A few weeks ago my husband peeled an orange and stuck it in the sink, to be disposed of by the lovely garbage disposal. I got after him and told him orange peels couldn't go in the disposal. He was confused and asked why I could put lemons in the disposal (to clean it) but not orange peels. I realized I didn't know why, but that is just what I had been taught.

So the bad news? According to most plumbers, very little food should be going down the disposal. It is meant for the food that does get left behind.
But really...who is going to scrape out their kids' bowls of cereal into the garbage when there is a perfectly capable tool right there to clean it up neatly?
So on the one extreme you have people who say you should not put ANYTHING down the drain, and on the other hand there are people who will put EVERYTHING down the drain.
Okay, almost everything...minus the notorious potato peels.

But really most garbage disposals are fully capable of grinding up just about anything, but there are few things you should NEVER put in your disposal.
*Potato peels
*fiberous or stringy foods such as celery, asparagus, artichoke hearts, etc.
*rice and pasta (because it can expand just like potato peels) -I'm really bad at this one.
*Potato peels
*fiberous or stringy foods such as celery, asparagus, artichoke hearts, etc.
*rice and pasta (because it can expand just like potato peels) -I'm really bad at this one.

All citrus can clean the disposal great. However, I only do this in moderation. I don't put all the peels from the 2 oranges I give my kids down the drain. Just a few pieces.
Also, grinding up ice cubes can sharpen your blades in the disposal...who would've thought!

There you have it...the skinny on garbage disposals.
Real Mom's Dinner: Last night we had pork chops, parley red potatoes, carrot sticks, and pineapple. We will either have homemade pizza tonight or broccoli and beef...it's almost 5:00 and I can't decide.