Julie1471
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 504
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Pump
- Dislikes
- Having high blood sugars!!!!!
True.
Just seems odd, margarine is bad, but beef dripping, equally as highly processed
"Further chemical-physical stages (bleaching, neutralisation, deodorisation) ultimately deliver a product known as 'refined beef tallow'
is somehow healthier.
Different bleach maybe?
Me, I avoid processed foods, I avoid added chemicals, so both are out.
At least butter is slightly less processed. Still big business, and made in a vast factory, but mainly natural.
Typical plant here.
http://www.spx.com/en/assets/pdf/GS_butter_production_07_12_GB_web.pdf
Our own Organic Traditional Beef Dripping is simply made by slowly rendering down our own minced organic Beef Fat. Traditionally dripping was used for frying the great British favourite `Fish & Chips`. High end fish & chip shops still insist beef dripping remains the best fat for frying! Dripping is perfect used to make great tasting roast potatoes, Yorkshire puddings and the for browning the Sunday joint. Store well refrigerated.
http://www.laverstokepark.co.uk/fro...ganic-beef-dripping-400g_ct483bd190pd1848.htm
Enjoy the healthy benefits of CLA and omega 3's in robust quantities while cooking with grass-fed beef tallow, sometimes known as "lard." The 5 gallon, 36 pound pail of tallow is ready for commercial or home use. Our tallow is simply rendered beef suet and is naturally pure white to light yellow in color with omega 6:3 ratios similar to fish. Not all fats are created equal and our beef tallow has plenty of CLA- "the good, natural trans fat". All of our beef products are 100% grass-fed and grass-finished.
It has not been bleached, deodorized, hydrogenated or altered. We love the tallow ourselves and it has many uses:
http://www.grasslandbeef.com/Detail.bok?no=711
You can buy organic beef dripping online or check with your butcher some may supply it.
In the states it's the same with organic beef tallow.
Worth paying the extra for.
Also worth checking what the "organic" refers to though.
No point if it's "organic" fat, steamed, chemically processed, bleached, and packaged up.
I don't think there's an "organic" process though, so it could become a minefield.
Of course it's worth the extra it's not as if it costs a fortune, I doubt you will find any organic beef dripping that has been highly processed I've not seen any, and it's not a minefield if you go direct to the suppliers and check on how it's produced.
Reminds me of my paternal grandfather, used to love his "horseshoe brisket", with that gorgeous crescent of fat in it.We had Brisket this w/e Yummy .
While I like Alldi's own brands, I find Lidl is slightly more to my taste.
Aldi seems to have sold out to try to seduce Tesco shoppers, Lidl still stays a bit more continental.
What is it about Kerrygold though, that inspires such loyalty here?
I'm a Grannie, and boy, am i constantly learning that the old adage "you can't teach your Grannie to suck eggs" is wrong! ://www.telegraph.co.uk/foodanddrink/foodanddrinkadvice/10635994/Gourmet-butter-satisfy-your-churning-desires.html
I buy my meat from a local butcher who buys local meat and displays the farm that the meat comes from so if I cook this meat and use the fat then that should be the best sometimes if a piece of beef is a bit lean the butcher will give me an extra piece of fat to cook with the beef .We had Brisket this w/e Yummy .
Grass growing in winter isn't a problem round here sadly, mowing grass when muddy is a pain in the butt though. Anyone got a cow I can borrow? I promise to give it back. Well, most of it anyway.
Skirt stir fries well but also makes lovely casseroles because it keeps its taste and makes thick gravy
KAREN!Gosh you've made me hungryI am dreaming of a large slice of white bread covered in dripping - yummy
or a roast beef Yorkshire pudding wrap
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