Guest guest Posted May 6, 2008 Report Share Posted May 6, 2008 Judicious use of a ³strainer.² Re-use of bacon/pork/lamb/moo grease is great and made even better if strained off while still hot to eliminate the frond and other particles that can foul other dishes or create disturbance when simply used as a cooking fat later. I also let mine solidify in a shallow dish to encourage a quicker Œset¹ and to allow more restrained use later when skimming it with a spatula. I find animal fats to go a lot further than oil when using for cooking and consequently it is easy to employ too much for the purpose at hand. A hilarious anecdote from my personal history: My mother (who was raised in eastern Canada) was a maple sugar FIEND. Any chance she could, she would purloin it. Our family has a long line of sugar-captains and sugar-camping. It was common, therefore, for there to be lots of solidified maple sugar around, which my mother would make-off with any chance she got. Enter her mother, the Scotch princess-bride who threw away NOTHING. One of Grandmother¹s habits was to save bacon fat. Every day she would feed Grandfather bacon and eggs. She saved all the drippings. In the freezer. My mother, as a youngster, was scanning the freezer for easy pickins¹ when she came across a tempting package of greyish-brown stuff. Assuming she had hit the ³motherlode² (pardon the pun) of maple sugar, she proceeded to tear into the package and scoop out a huge spoonful of the substance and shove it into her mouth. Upon masticating it and softening it up she quickly realized that she was not dissolving a large quantity of pure maple sugar but rather was stuck with a mouthful of that morning¹s solidified bacon drippings! I cannot imagine the sensation, but my mother assured me that she never dove into muddy water again~ Anyway, folding in even a slight amount of any animal fat, particularly so with BACON fat, can yield that inexplicable yet perfect addition to scalloped potatoes, soups, or anything that would benefit from more ³mouth-feel² and still leave the dish without the greasiness that comes from simple oils or even butter...some dishes do not take the ³oil/butter² flavour the way they will with a simple infusion of bacon fat. And, as Will has pointed out on numerous occasions, if you use the right kind of product such as his pork or good beef fat, you can actually boost the nutritional value of the dish with its inclusion! Just be careful not to cook the fats excessively when first in the pan because the delicate fats can be quickly cooked into a state that does not support that proposition. Cheers, H. Alan <snippity-snip> Do you have any " use it up " tricks for leftover ingredients that our parents and grandparents routinely saved and used, but that are more often than not simply tossed away these days? Let's hear them! Peace, Genie <snippity-snip> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 6, 2008 Report Share Posted May 6, 2008 Oh that's an easy and fun one! :-) How about saving up all those bread crumbs that always collect at the bottom of bread bags, at the bottom of the toaster, on the cutting board? I simply add them to a container in the refrigerator freezer. Crumbs add up over time, and perfect in dishes such as meat loaf. Yum! I save the rest of the asparagus stalks that are too tough for eating, same with broccoli stalks. They go into the freezer too eventually destined for stock-making. Cheese rinds are good (i.e. Jarlsberg) for stock as well. If a recipe calls for just egg whites or just egg yolks I freeze the opposites for future recipes using those. Works well for me. Do people save water from steaming vegeteables for stock? I haven't decided if that helps the flavor of bone broths. Keep those frugal tips coming, guys! Sara R. Genie wrote: Because I am inherently frugal, not to mention downright stingy, I like to find ways to use things up. This is especially true when it comes to good food. So, finding that I always have lots and lots of fat leftover from cooking bacon, I keep it in a glass jar in the fridge and use it for weeks (months?) after the source bacon has been eagerly gobbled up. --------------------------------- Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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