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    Tons Of Americans Are Just Now Finding Out How Brits REALLY Wash Their Dishes, And The Reactions Are Killing Me

    By Siena Giljum,

    7 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1mUEgo_0vZuu7IT00

    There's something weird happening on the internet (redundant, I know).

    It's yet another discovery about how things are done over in the UK, and this time it's about doing the dishes (or, as it's called there, "washing up").

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2XEGBB_0vZuu7IT00
    Picture Alliance / dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images

    The origins of the current wave of outrage are hard to pin down, but the debate has gone on for years. Let me explain: It seems that some (but not all) in the UK don't rinse the leftover soap off their dishes once they're done scrubbing.

    The method is as follows:

    1. Put a bowl in the sink.

    2. Fill your "washing up bowl" in the sink with water and washing up liquid — dish soap for you Americans, but we'll get to that.

    3. Wash your dishes with a sponge or cloth.

    4. Place them to dry on the drying rack, or dry them with a "tea towel."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4AAF7U_0vZuu7IT00
    Addis / Via amazon.co.uk

    That's right...no rinse included. Brits assert that the remaining dish soap just falls off the dish if you let it air dry on the rack, or that, if you choose to dry the dishes by hand, it comes off on the tea towel.

    Paul Johnston-Naylor, aka @gooniedad , made a video last month that detailed his washing up process. It's amassed over 4M views, and has worked the internet into some serious suds:

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1X5qGy_0vZuu7IT00
    TikTok / Bekky Bekks/Unsplash / Siena Giljum / Via tiktok.com

    "I don't understand what it is about our washing up that we do so wrong," Paul says in the video. He's a born Brit and lives in Guildford, England.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3BYFl9_0vZuu7IT00
    Paul Johnston-Naylor / Via tiktok.com

    "Basically, I put the water in the washing up bowl with the washing up liquid, and then I wash up: a plate, a saucepan, nice forks. And then I just pop it on there to dry," Paul says, gesturing to his draining board. "What's wrong with that?"

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3GmsZz_0vZuu7IT00
    Paul Johnston-Naylor / Via tiktok.com

    Commenters on the video were seriously heated, incredulous about how someone could not rinse their dishes as the final step in the washing process.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=28Dawq_0vZuu7IT00
    TikTok / Bekky Bekks/Unsplash / Siena Giljum / Via tiktok.com

    Paul told BuzzFeed that a friend of his, Atlanta-based creator Anthony Jenette ( @ajslambino ), messaged him that he was going to make a video about what's different in a UK kitchen versus in the US — and that "Americans are freaking out about how we wash up." Paul stitched AJ's video to make his, and it took off.

    The two often make videos about the differences between living in the US and UK, calling themselves the "Pond Bros."

    At first, Paul didn't even know what Americans were thinking was off about how Brits washed dishes: "I made a reaction post explaining how [we do it] and I was convinced it was that we use washing up bowls; never did I think it was that I don't rinse."

    The soap in question is something called "washing up liquid," which, as far as I can tell, is the same as what we would call dishwashing liquid or dish soap here in the US.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1LXCqQ_0vZuu7IT00

    The formulas for both Magnum Washing Up Liquid (UK) and Dawn Dishwashing Liquid (US) are primarily made up of surfactants, or "surface-active agents," compounds that reduce the surface tension of liquid — basically, they allow the soap to mix with the water and cut through food residue.

    Aldi / Via wfecm.prd.aldi.orckestra.cloud

    Generally, ingesting a small amount of dish soap is pretty safe , so in theory, it's not dangerous to leave out the rinse step. People mostly just think it's kinda gross, citing a lingering soap taste and germs.

    Definitely don't ingest it on purpose, though.

    Content creator Jason Riley, @jaseinamerica on TikTok and one half of @joshandjase , is from Nottingham, England — he also made a video about how he washes up and sparked similar debate for leaving out the same step. He starts the same way:

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3ttlT1_0vZuu7IT00
    Jason Riley / Via tiktok.com

    He puts the washing up liquid and water in a bowl, scrubs his dishes with a sponge and...

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3THksl_0vZuu7IT00
    Jason Riley / Via tiktok.com

    ...straight on the drying rack.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3fnNTv_0vZuu7IT00
    Jason Riley / Via tiktok.com
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2zm7uI_0vZuu7IT00
    TikTok / Bekky Bekks/Unsplash / Siena Giljum / Via tiktok.com

    Some people in other parts of the world (namely Australia and Canada) don't rinse either, and some in the UK do.

    "Most people are just in shock that I don't rinse, but I've found that people from the UK, Australia, and Canada are with me on not rinsing," Paul said.

    A LOT of people from around the world are VERY pro rinse:

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0VMTzH_0vZuu7IT00
    TikTok / Bekky Bekks/Unsplash / Siena Giljum / Via tiktok.com

    As are many in the UK after all:

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1X78hN_0vZuu7IT00
    TikTok / Bekky Bekks/Unsplash / Siena Giljum / Via tiktok.com

    Some people, though, definitely DO follow the no-rinse method (so we're not being trolled, as some commenters in this debate have questioned).

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0kFcxk_0vZuu7IT00
    TikTok / Bekky Bekks/Unsplash / Siena Giljum / Via tiktok.com

    Americans have weighed in on this particular method in utter disbelief. Roxan McDonald ( @spiritual_af on TikTok), asked someone from the UK to "show the steps that you take to take a dish from dirty to clean." Her video racked up 1.2M likes, 18.4M views, and a whole lot of freaked out comments.

    "I truly hope I didn't see what I think I saw," she captioned the video.

    The internet is a weird place, yes, but an oh so funny one.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2kqfkN_0vZuu7IT00
    TikTok / Bekky Bekks/Unsplash / Siena Giljum / Via tiktok.com

    I can't say I'll be changing my dishwashing methods anytime...this may just be another thing the American mind simply cannot comprehend. What's your take on the "washing up" debacle? Let me know in the comments.

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    Comments / 6
    Add a Comment
    Donna Lands
    2h ago
    Did the British get sick from this? I don't know. When I went camping, I cleaned my plates with sand and just water. I didn't get sick. Soap doesn't taste good. I would rather go no soap and abrasive sand paper and hot water than just soap.
    toni@s
    4h ago
    And that's why there days are spent in the bathroom
    View all comments
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