Uncommon Uses For The Common Dishwasher

Uncommon Uses For The Common Dishwasher
 Believe it or not, your dishwasher can be used for more than just dishes. To be exact, it can be used for 11 other unexpected items: (Courtesy Sarah Stebbins, Yahoo!) 1. Baseball Caps: Caps can often get bent in the washing machine, but hold their shape in the dishwasher, especially inside a contraption like the Ball cap Washer. Don't wash them with dishes; food can get trapped in the cloth. 2. Action Figures and Other Small Toys: These can ride in a mesh lingerie bag on the top rack, but don't wash Barbie or she'll have a horrible hair day. 3. Rain Boots: Boots should have the liners removed and laid horizontally. Hook flip flops on tines in the top rack. (FYI, Crocs are not dishwasher-safe). 4. Tools: Tools with metal or plastic handles hold up fine. 5. Ceramic Cabinet Knobs: These do well in the silverware basket, so if you feel like embarking on the process (remove, wash, replace), go for it. 6. Hairbrushes and Combs: Plastic brushes and combs can take a spin, but not wood or natural boar-bristle brushes. 7. Fan Grilles, Switch Plates, and Vent Covers: If they're plastic, aluminum, or steel then they're good to go. Enameled, painted, or plated should stay out. 8. Shin Guards, Knee Pads, and Mouth Guards: Toss them all into the top rack. 9. Light-Fixture Covers: These are fine in the top rack, as long as they're not antique, enameled, or painted. 10. Garden Tools: Because these may have come in contact with pesticides or animals, don't mix them with a load of dishes. (And don't wash those with wood handles.) 11. Potatoes: These can get nice and clean in the top rack with a rinse-only cycle (no detergent)/ Sound crazy? It makes mashed potatoes for 20 a lot quicker! What NOT to put in the dishwasher... 1. Cast-Iron, Enameled-Cast-Iron, and Copper Pots and Pans: Cast iron rusts, enameled cast iron chips, and copper dents. 2. Formal Dishes and Nice Flatware: Rule of thumb: If it's something you would cry over harming or losing, don't put it in. If you do put sterling silver in the dishwasher, use about a tablespoon of detergent and don't mix it with stainless-steel flatware; a chemical reaction between the metals can discolor the silver. 3. Wooden Spoons: These often warp and crack. If you don't mind replacing them frequently, throw them in. Otherwise, wash them in the sink. 4. Good Kitchen Knives and Steak Knives: These aren't cheap, so why risk dulling their blades? 5. Crystal Glasses: These are especially vulnerable. Food particles can etch them and heat can cause cracks. After hand washing (it's usually safer than using the china/crystal setting), dry with a cloth that hasn't been laundered with fabric softener, which can leave a film. 6. Insulated Mugs and Containers: These feature vacuum seal, which can be destroyed if water seeps in. 7. Brass Items: Hot water can remove the natural protective layer that forms on brass. 8. Wooden Cutting Boards: These can swell and contract, leaving them teetery and essentially useless on a counter. Most bamboo boards are susceptible, too.
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