I don’t mind doing dishes. In fact, I might go as far as saying that I like doing dishes. One of the main reasons, I think, unlike cooking, which stresses me out tremendously, I can think about other stuff while doing dishes. With the water flowing (only while rinsing, not during scrubbing!), and my hands gently caressing the dishes, there is something meditative, almost monastic about it. Perhaps, it is the edited nature of the chore, the diminishing pile of filthy dishes makes it cathartic. It’s often while doing dishes I think about a variety of things – nifty sentences, status quo, the health of my intestine (the quality of the diet is often directly related to the ease of doing dishes – greasier the dishes, unhealthier the food, harder to clean- therefore, dirty dishes is the reductive version of my intestines!).
It has been even more pleasant for the last two months since I’ve started to do my dishes with gram flour. It took some attention to set up a system that de-tangles the issues of using a powder, instead of the usual liquid. But now I have perfected the logistics and made it me sloppy-proof.
Washing Without Waste
On the image below, the main stash of gram flour is on the left. This is what I have after two months of a 3.5 lb bag (ran for about $5). On the right is the second receptacle which sits on the counter. It holds a week’s (or 2 weeks’, depending on the size of the household) worth of flour. This (thrifted) bowl is bottom heavy, so it does not topple. The spoon, bought from the barware section, has a very long handle, which prevents water droplets lumping up the flour.

Then comes the small (in this case, a thrifted, footed, brass, lotus-inspired) bowl where I’d take a single batch’s worth of gram flour: half a teaspoon for two plates, a couple of teaspoons for half a sink of dishes.

Below are all the scrubbing utensils. There is no plastic other than the nylon bristles in the toothbrush. The other brushes are made of wood with natural fiber. It has only been a month or so since I have switched to these from typical petro-scrubbers-packaged-in-four, that were landfill-bound at the end of their life cycle. They are compostable, artisanal and much more beautiful.

You can also easily use a cotton cloth cut up in small squares. I used this when I ran out of plastic scrubbers and was waiting for the compostable brush to arrive. It worked perfectly.

Another issue to consider is, unlike liquid soap, even the thinnest residue left by flour-water would be noticeable when the dishes dry up – but, soap or otherwise, any residue should be washed off anyway. When I was using conventional dish-washing liquid, my right hand used to be significantly rougher than the left. Now, both the hands are equally smooth (or more like equally rough!). The dishes now make a “squeaky” sound, that I never heard while using liquid soap. I do not worry anymore if my veggies get an accidental dunk in this “soapy” water.
I did not even notice the overall eco-unfriendlin“ess or unhealthiness of the existing dish-washing setup, the plastic scrubbers’ disposability, even during their last purchase, a couple of months ago. It’s interesting how these editing/clean-living elements work in layers. The next layer of discrepancy only surfaces after the previous layer has been dealt with. All it takes, is to be mindful.
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