It took me nearly two weeks to determine that the nasty smell in my new apartment was coming from the garbage disposal. First I tried to deodorize it (suggestion found on the internet: 1 part vinegar, 1 part water, freeze into ice cubes. Pour ice cubes down the garbage disposal and let it chomp them up.) Well, the disposal wouldn't chomp the ice,
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Do I need to run water when I flip the switch? How much food can it handle? Are there any foods garbage disposals hate?
Yes, you should run water when you flip the switch to make it grind up the stuff.
It can handle probably about 1-2 cups of food at a time. When you notice that water is no longer draining down the disposal, it's definitely time to withhold further food and grind.
Foods that are incompatible with disposals, in general: bones, melon rinds, corn cobs, egg shells, banana peels (some very good disposals are fine with these). Sometimes meat skins if they're rubbery.
You probably know the trick of putting a lemon or an orange down the disposal to make your sink/kitchen smell nice?
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However, I do slice them up small. I keep them in water in the fridge, so they stay soft. OR, you can freeze the cut up ones and then plunk them down with HOT water to soften.
A plumber told me to put baking soda and ice cubes down every month or so to "sharpen" the blades. I'm not sure if he was pulling my leg. I sometimes do it.
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I guess I missed something because I thought you bought a place! It sounds like you are renting and have good people managing the property - that is great.
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However, my builder gave me some great advice regarding garbage disposals: use them infrequently. Sure, it's convenient to let the salad trimmings go down the disposal rather than fish them out of the sink and put them in the trash. Disposals do cut down on landfill waste. And it's much easier, especially for city dwellers, to just dispose of the organic waste through the sewer lines. But disposals can be stinky. And they break. And you always drop coins, jewelry, spoons and such in it. And the waste can back up sewer systems, especially in older homes, apparently.
My plumbing is under a slab, and I'm a homeowner, so I don't use mine very often. Digging up a clogged sewer line could put me in serious debt! The solution, we all know, is to compost your organic waste, make it work for you. It's just... hard. And, errr, stinky *grin*
Good luck! And happy disposing!
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