Srs question. Utensils. Head up or down? I go head up but just want to verify. I feel like this is in @Buck Turgidson ‘s wheelhouse.
Only thing that shouldn't be put in a dishwasher are your non-stick pans. Those need to be hand-washed.
This should be a poll question. I go head up for utensils, but only because I don't want to waste time seeing if its a fork or a spoon, despite it being 1-2 seconds.
things that can stab you (knives and forks) go down. harmless utensils can go either way depending on how packed in they are.
Is this thread a massive metaphor for gender identity? I’m a fork, face up. You may address me as a forking human.
Non-stick pans, wood, chef knives, aluminum, copper, cast iron, china, crystal, insulated mugs (like yeti), some plastics (need to be sure they're marked "dishwasher safe", always put on the top rack) I'd go head up, but that was more of a space thing. Not sure it matters. Definitely doesn't matter to me since I don't have a dishwasher in the cabin, the slack shack or the barndominium.
Yes and don’t store your good knives with anything else they can bang against. Will F up your edge. I have a few Sakai knives from Japan trip last year and I’ve managed to maintain a pristine edge.
Not MasterClass, but this guy is pretty damn cool Rob Kenney knows what it’s like to grow up without having a dad around. He was 14 years old when his own father abandoned him and his seven siblings. Now, having raised two children to become successful, well-adjusted adults, Kenney is on a mission to become the Internet’s dad. With his new YouTube channel “Dad, How Do I?” the Washington resident shares weekly tutorial videos where he demonstrates how to do everything from fixing a faucet to jumping a car—awkward dad jokes included. “My goal in my life was to raise good adults,” he told Shattered Magazine. “I never wanted to be wealthy. I never wanted to be necessarily successful. My goal in life was to raise good adults—not good children but good adults—because I had a fractured childhood.” Kenney said he always wanted to make a series of videos detailing important lessons not taught in high school. This past April, he finally found the time to make it happen. “I had lots of excuses, but while we’re in quarantine, I ran out of excuses,” he recalled. https://www.southernliving.com/news/dad-how-do-i-youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNepEAWZH0TBu7dkxIbluDw/featured