As noted before, my trusty water guzzling Kitchenaid gave up the ghost and was replaced by an eco-sanctioned GE.
GE both in the owners manual and stamped on the grey plastic inside panel recommended Cascade pods. First time I ever saw a dishwasher that literally mandated a specific brand of detergent.
That being said, over the last 6 months I used:
Finish Powder
Finish powerball tabs, free and clear
Ajax from Dollah General
Target store brand
Cascade Platinum
The most costly of the above mentioned bunch is, drum roll, Cascade. And again, I learned that more often than not, you DO get what you pay for.
In summary, Cascade in combination with my slightly hard water and the design of the GE, wins hands down. None of the other 3 could remove stuck on pasta sauce. None of the other 3 could take down dried egg yolk. And none of the other 3 could clean an ashtray.
While the Cascade cannot hold a candle to the phosphate era, out of all the ones I used, it performed best.
The Ajax, sourced from Canada, left dried pasta sauce on flatware that took 3 additional washings to remove.
Target brand skipped over egg yolk and left it mostly intact as in still stuck on the darn plate.
Finish did reasonably well but could not handle any au gratin OR dried mustard.
These are the most noted deficiencies I found.
Criteria:
I run my dishwasher once, perhaps twice weekly. I have the incoming water temp at around 135. I use the heated wash, steam, and heated dry. I do not scrape or rinse ANYTHING. Only the largest chunks get tossed in the dustbin. Sometimes the load will sit for 5-6 days before run. I clean the filter each time before use, even if it looks mostly okay to be fair to all the brands.
GE both in the owners manual and stamped on the grey plastic inside panel recommended Cascade pods. First time I ever saw a dishwasher that literally mandated a specific brand of detergent.
That being said, over the last 6 months I used:
Finish Powder
Finish powerball tabs, free and clear
Ajax from Dollah General
Target store brand
Cascade Platinum
The most costly of the above mentioned bunch is, drum roll, Cascade. And again, I learned that more often than not, you DO get what you pay for.
In summary, Cascade in combination with my slightly hard water and the design of the GE, wins hands down. None of the other 3 could remove stuck on pasta sauce. None of the other 3 could take down dried egg yolk. And none of the other 3 could clean an ashtray.
While the Cascade cannot hold a candle to the phosphate era, out of all the ones I used, it performed best.
The Ajax, sourced from Canada, left dried pasta sauce on flatware that took 3 additional washings to remove.
Target brand skipped over egg yolk and left it mostly intact as in still stuck on the darn plate.
Finish did reasonably well but could not handle any au gratin OR dried mustard.
These are the most noted deficiencies I found.
Criteria:
I run my dishwasher once, perhaps twice weekly. I have the incoming water temp at around 135. I use the heated wash, steam, and heated dry. I do not scrape or rinse ANYTHING. Only the largest chunks get tossed in the dustbin. Sometimes the load will sit for 5-6 days before run. I clean the filter each time before use, even if it looks mostly okay to be fair to all the brands.