Several weeks ago, the "Lil Woman" cornered me at the Frig while I was grabbing a cold Diet Coke and held up a blue plastic colander drain sieve under my nose and frowned while saying, "Okay... 'Mister Know-It-All', What the Hell is THIS?" I could see some white residue on the thing after it had just been through a heavy dish-washing cycle, so I attempted to rinse the marks off with hot tap water. No go. Puzzled... I did the next logical thing and pulled out the bottom tray slide and lifted the plastic pre-wash screen out and removed all manner of pieces of broken plastic spoons, some cat hair and something that looked suspiciously like a wallet I lost last year.
Anyhoo.. with a high degree of confidence, I threw in some more dishes and blurted out with gusto, "Okay, Punkin' ...THAT should it...!" Forty-five minutes later... out came the dishes with even MORE of this impossible to remove stuff!! Sh*t! Next up... I looked at the latest box of the more expensive dish-washing powder I bought at Publix and pointed to it as the likely chemical culprit and so I switched to the residue of the cheaper stuff I had only just set aside and Voila! No go. This stuff would not budge even on the same set of dishes I had run through twice. Something else must have been involved.
Several Googles and a few days later... I found out what the real problem was. It seems as though the EPA has been on a binge to reduce or eliminate the contamination of ground and seaway water with Phosphates due to the algae blooms caused by what they called, "eutrophication" (over-enrichment with nutrients) as the main threat to water quality..." Okay so now that I knew what the problem was from the reduction of Phosphates in all cleaning materials, so I Googled up a suggestion from someone who simply took a coffee cup filled with Distilled Vinegar (also cheap and available by the gallon at Publix) and after washing the dishes since then, the almost permanent white deposits have been gradually eliminated from the dishes, the stainless steel silverware in particular, and most disgusting...from certain kinds of plastics. So if you live in Florida... or anywhere that this enforcement has been put into effect and the water is as "hard" as we have down here and suffer as we had in "cleaning" up this problem, try a cup of Distilled Vinegar on the Top Shelf of the Dish Washer and see if it cleans things up! ...or you can just install an expensive Water Softening Machine.
Anyhoo.. with a high degree of confidence, I threw in some more dishes and blurted out with gusto, "Okay, Punkin' ...THAT should it...!" Forty-five minutes later... out came the dishes with even MORE of this impossible to remove stuff!! Sh*t! Next up... I looked at the latest box of the more expensive dish-washing powder I bought at Publix and pointed to it as the likely chemical culprit and so I switched to the residue of the cheaper stuff I had only just set aside and Voila! No go. This stuff would not budge even on the same set of dishes I had run through twice. Something else must have been involved.
Several Googles and a few days later... I found out what the real problem was. It seems as though the EPA has been on a binge to reduce or eliminate the contamination of ground and seaway water with Phosphates due to the algae blooms caused by what they called, "eutrophication" (over-enrichment with nutrients) as the main threat to water quality..." Okay so now that I knew what the problem was from the reduction of Phosphates in all cleaning materials, so I Googled up a suggestion from someone who simply took a coffee cup filled with Distilled Vinegar (also cheap and available by the gallon at Publix) and after washing the dishes since then, the almost permanent white deposits have been gradually eliminated from the dishes, the stainless steel silverware in particular, and most disgusting...from certain kinds of plastics. So if you live in Florida... or anywhere that this enforcement has been put into effect and the water is as "hard" as we have down here and suffer as we had in "cleaning" up this problem, try a cup of Distilled Vinegar on the Top Shelf of the Dish Washer and see if it cleans things up! ...or you can just install an expensive Water Softening Machine.
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