Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have a good story. When I bought my first house in alexandria, VA, I later learned that the sewer pipes from the house to the street were made of a type of 'paper' material, I think in the 60s.
Flushed toilet paper there and had a clog up the basement drain. Plumber put a camera in the sewer pipe area under the front lawn and showed me the pipe was not smooth (since it was 'paper' type material). So toilet paper was stuck. Another drain company came and blasted everything out carefully with water and a "oil ball" rolled out to the street sewer underground.
This happened to our tenants in the house we rent out in Rockville. We had to replace the line from the house to the street. So much housing went up so quickly in the postwar period while iron and steel were still in short supply and very expensive. The stuff they used instead to make “pipes” was called Orangeburg.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orangeburg_pipe
Anonymous wrote:Have a good story. When I bought my first house in alexandria, VA, I later learned that the sewer pipes from the house to the street were made of a type of 'paper' material, I think in the 60s.
Flushed toilet paper there and had a clog up the basement drain. Plumber put a camera in the sewer pipe area under the front lawn and showed me the pipe was not smooth (since it was 'paper' type material). So toilet paper was stuck. Another drain company came and blasted everything out carefully with water and a "oil ball" rolled out to the street sewer underground.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a disposal but rarely use it or put anything in the drain. Terrible for the pipes
+1 Plumber once told me garbage disposals were good for two things: Making money for garbage disposal makers and making money for plumbers.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We don’t eat meat so we don’t have this gross problem.
Interesting statement. I don’t care that you don’t eat meat, but you sound insufferable and holier than thou. Anything cooked in oil or butter will cause grease, even healthy oils. Are you also too good to cook with oil, too?
NP here. This reaction is funny to me.
I use oil to sauté food all the time, but never have to deal with draining grease in the sink as I use only the amount that I need. Honestly, what you describe sounds very very gross. This is not an aversion to oil/fat. I use butter in baking, I use oil to sauté garlic and onions and spices to flavor various dishes, I don’t deep fry anything though. The idea of having a pot full of grease from regular cooking sounds gag-worthy.
It’s really funny how offended you are that other people simply don’t have to deal with this. Cooking meat sounds very unpleasant.
NP - I had this same reaction. Deep frying at home is not something I have ever done! I’m otherwise not sure what would use so much excess oil. I sauté veggies in a tablespoon or so, but that gets consumed as part of the dish.
This comes up for me in several settings:
cooking bacon (once cooled we use paper towels to wipe up the grease and toss in trash)
making donuts or wings (each is a 1-2 times a year thing, and it is a pain but once the oil is cooled we put in a large tupperware and take to county recycling site)
making the occasional brisket or roast in the oven (we usually make it a day in advance, and refrigerate and then skim off the solidified fats and toss in trash)