Clean dishwashing brush - reduce plastic waste

Dishwashing brushes turn brownish over time. Why throw away right away? If you put them in water overnight with a tooth-cleaner tablet, they are like new again. Incidentally, this is also possible with (white) toilet brushes. ?

Brandy: It is enough to put the dish brush into the machine regularly when the dishwasher is started. So you do not need any additional means to clean the brush and clean without residue, it will.

Of course, the toilet brush has nothing to look for in the dishwasher - at least not in mine. Eisenhauer: Somehow a pity. Now, "good housewives" (moms) have to master perfect language and rhetoric so they can give their tips here without being tattered. Some are really very intolerant here, I think.
Everyone can understand what the Tippgeberin meant and all misinterpretations are interpreted in my opinion willfully.

Incidentally, my dishwashing brush also ends up in the dishwasher, if that's my opinion. Although made of plastic, it has been surviving for over a year without visible damage.
My wooden dish brush (yes, I use several) is scrubbed in the rinse water using the other brush and cleaned.
I brush toilet brushes directly after use in the running water of the toilet. Discolouration that develops after a while (we have very lime-containing water and it does not stay that way) leads to the replacement of the brush.

MY ZERO WASTE CLEANING KIT || Kate Arnell | May 2024