|
Liquid coffee can be poured down the sink.
Coffee grounds can be thrown in the trash. You’re welcome. |
| Wait… you can’t pour milk or coffee down the sink or toilet? You know what goes down a toilet, right? Pour it down the sink. |
| What does decaf have to do with the disposal method? |
| Milk in the toilet is no different than poop/diarrhea. |
|
You can pour liquid coffee down the sink.
Coffee grounds can go in the trash or used as plant fertilizer. |
I put mine in the instant pot on the keep warm setting, it does a good job of keeping the cheese moist. |
Or compost |
I don't know why OP prefers the toilet for pouring liquids, but she's right that you shouldn't pour milk down the drain. It's bad for the environment. Here's a UK article with an explanation: https://www.dssmith.com/recycling/insights/blogs/2016/1/pouring-milk-down-the-drain-is-a-criminal-offence-for-businesses |
No, milk is much worse. |
I asked the question assuming that OP was talking about getting rid of grounds, because asking how to get rid of liquid coffee makes no sense. |
| Omg just throw it into the yard |
You learn something new on DCUM sometimes. Looks like milk in the drain is bad. “ This is because milk requires adequate oxygen to be broken down, denying other organisms the air they need for survival. Even worse, large quantities of milk can suffocate the entire ecosystem.” |
The sink has anxiety. |
| I follow the 12 step method of the Anal Retentive Chef on SNL. |
Because decaf is the Devil's Liquid, maybe? |