doing the dishes so I cook instead, seems like a fair division of labour. On the odd occasion that I wash a plate the sink with or without the plug in seems perfectly up to the job


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 3:36 pm
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The bowl for only washing [s]things you eat off[/s] bike parts.

FTFY


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 3:38 pm
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If you're on a water meter - definitely yes.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 3:39 pm
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If you're on a water meter - definitely yes.

Water meter? Really? You mean pay for that stuff that regularly falls from the sky and fills up all the lochs free of charge. Pay for that?

You be telling us you can't ride on footpaths next 😀


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 3:44 pm
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Most stuff in the dishwasher the rest can come in the shower with me. Using a bowl would be unhygienic.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 3:50 pm
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STW - all human life is here.

and a lot of unidentified life forms busy building a civilisation underneath your washing up bowl


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 4:13 pm
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Water meter? Really? You mean pay for that stuff that regularly falls from the sky and fills up all the lochs free of charge. Pay for that?

Ever checked your council tax bill? Unless you live in the hills with your own water supply and disposal system I suspect you do too.

As for washing up bowls (I've got a dishwasher now but used to wash by hand) - who the hell fills the bowl with dishes and needs to remove them? That's what the worktop is for, you then transfer them to the sink as they need washing.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 4:20 pm
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If you can afford an MTB you can afford a dishwasher this isn't the third world you know


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 4:25 pm
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Well, i'm pretty sure this has ended up in my favour.

If you can afford an MTB you can afford a dishwasher this isn't the third world you know

its not the dishwasher thats expensive, but the house to put it in.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 5:30 pm
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You never said you were camping. You have to use a washing up bowl when camping.


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 5:36 pm
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Anyway, aren't washing up bowls just for putting on the floor when you go to bed slaughtered or your kids are puking up all night?


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 5:37 pm
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"its not the dishwasher thats expensive, but the house to put it in."

Our gerrymandered 1960's bauhaus rip off semi has no room whatsoever for a dishwasher the clothes drier necessitated by breeding lives in the spare bedroom/bikeroom .

washing up bowl for us keeps our double belfast sink chip free and can easily be cleaned and emptied i've even discovered if i turn it upside down i can clean the bottom .


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 5:40 pm
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No Bowl.
No No No No
Preperation is the key..


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 5:45 pm
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Just use the sink you Jessie!


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 5:53 pm
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Jerome

Preperation is the key..

Do you have three teenagers in your house?

Bowl for hot soapy water.
Gappage at the side for rinsing latecomers.

I do love my dishwaser though


 
Posted : 21/03/2012 6:04 pm