Kind of a rant — I drink water and flavored-water beverages, and I don’t wanna buy 24-packs of water and trust my local municipality to recycle. Maybe they do, maybe they don’t. Either way, it’s not recycle, it’s “reduce, reuse, recycle.” I’ll drink a Gatorade (Zero) and reuse it a few times and then toss it.

But if I want a reusable bottle — there’s one by Aladdin (Thermos) I like, and one by Zojirushi, I’ve bought two of each over the years. Just tossed the Zojirushi. Zojirushi is a Japanese brand, very high quality, but a bit over-engineered. It’s got this rubber gasket and plug that, you can clean them daily, they get black spots. Not sure if it’s mould or what, but it’s kinda gross and I don’t like it. The Aladdin/Thermos one is a bit better, didn’t think there was any mould anywhere until I dropped it, the cap flew out, mould farm inside! Nowhere that touched the beverage so that was nice. But I’m kinda done with both of them. I would rather just waste plastic than risk drinking from a mouldy reusable cup.

Are there reusable bottles that aren’t mould farms?

  • brisk@aussie.zone
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    17 hours ago

    Gaskets are consumables, whatever bottle you get, make sure you can source additional gaskets.

    • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      been using the same bottle for over a year. insides are 302 stainless with a silicone gasket. I only keep water in it, nothing but water.

      I wash it with a bottle scrub every four weeks.

      1. hot rinse (hottest from tap)
      2. soap wash (scrub)
      3. vinegar rinse with hot to steam
      4. rinse with cold until I don’t smell vinegar

      I rinse it every week using the same steps above, I just don’t scrub it. I pay close attention to the gasket and make sure it gets a full exposure of the vinegar.

    • VitoRobles@lemmy.today
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      21 hours ago

      I make brewed teas and cold coffee and bring them to work in mason jars. Started a trend at work.

  • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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    6 hours ago

    I had a Zojiirushi in the past too. I agree, it takes too much effort to clean. I now use a wide mouth bottle that just has a screw top lid, no straw or drinking apparatus besides the large open mouth. No gaskets or anything else. It’s only two surfaces to clean and requires no disassembly, other than taking the lid off. It’s much easier to keep clean.

    The brand doesn’t matter. Just get a wide mouthed metal bottle of whatever cheap brand is around. None of them have engineered a new alloy that makes their bottles better or anything. Just make sure it’s double-hulled if insulation is important, which most are.

  • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    get a non-plastic bottle. plastic is notorious for harboring bacteria, and mold, because they are prone to microscope crevices from forming. probably a metal one. you might want to use soap and hot water for metal containers.

    • MrsDoyle@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      Hard agree. My water bottle is stainless steel. The lid screws off, there’s no complicated nozzle to get clean, you drink from it like a normal bottle. I don’t have a dishwasher, just wash it in hot soapy water, rinse and refill. A bonus is that it takes a lot of punishment - I dropped an expensive plastic one once and it exploded. Also it’s a thermal bottle, so cold drinks stay cold.

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Put them in the dishwasher after every use. If it is not dishwasher safe, throw it away and get one that is.

    They actually had a special on drinking bottles recently and I was thinking about buying one. Then they had a report on TV about such non-dishwasher-safe bottles, and that you simply don’t get them clean with washing them by hand. They had some nice pics of such bottles building up things in nooks and crevices. Gave up on that special offer, as they were not dishwasher safe.

  • regdog@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    The solution to your problem is not to buy one specific bottle. The solution is to have two separate water bottles, so that you can swap and clean them on your own time.

  • gnomesaiyan@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Yeti wide mouth because it’s easy to clean. I just flush it with hot tap water and a drop of Dawn, let it sit for a few minutes, then hold my hand over the mouth and shake. Rinse thoroughly, then dry right side up so condensation doesn’t build up inside. The part to really pay attention to is the mouthpiece, but that is quickly cleaned with some soapy water and a rag.

    Also, DON’T use your dishes rag/sponge on your water bottles, as it always has residual dish gunk (no matter how many times you rinse it) that will actually make your water bottle dirtier. Keep a separate rag for washing drinking bottles and wring it properly when you’re done.

  • null@piefed.au
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    2 days ago

    Anything that’s wet all the time is going to grow mold or algae or whatever.

    Whether you rinse or scrub, if you just shake off the drips or even towel it off before you fill it up again it’s going to get gross.

    It needs to spend a significant amount of time completely dry.

    The solution is to have 2 bottles and switch them every few days.

  • Sivilian@lemmy.zip
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    3 days ago

    Just learn how to clean them and clean them. There is no magic bottle that doesn’t.

  • lectricleopard@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    The only thing that ever comes in contact with my water bottle is water. It is always spotless.

    You are contaminating it with your mouth when you drink from it. If you put sugary stuff in there, you are basically carrying a petri around with you and asking why its growing stuff.