It's a sensitive subject: Used cooking oil absorbs some of the 'not-necessarily-good-smells' of the food it cooked, so after reusing cooking oil once or twice I: 1. Here in south LA I use oil-soaked paper towels as fire-starters (when cleaning up frying pans & other oil-soaked cookware) to light dead yellow pine limbs/needles & burn them outside in a fire pit ($99 or less seasonally at SamsClub.com, Amazon, etc.), NOT in the inside fireplace which gets you a smokestack fire (not good). Sure, you can dump used cooking oil along with the yellow-yuck in the trash can (it is, after all, bio-degradeable), but it's not nearly as fun as a good, warm, outside fire, especially in autumn/winter! 2. Sneak it in with auto-oil changes. I do all my own auto maintenance (including oil changes), & most nearby auto parts stores accept used engine oil. I'll combine up to half of used cooking oil (to keep its smell minimized) with used engine oil & gladly donate it to them. Not as fun but...
No can't say that I do
No the don't recycle oil.
No,sorry I don't. Try Griffin Waste and Recycling.
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