• Yup. Also: I’m tall, so now I can’t see everything that’s in the sink. It also needs some kind of anti-tip measure if the suggested use is to keep heavy dishes up high like that. Also, I’m not convinced this is sanitary - are we gonna get raw-chicken-water-splashback onto clean plates?

      • @Kornblumenratte@feddit.org
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        3 days ago

        According to the CDC, chicken should not be rinsed to avoid Salmonella cross contamination.

        Notabene: this advise is from the pre-Trump CDC.

      • @RebekahWSD@lemmy.world
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        44 days ago

        My short ass finds some of this helpful but not enough! It’s going to be difficult to get some of the stuff from the back of the top rack for me. More room though…

      • @barneypiccolo@lemm.ee
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        4 days ago

        It’s a DRYING rack, it isn’t meant to be permanent storage. You wash the dishes after dinner, and place them in the rack. The next morning, after they’ve dried, the first thing you do is put them all back in the cabinets.

        However, I acknowledge that a LOT of people won’t bother with the second step.

    • @BJHanssen@lemmy.world
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      24 days ago

      Nah that’s just in the pictured configuration. The baskets and all the accessories just hook onto the rack frame so you can move things around to whatever config you want. Do the dish baskets on top of each other and leave the ‘flatter’ bits (like the knife block) for over the actual sink, much better config. Thirty second job even with the dishes on them.