Anonymous wrote:Sincere question for those who don’t want one and dislike them and will never use one if you, say, rent a vacation house that happens to have one:
What do you do in these situations…. Bowl of cereal with a cup of milk remaining and 30 soggy cheerios. Bowl of clear broth soup with a cup of fluid left in the bowl mixed with a half cup of mushy tomatoes? A pan with ~ 40 grains of rice stuck to the side that necessitates rinsing? Caked-on noodles glued to side of baking pan?
Do you just rinse down the drain ? Dump cups of liquid in the garbage can?
Anonymous wrote:Garage disposals=must have
Anonymous wrote:Sincere question for those who don’t want one and dislike them and will never use one if you, say, rent a vacation house that happens to have one:
What do you do in these situations…. Bowl of cereal with a cup of milk remaining and 30 soggy cheerios. Bowl of clear broth soup with a cup of fluid left in the bowl mixed with a half cup of mushy tomatoes? A pan with ~ 40 grains of rice stuck to the side that necessitates rinsing? Caked-on noodles glued to side of baking pan?
Do you just rinse down the drain ? Dump cups of liquid in the garbage can?
Anonymous wrote:Sincere question for those who don’t want one and dislike them and will never use one if you, say, rent a vacation house that happens to have one:
What do you do in these situations…. Bowl of cereal with a cup of milk remaining and 30 soggy cheerios. Bowl of clear broth soup with a cup of fluid left in the bowl mixed with a half cup of mushy tomatoes? A pan with ~ 40 grains of rice stuck to the side that necessitates rinsing? Caked-on noodles glued to side of baking pan?
Do you just rinse down the drain ? Dump cups of liquid in the garbage can?
Anonymous wrote:I am very careful about what goes in the disposal - usually small scraps like eggshells and whatever small bits of food are left on the plate - small though. I also never ever put grease or oil down there.
All that said I cannot imagine not having one.
Anonymous wrote:I've never had problems with egg shells and have always heard that they were good'ish for the disposal. I do try to add them to the compost also as they are beneficial for that. Grease contributes to clogs.
Anonymous wrote:Garage disposals=must have
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people grind things down the disposal? I never encountered one till I came to the US, so I’ve always been curious. I have a disposal because it was already there, but I use a sink strainer instead.
Better for the environment and less rotting food smell in the trash.
But terrible for your pipes!!
To be clear, they don't damage the pipes, they just introduce a lot of things with a propensity to clog.
I still remember when my wife ran a bunch of irises through the disposal (why I don't know). The inside of the drain pipe at the cleanout in the basement looked like the underside of a lawn mower.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people grind things down the disposal? I never encountered one till I came to the US, so I’ve always been curious. I have a disposal because it was already there, but I use a sink strainer instead.
Better for the environment and less rotting food smell in the trash.
But terrible for your pipes!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am very careful about what goes in the disposal - usually small scraps like eggshells and whatever small bits of food are left on the plate - small though. I also never ever put grease or oil down there.
All that said I cannot imagine not having one.
My plumber said egg shells are the worse thing for the disposal and pipes
Anonymous wrote:I am very careful about what goes in the disposal - usually small scraps like eggshells and whatever small bits of food are left on the plate - small though. I also never ever put grease or oil down there.
All that said I cannot imagine not having one.