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It's a core ingredient for real hot bacon dressing... Pennsylvania Dutch REPRESENT! :)
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mcqueen gets it in his supper mixed with the kibble. he eats that shat up, good for his coat too.
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A guy I know who owns a gourmet restaurant says goose fat drippings are the ultimate cooking fat.
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NOTHING better than pancakes fried in bacon grease! |
I save all grease in a can that remains in the refrigerator until I accumulate enough to throw a full can into the trash. I remember reading somewhere a long time ago that is is not only good for a person to consume, but it also not good for your pipes in your house either.
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One of my favorites is pork fat from a mexican place I go to once in a while. They cook their carnitas in a big pot and after the meat is cooked they put the excess fat in tubs for sale. It has the little bits of carnitas left in it and is great for all your frying needs. The only problem is it comes in a 3 lb. tub so it lasts a long time.
Jerry |
How else would you make sawmill gravy for biscuits?
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We do a large goose each year at Christmas. The rendered fat is about 4 cups. I use this for cooking until it runs out, which is usually sometime mid to late spring. Great flavour. We are very health conscious but this is one of those luxuries we think is worth it. |
During the summer I go thru 35 cases (@500lbs) of bacon in a week. After using the fat to cook 1000 lbs of eggs and 700lbs of potatoes my breakfast cooks take the rest home in 2gallon buckets for their amigo's and family. I don't go near it.
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looks like another crock pot dish coming up, after the goat curry that is. |
My grandmother does it. After it has cooled and hardened, she spreads it on bread (relatively thick, I might add, not like a thin butter layer) and eats it straight. Apparently common for old Germans. She's a very healthy 94 years old, so I guess I can't argue.
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Slightly off topic, but probably relevant to many of you lard-lovers, is olive oil indeed the healthiest oil? Or is that just good marketing? What about sesame oil?
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Yes, it adds great flavor to black beans and for frying taquitos, not for everyday use but the jar is in the fridge right now!
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Try bear oil! (Rendered fat from a black bear).
George |
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Sesame oil is likewise healthy, although not popular in US for cooking as much as flavoring. If you are cooking with sesame oil, important to use the light variety which has a higher smoke point -- the dark stuff will burn. The bad stuff is palm oil, palm kernel oil, coconut oil, butter, margarine, shortening, lard, bacon fat, etc. Depending on the dish, I typically use olive, canola or peanut oils. Olive and peanut where their flavors complement the dish (European and Asian, respectively) and canola where I need a neutral flavor or when cooking with high heat (very high smokepoint). |
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Went to get some more of that stuff, grape oil, whoooooo is it expensive. |
Don't know goose, have done it but long time ago. I remember how much fat a roast goose produces, never thought to save it.
Duck we cook often enough. I take the bird apart, brine, score skin, steam to render off some fat, brown on stovetop (oil and high heat), then finish in oven. Carcass makes great stock. For (more) affordable duck, buy at your local Chinese grocery. |
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I do not cook with left over bacon drippings. That being said I do love the pork fat in some of my cooking it is just not left over.
My mother used to tell a story of going to a friends house, and they fried fish in the bacon grease. |
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