Guest guest Posted October 3, 2004 Report Share Posted October 3, 2004 " i suppose using bacon would work " bacon has nitrates and a lot of bad salt! so minimise if you can. I buy pork skin (the butcher keeps it for me as everyone else around here is fat-phobic) and just put in in the oven at low temp (the lowest setting you've got). Periodically pour off the fat into a glass jar. The crackling at the end of the process (with a bit of sea salt) is gastronomically orgasmic! Enjoy! Irene Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 3, 2004 Report Share Posted October 3, 2004 It is possible to buy bacon without nitrates, but it costs mega bucks. I buy it when on sale. The pork skin is a great idea! I tried to take the slin off some pork hide last year. What a joke. I had to give up and throw it away. Buying it without the hair is perfect. I always pour off the fat from pork after it cools a bit. I'm afraid the glass will break if the fat is too hot. You could use a pyrex container.Just a thought. Sheila > " i suppose using bacon would work " > > bacon has nitrates and a lot of bad salt! so minimise if you can. I buy > pork skin (the butcher keeps it for me as everyone else around here is > fat-phobic) and just put in in the oven at low temp (the lowest setting > you've got). Periodically pour off the fat into a glass jar. The > crackling at the end of the process (with a bit of sea salt) is > gastronomically orgasmic! Enjoy! > Irene > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 3, 2004 Report Share Posted October 3, 2004 Dear Sheila, > I always pour off the fat from pork after it cools a bit. I'm afraid the glass will break if the fat is too hot. You could use a pyrex container. ==>That reminds of the grease pots that people kept on the back of their stoves back in the 1940s and 50s. As I recall most of them were metal containers with a strainer on the top. But glass would be preferable. You could warm up the glass container with hot water before pouring in the hot fat too. Bee Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 3, 2004 Report Share Posted October 3, 2004 Clarified butter is listed in NT, but you're right, not lard. When clarifying the butter the oven temperatureis 200 degrees. I'm not sure aobut the bacon. When I get a chance I will check the oven lard making temperature. I think it's lower then 250. I'll get back to you on that one. I think there is a part of the hog called fat back. You might check into it for lots of fat. The name makes it sound perfect! Keep playing, :-) Sheila > > i'm interested to find out more about ghee vs. clarified butter, i > didn't know ghee was boiled at such a high temp! thanks for the info. > > as far as rendering your own lard...no recipe in my n.t. cookbook > > i've been looking at a few different recipes on-line. do you have any > recommendations for what part of the pork to buy to get a lot of fat, > aside from buying a lot of bacon! i suppose using bacon would work, & > roast it slowly in the oven? what's a good temp, like 250F ? > > thanks again ~ suz-always-playing-in-the-kitchen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 3, 2004 Report Share Posted October 3, 2004 My husband's mother saved bacon fat. It was kept on the back of the stove. It was full of nitrates. I was horrified. now I know if it had been free of nitrates it would have been safe.I have often wondered if foods like the bacon fat caused her brain tumor? It did not kill her, but it had to be removed surgically. Not a pleasant experience to say the least. She also used a lot of refined foods and was very over weight. Now it is too late to help her. Maybe she would not have listened to me anyway. She was a sweetheart and I still miss her. It is such a blessing to have wonderful web sites like this one where peole can learn healthy way of cooking whole foods and regain their health. Sheila > > Dear Sheila, > > > I always pour off the fat from pork after it cools a bit. I'm > afraid the glass will break if the fat is too hot. You could use a > pyrex container. > > ==>That reminds of the grease pots that people kept on the back of > their stoves back in the 1940s and 50s. As I recall most of them > were metal containers with a strainer on the top. But glass would be > preferable. You could warm up the glass container with hot water > before pouring in the hot fat too. > > Bee Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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