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Load Your Dishwasher Correctly for Dishes That Actually Get Clean - CNET

Nov 05, 2024Nov 05, 2024

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How to load your dishwasher with plates, bowls, cups and silverware so it does more than rinse.

Your dishwasher needs your help to function correctly.

Not sure how to properly load your dishwasher? No wonder you're bummed about how your dishes keep coming out. The act of loading a dishwasher isn't complicated, but there's a proper way to go about it so you don't wind up with streaky, spotty dishes and caked-on food. Check out these tips and get much cleaner dishes (and settle arguments over whose method is right).

For more cleaning advice, check out how to clean a stand mixer, how to clean a blender and how to clean a cast-iron skillet.

Leave most of the washing to the dishwasher. Just scrape off the big stuff from the plates first, then load them in. Don't worry about rinsing, as it can trick the dishwasher's sensors. Learn more about why you should skip rinsing here.

Load the plates on the bottom rack, but make sure they have a little space between them. Touching can block the water jets and can also cause chips in a plate's finish.

Put bowls on the top rack. Make sure the bowls are tilted down so they don't gather water.

Same for cups. Put them on the top rack in between the tines, if possible. They should be upside down so they don't fill up with water but tilt them slightly so that water doesn't pool in any indentations on the bottom of the cup.

Bowls and glasses go in the top rack of the dishwasher.

This sounds obvious, but some people ignore the fact that there's a special cup for utensils. If you're one of these people, you may be compromising wash quality. Throwing a handful of utensils on the top rack will not get them as clean as putting them in their designated cup. Besides, putting them in the cup prevents them from dropping down and blocking the sprayer arms.

Always put silverware, except for knives, in the designated cups with the handles facing downward. Don't let real silverware and stainless-steel utensils touch. During washing, a chemical reaction can happen that causes pitting in the metal.

Place knives in the silverware cup with the points inside of the cup and the handles upward.

Big serving spoons and spatulas are best placed on the top rack so they don't fall and block the dishwasher's spraying arms. A handy trick is to thread a tine through the hole in the handle to keep the item in place during the wash.

Sticking a rack tine through a spatula or other large utensil can keep it in place during a wash.

Small pots can be placed on the bottom rack, but make sure to do larger pots in a separate load. Larger pots can block water jets, leaving the dishes on top dirty. Make sure that all pots are angled down so they get the full benefit of the jets, as well.

Put plastic storage containers on the top rack so they don't get warped by the heating element.

Make sure not to put any large pans or dishes by the door. This can block the detergent from deploying.

Before you start the load, do a quick check of the floor below the sprayer arms. Make sure there isn't any food, spoons or other items that could block the filter or the sprayer arms. Foreign items down there can gum up the works and make your dishwasher not work properly.

Now you can start loading that dishwasher the right way, and get cleaner dishes every time.

For more, check out this hack to get grease out of hard-to-reach spots, and where to put your house plants so they don't die.