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Re: Re: Lardo

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>Great! One last question, does the final product taste anything like

>the meat? I'm asking because I was thinking about combining pork fat

>and ghee to make something that's spreadable and taste sorta like

>butter, but is very low casein.

>

>THanks!

>Katy

Nah, it tastes nothing like the meat. It DOES taste " buttery " in a sense ...

actually better, because the " butter " taste lately makes me

gag (one of the benefits of having food aversions ...). Also lardo typically

has spices in it, butter doesn't. I can't see adding ghee to it though, because

the lard kind of mutates in the salt and ghee wouldn't do that. The lard

becomes translucent and really interesting, partly because if it's protein

structure and the fact the salt replaces the existing water in the fat

cells. Ghee has no water to replace.

To emphasize: lardo is made using raw, big, chunks of fat. Not LARD, which

is boiled fat (no water/protein in it).

Heidi Jean

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[Heidi] To emphasize: lardo is made using raw, big, chunks of fat. Not

LARD, which

is boiled fat (no water/protein in it).

[MAP] Sometimes I have been frustrated in my exploration of using

pure, unprocessed chunks of kidney fat because it can stick to the

roof of the mouth in an very unpleasant way. I have eaten it raw a

bunch of times crumbled into small bits and tossed in a salad, which

has generally works nicely, but sometimes I do have that problem. I

wonder if other chunks of fat have that issue and whether lardo-making

affects it. I have also experimented with cooking the chunks, e.g.

adding them to a sauce/curry, though I'm fairly averse to adopting

this kind of unnecessary processing as a habit, and the textural issue

remained problematic. I also tried frying with them a few times for

fun, but it didn't work well because they'd form little pieces that

would burn instead of becoming pure fat. I'm presuming that to make

leaf lard you simply work with low temperatures and fiddle around with

it. I wonder what's in that stuff besides fat?

I'm averse to adding that much salt to my food (and yes, I use Celtic

Sea Salt exclusively...), but I ought to try lardo with kidney fat.

I've got a ton of it. I should make leaf lard at home and sell it

over the internet. :-)

Mike

SE Pennsylvania

The best way to predict the future is to invent it. --Alan Kay

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Mike-

>Sometimes I have been frustrated in my exploration of using

>pure, unprocessed chunks of kidney fat because it can stick to the

>roof of the mouth in an very unpleasant way.

That's because the fat is very saturated and very long-chain (which

probably means it's among the healthiest fats around). I have the same

problem with eating heart -- there's some of that fat around the heart --

except that I don't really mind it.

>I also tried frying with them a few times for

>fun, but it didn't work well because they'd form little pieces that

>would burn instead of becoming pure fat.

Yeah, rendering can be tricky, and is typically aided by starting out with

some water. I doubt it'd be practical on a per-dish basis.

-

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