Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Talk to me about white goods.


We're planning a new kitchen and might get as much as we can in the sales. We need (all integrated): double oven, hob, microwave, washing machine, tumble dryer, dishwasher and a fridge freezer.


There's only 2 of us now but we're trying to think ahead about sensible choices in case we have a family. All I know is that I really don't want a combined washer-dryer, I'm 'meh' about fancy brands and features on fridges and dishwashers, and I really need a delay time on the washing machine.


What am I not thinking about? What has been a lifesaver for your family? What do you think was a fad, in hindsight?

  • 2 weeks later...

We have an electric double oven installed at eye level to avoid bending (also if young children to prevent them opening doors and burning themselves). We have a separate gas hob - so if there is a power strike we have alternative cooking source. Washing machine absolute essential - the best you can afford i.e. in 20 plus years we have only had a Zanussi and Miele and use machine at least 5 times a week.

Never bothered about tumble dryer or dishwasher (unless you entertain a lot of have a large family - at the most there are 13 of us).

What I regret is having light grey floor tiles which show up every mark - should have gone for something darker.

If we had space, I would go for two dishwashers: one ultra small capacity for daily use, one large capacity for entertaining.


I've had a combo washing machine / dryer. I didn't like it. If we had the space, I would have a tumble dryer because they're great for sterilising towels and removing pet hair. We only have a washer now, and we manage. You can also use a small electric dehumidifier to help laundry dry better.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Maybe if you indicated what you were reviewing, pub, gastro pub, high-end gourmet, local Italian etc. - whatever classifications you wanted, then you need only indicate that your stars referred to overall quality in that category. So it it's pub grub then 5 stars means it's great pub grub, but not the same experience as 5 stars in a high end gourmet category. Your star system could then include implicitly value for money as well. 
    • Does OP know they can sell everything but alcohol even without a license?😄
    • Thanks, it's a real dilemma whether to do star ratings. A few people have asked me to do them but I've tried to resist as they are too reductive - people will look at them and won't read review! and they are difficult too - my last review of Victoria Inn, i'd give it five stars for value for money - how can you knock two courses for £18? – but 2 stars for quality - edible but nothing special. Which I guess is why some sites give star ratings for different things...
    • ok - Jeremy himself is against mandatory vaccines. Is he as extreme as his brother? No? Is it fair to discuss how the overall view of that family would inform Jeremy's response to the pandemic? I would argue very much so    
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...