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"Part of my kitchen floor are thick with dust, grease, part of a broken mug, a few mummified oven-chips, a desiccated used teabag and a couple of pieces of cutlery", says Sandettie Light Vessel Automatic. To most people, that's filth. To some of us, that's dinner. Tell us about squalid homes or obsessive cleaners.
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 13:00)
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Why do people own tea towels? They're disgusting clothy havens of germs. What's wrong with leaving dishes to drip dry? Why would I want to wipe a freshly scrubbed saucepan with a rectangle of fabric that's been draped over a chair gathering grime, that people have dried their hands on, that's been slung over someone's shoulder when cooking and that's covered in food stains and grot?
Air dry ftw. Same principle apparently applies to genitals.
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 13:50, 13 replies)
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Best fight evah!
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 14:06, closed)
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"tea towel holders" can be equally filthy.
AKA "the one eyed brown barking spider".
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 14:11, closed)
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but I don't like water marks on my wine glasses, so I still keep one.
Other than that, I agree.
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 14:13, closed)
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Wrong wrongity wrong wrong wrong.
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 14:28, closed)
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We have a teatowel for drying that gets changed for fresh whenever it's had anything other than plain water on it, and a hand towel for drying hands and impersonating an oven glove.
A friend's lodger got invited to leave for using the teatowel to wipe his face after cycling home...
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 16:15, closed)
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One tea towel for dishes - never use this for anything else.
One tea towel as an improvised oven glove - this doesn't require as much care, but don't let it touch food.
One roll of kitchen towel/roll for drying hands after washing them - easy to use then bin.
Always hang them up somewhere clean.
Yell at guests that get it wrong ;-)
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 14:28, closed)
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You're supposed to use a separate hand towel for the rest. And wash things regularly.
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 15:59, closed)
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I have a hand towel and a dishwasher so that solves most problems.
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 17:20, closed)
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...if one actually does the washing up. Ever.
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 19:03, closed)
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You can get cheap disposable paper plates and plastic cutlery at 99p stores or similar. Perhaps I shall just buy those once a week and save effort & money on water bills/washing up liquid/paper towels :D
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 20:24, closed)
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people seem to think that you can use a tea towel for weeks on end and it magically cleans and purifies. In my house, I use a fresh tea-towel every day, for the drying of anything that needs to go away now rather than air dry.
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 20:16, closed)
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After all, it only ever touches things just after they've been washed.
( , Fri 26 Mar 2010, 13:26, closed)
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