The method is as follows:

1.Put a bowl in the sink.

3.Wash your dishes with a sponge or cloth.

4.Place them to dry on the drying rack, or dry them with a “tea towel.”

Hands washing a bowl under running water using a sponge

That’s right…no rinse included.

Paul Johnston-Naylor, aka@gooniedad, made avideolast month that detailed his washing up process.

He’s a born Brit and lives in Guildford, England.

A kitchen sink area with a dish rack containing various dishes. A bin for washing dishes is under a running tap, filling with water

“What’s wrong with that?”

Paul stitched AJ’s video to make his, and it took off.

People mostly just think it’s kinda gross, citing a lingering soap taste and germs.

A user comments, "You don’t rinse the soap off?" GoonieDad replies, "No" with a wide-eyed emoji

Definitely don’t ingest it on purpose, though.

“I truly hope I didn’t see what I think I saw,” she captioned the video.

The internet is a weird place, yes, but an oh so funny one.

Multiple social media comments questioning why someone does not rinse their dishes as the last step in washing them

Aldi listing for Original Washing Up Liquid 500ml Magnum. Contains specifications, ingredients, weight, warnings, and storage instructions for the product. Ingredients and directions for use are circled with arrows

A social media exchange showing a user asking, "wait, you don't rinse them?" and Jase In America replying "NO"

Comments from people in Finland, Greece, and Sweden saying dishes should be rinsed with the flag from each commenter's country

Three internet comments about dishwashing habits from English, Welsh, and British users with the flags from their countries

Comments from users in Australia, UK, and New Zealand saying they also don't rinse their dishes of soap with the flags from their countries

Two TikTok comments: First comment jokes about the British using dishwashing liquid as a spice. Second comment humorously describes cleaning dishes with tea and a crumpet