My little weekend rant:
(I am only commenting on the article)
The story is BS, BS, BS. Junk science at its best. This story is suddenly all over the place because of its clickbait title.
For instance, they do not establish any transfer to humans from any residual that might remain on a plate from a dishwasher using a rinse aid.
Does your dishwasher have a final rinse? Did they test a variety of dishwashers and test how much remained from each model and brand?
This is what they did:
“Methods: Enterocytic liquid-liquid interfaces were established on permeable supports, and direct cellular cytotoxicity, transepithelial electrical resistance, paracellular flux, immunofluorescence staining, RNA-sequencing transcriptome, and targeted proteomics were performed.”
So, look at your squeaky clean plate from the dishwasher. How much rinse aid do you think is going to be transferred to your food?
The amount probably is unmeasurable. They didn’t show any tests backing up the transfer to the food you eat.
I have been eating food on dishes that were cleaned in a dishwasher for over 60 years, mostly with products using rinse aids or adding a rinse aid myself. If I have a leaky gut it is news to me.
Hundreds of millions of people across the world have been using commercial dishwasher detergents, many containing rinse aids, and people also add rinse aid in the little dispenser located in the dishwasher door. And probably millions were saved from food-born illnesses and the transfer of germs, by sanitizing their dishes and silverware.
Sanitizing my dinnerware is the main reason I use a dishwasher.
If you are so paranoid that you believe that commercial dishwasher soap is a threat to your health go ahead and use an alternative.
It’s not any cheaper.
From Amazon:
Arm & Hammer Pure Baking Soda (15 lbs.) $22.10. ~0/09 / oz. That’s a lot of soda!
20 Mule Team All Natural Borax Detergent Booster & Multi-Purpose Household Cleaner, 65 Ounce, 4 Count $19.63 ~0.08 / oz
Arm & Hammer Natural Detergent Booster and freshener Super Washing Soda Detergent
55 oz, $15.07 ~ 0.27 / oz
Cascade Complete Powder Dishwasher Detergent, Fresh Scent, 75 oz
$6.24 ~0.08 / oz
Who really wants to make their own dishwashing powder? It’s probably more expensive than the commercial product and not proven to be any safer.
I don’t think that baking soda is going to be very effective on very dirty dishes, especially if you have hard water.
I also think that washing soda, sodium carbonate, would be a little harsh on anything metal, especially anything aluminum.
So, if I was going to switch, I would try borax.
Bottom line:
I will continue to use commercial dishwashing soap as the alternatives don’t appear to be any cheaper and no one has proven that the alternatives are healthier.