As many of you know, a modern Bosch dishwasher takes about 100 minutes - more than an hour and a half - to run a full cycle. Way too long if you're in a hurry to clean something up so you can use it.
My Bosch DW is about five years old... SHU43C... It works very well and it reasonably quiet as well. But the time! It's really a drag when all I really need are the parts for the Cuisinart Grind 'n Brew coffee maker to be clean and dry...
Sooooo... the other day I decided to try the "quick" cycle on the machine. It was lightly loaded with very lightly soiled dishes and flatware. I figured I could always run a full cycle if I needed to.
Purged the adjacent kitchen sink hot water tap, and let her rip. 30 minutes later, tada! nice clean coffee maker parts. And everything else was as clean as could be, as well. Naturally, given the quick cycle, while the dishes were dry enough to put away, the coffee maker parts and other complex shapes were a bit wetter than usual, but nothing that a little toweling couldn't fix.
I might be running the machine on the quick wash every night from now on. It probably saves on water and energy, and avoids leaving dirty dishes in the thing overnight (or even a few days) to get to a full load for a full wash.
Of course, I do have a couple of vintage KA-Hobart portable dishwashers that take only 45 minutes for a full load... but right now both are on the patio... and I'm a bit concerned one of the coffee maker plastic parts might fly down to the lower rack and be damaged by the heating element... When I move the '67 KDW5 to the main kitchen I might try that though.
Meanwhile, I have a solution to the grind 'n brew coffee maker cleaning blues...
My Bosch DW is about five years old... SHU43C... It works very well and it reasonably quiet as well. But the time! It's really a drag when all I really need are the parts for the Cuisinart Grind 'n Brew coffee maker to be clean and dry...
Sooooo... the other day I decided to try the "quick" cycle on the machine. It was lightly loaded with very lightly soiled dishes and flatware. I figured I could always run a full cycle if I needed to.
Purged the adjacent kitchen sink hot water tap, and let her rip. 30 minutes later, tada! nice clean coffee maker parts. And everything else was as clean as could be, as well. Naturally, given the quick cycle, while the dishes were dry enough to put away, the coffee maker parts and other complex shapes were a bit wetter than usual, but nothing that a little toweling couldn't fix.
I might be running the machine on the quick wash every night from now on. It probably saves on water and energy, and avoids leaving dirty dishes in the thing overnight (or even a few days) to get to a full load for a full wash.
Of course, I do have a couple of vintage KA-Hobart portable dishwashers that take only 45 minutes for a full load... but right now both are on the patio... and I'm a bit concerned one of the coffee maker plastic parts might fly down to the lower rack and be damaged by the heating element... When I move the '67 KDW5 to the main kitchen I might try that though.
Meanwhile, I have a solution to the grind 'n brew coffee maker cleaning blues...