If Forced To Choose Only One Modern Major Appliance

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launderess

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What would you have?

Washing machine?

Dishwasher?

Clothes Dryer?

Am asking because it wasn't that long ago it seems when our mothers or grandmothers generation started out and lived with for some time only one major appliance. In most homes it was a fully automatic washing machine.

When parents were starting out and just bought their house Mother got an automatic washing machine. That's far as Dad would go then, so Mom used clothesline in yard. Later on Dad loosened up the mousetrap and sprung for a dryer.

One night while again being saddled with KP duty, asked Mother why we didn't have a dishwasher. She shot back she already had three of them (myself and siblings), so that was me sorted.
 
Most certainly a washing machine! I could hang clothes to dry and I already wash the dishes by hand anyway. But I’ll be damned if I’m willing to hand wash all the laundry, oh hell to the no to that!

And BTW Laundress my Mom was just like yours, LOL.

My siblings and I were her dishwashers, and she said the same thing as your Mom more than once. Mom never had an automatic dishwasher except for one month in May 1962, We had a 1956 Westinghouse DW that broke down within a month after moving into that house. My Dad died in June and the DW was the least of our problems and was never repaired.

We never really missed having a DW. And I have one, but haven’t used it in 4 years now. And I don’t miss using it one bit either.

Eddie
 
After getting that vintage GE portable dishwasher find oneself using it less and less as time went buy. Just seemed quicker to wash things by hand than moving that big heavy DW about. It's taking up space that could be used for one of my washing machines, so have a feeling by year's end it will be going somewhere else....

Thus can see why many households either never bothered with a dishwasher, or even used them much or at all if they had.

Few of my aunts had dishwashers when one was growing up, they still washed things by hand. Myself and cousins couldn't understand why we were stuck in kitchen washing dishes by hand with that nice DW just sitting a few feet from sink. One cousin dared to voice her opinion, she never did that again... *LOL*
 
Honestly, tough decision between a dishwasher and a washing machine, though I think washing machine beats out the dishwasher. Haven't had a dishwasher since january and have had to hand wash dishes every day, but thats manageable I feel compared to handwashing clothes & sheets & the lot.
 
Done a fair bit of laundering bed and table linens by hand

To lessen wear and tear on Miele or even AEG front loading washers. Both seem to work best when loaded near or at capacity, far less bother with OOB spins.

Also certain bed linen have nasty habit of balling up which contributes to OOB issues.

Years ago now bought a Child's "rapid washer" posser, and am here to tell you it works a treat. Using a tub and posser can get through two sheets and pillow slips in < 20 minutes washed and rinsed twice, all with little effort. Things are then bunged into spin dryer for bit, then onto lines.

https://www.lehmans.com/product/rapid-laundry-washer/washers_and_wash_day_accessories

These sort of vacuum possers really do shift dirt. Have done really filthy loads like dust cloths, socks (worn around house indoors), and so forth. With first downward push it is amazing how much dirt is forced out. Just five minutes of such "agitation" and things are clean.

Also find doing dark or black colored items by hand results in far less lint.
 
Dishwasher. Most dishwashers today have heaters and wash decently when loaded accordingly. Reliability and is a whole different subject though.

I need a vintage washer since I can't tolerate dumbed down temps, poor rinsing, no lint filter, and a lack of flexibility in modern top loaders.

Prefer my vintage TOL Maytag dryers which have much better durability, reliability, and build quality than anything currently on the market.
 
I guess it would have to be a washing machine..

 

<span style="font-family: helvetica;">I can wash dishes if I have to.  Wouldn't be thrilled about it but I would.  However, I'd rather have a boil implant than have to go to a laundromat to do my laundry.  Just the idea of having to sit there for a few hours a week waiting on machines, ARGH!</span>
 
Absolutely would have to be a washing machine. There’s no other household chore that’s as difficult and so much drudgery.

Washing dishes, while not much fun, isn’t all that big a deal and drying clothes on a line works fine (most of the time.)

If you want to go further I suppose the other big one (probably more important) is the fridge. It would be extremely difficult to manage without one - especially when you consider the amount of fresh dairy and so on that we keep. It would be literally going back to Victorian days.

Modern cooking appliances are also rather important. Can you imagine going from induction, modern ovens and so on to cooking on an open fire or even using a solid fuel burning stove / range.
While ranges still exist here they’re sort of a show piece / hobby / historical artefact. You may have a few diehard Aga fans, but 99.9% of them are not used as a primary means of cooking.
 
I would go with a washer. I can't imagine trying to do laundry by hand or having to rely on a laundromat. My mother grew up in the 40's in a family of 12 kids. She and her next older sister were tasked with doing the entire family laundry on a washboard in the bathtub, which included boiling, bleaching and bluing. So her one non negotiable was she wanted a washer even in a Brooklyn apartment. When we moved to Connecticut in 1966 the house didn't have a dryer or dishwasher - we didn't get either one until I was a senior in high school (around 1975). The dryer didn't get that much use since she was used to a clothes line and then it was saved for towels, underwear and socks. Everything else went outside.
She loved the idea that the dishwasher left glassware streak free and sparkling but hated leaving dirty dishes even for one day and wasn't a big fan of unloading the thing as she liked everything tidied up and put away at the end of every meal and those dishes meant "unfinished business".
Fast forward to today. If necessary I could manage without a dishwasher since I live alone, and like my mother, use the clothesline more than the dryer. But for those occasions when I have a large dinner with lots of glasses, nothing beats the dishwasher for results. Over the years, I made sure to only have glassware that is dishwasher safe so the Villeroy and Boch can go in but the Kosta Boda is so fragile it breaks if you look at it the wrong way. Haven't used that in over 30 years. Last time was Christmas 1990, one of the coldest days of the year. After washing the wine glasses, placed them in the rack across from the window to air dry and someone then opened the kitchen window. The water we used must have been too hot and within less than a minute of the icy air rushing in, heard 5 popping noises and that was the end of 5 wine glasses. Lesson learned.
The kicker about hand dishwashing is that you just have to wash more carefully. One of my friends, an engineer who knows everything and lives like it's the 1940's literally refuses to use his dishwasher as anything more than a drying rack, even when he has his family dinners. He claims to have his dishwashing down to a "process" (a term engineers love) to minimize water usage, using dishwashing liquid very economically and get it done very quickly. Only one wrinkle. On more occasions than I care to count, dinner at his house usually includes re wiping flatware and glasses before I eat since both are usually streaked and spotted. Odd, he is remarkably fastidious everywhere else and accuses me of "drama washing" with the dishes.
Can't help it - I have an overly sensitive nose and the other unacceptable item for me on dishes and glasses is the "egg" or "poultry" smell that lingers after working with raw versions of either. I get a whiff of that at either someone's house or the diner or other restaurant and the meal is over before it starts. So drama queen or not, whenever working with either, before going into the dishwasher, everything gets rinsed in cold water and bleach first - bowls, utensils, cutting boards, sink, etc...
Works for me.
 
One appliance I could do without is a freezer.
Unless you have a big family or are a hunter I just don't see the need for it.
How many of us do not live within a twenty minute walk or drive from a grocery store.
I find chest freezers are the worst. Who ever really sees the bottom of one and knows what is really in there?
 
My freezer is often more like some kind of cryogenic graveyard for stuff I forgot that I had!
It’s great for ice cream and maybe the odd frozen pizza and a few specific items like frozen pastries, but I find I buy stuff, put it in the freezer when I realise I won’t be likely to use it. Then I forget about it for months and months and eventually have to throw it out because I realise that I have no idea how long it was there.

I have a pair of 2 meter tall fridge freezers side by side, so the bottom 1/3 of each is a freezer which gives me about 4 full drawers and two halves at the bottom. They can take it down to -26°C (—15°F) so in theory you can store stuff for a long time, but I just don’t really buy much frozen food.

Also cooking from frozen is really complicated! Defrosting etc etc.
I did find it a bit useful during the COVID lockdowns, but that’s not really reflective of how I normally live.
 
If we're talking Kitchen & Laundry...

If I had to pick ONE, it'd be a Thor washer/dishwasher combo. I've done the switching several times and it wasn't a problem. I'd just need both the machine and the tub not in use on pedestals high enough that I'd use my shoulders and not my back.
 
Thor washer/dishwasher combo.

Now that's cheatin'. Ain't it?
smiley-wink.gif
 
dishes and laundry

I hate washing dishes by hand. I have a dishwasher for that, so I'm not gonna complain. I will ABSOLUTELY NEVER do laundry by hand or on a line. I'm grateful to have a washer and dryer for that. I can't live without either of them.
 
You know, the obvious choice for most people here is the washing machine, but I think I would actually wash my clothes on a washing board for the rest of my life compared to having to do my dishes by hand for the rest of my life.
 
Being as Laundresses question is which one of those particular three appliances would you choose over the others given no choice it would have to be a washing machine of some sort. I don't like doing dishes but could get by as we have in the past and I can and already do hang laundry out when I can,so a dryer isn't really essential But I'm not going to do my weekly laundry by hand or dragging it to a laundromat.
 
Purposely left out appliances like fridges, freezers, modern ranges, stoves and ovens because don't consider them mod cons, but essentials. Right up there with indoor plumbing including running hot and cold water.

Modern refrigeration and freezing is one of the biggest health benefits of appliances, not to mention household economics.

As for solid fuel fired ranges, ovens, etc..., as someone said yes there is a group out there that love using AGA type ranges, but they are a small minority.
 

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