As a kid, I remember my grandma used to add it to pancake batter to make the fluffiest pancakes ever with a unique flavor. I also like to fry eggs in it but other than that, I don't use it for anything else. It seems a shame to waste it.
Anybody got any ideas?
I use it for anything that requires some oil in the bottom of a pan. Soups, stews, browning roasts, you name it.
Mike
I use it for anything that requires some oil in the bottom of a pan. Soups, stews, browning roasts, you name it.
Mike
/\ /\ /\
This!
Use it to brown a rue when gravy for your biscuits.
My cholesterol is way too high to use it often, but it's wonderful stuff!
I add some to the oil when deep frying.
heat it till lq ...but cool...inject into a pork butt ....
heat it till lq ...but cool...inject into a pork butt ....
That's a good one I would be willing to try!
How much?
I use it for EVERYTHING! It's a must to add to green beans. I prefer it in breakfast gravy over sausage grease. I use it to grease my cast iron skillet when making corn bread. Heck, you could fry a turd in bacon grease and it would taste good.
fry burgers in it til they have a nice crust on them. toss some onions in there and when done, dump the extra grease, deglaze with beef broth and let them simmer for a bit in it. best burgers you ever et.
I use it for EVERYTHING! It's a must to add to green beans. I prefer it in breakfast gravy over sausage grease. I use it to grease my cast iron skillet when making corn bread. Heck, you could fry a turd in bacon grease and it would taste good.
You had me up until the turd.
I've used it for about everything suggested so far, with the exception of the injection and the fried turd! I may try the injection.
Great used in box mac-n-cheese too, 50-50 butter and bacon grease, lots of black pepper.
Use it to brown a rue when gravy for your biscuits.
My cholesterol is way too high to use it often, but it's wonderful stuff!
I was thinking it is great for clogging arteries!
Makes great fried taters. You just can't run a decent kitchen without bacon grease.
Bill
Scrub your potatoes for baking and rub with bacon grease. You can and will want to eat the whole thing skin and all.
Put bacon grease in skillet, add rough chopped onion, thin sliced yellow squash, a little garlic and let cook down until soft. Good stuff, and better tomorrow. miles
my grandmother had a small aluminum canister on her stove with a strainer on the top...she would pour the left over bacon grease thru the strainer and it would filter out the bits of bacon and the pure grease would run down in the bottom, cool and solidify...she used it for just about everything...haven't seen one of those little grease pots in years.....
my grandmother had a small aluminum canister on her stove with a strainer on the top...she would pour the left over bacon grease thru the strainer and it would filter out the bits of bacon and the pure grease would run down in the bottom, cool and solidify...she used it for just about everything...haven't seen one of those little grease pots in years.....
Grease Keeper/Strainers are available online, and in kitchenware supply stores, most especially in the south.
Makes great fried taters. You just can't run a decent kitchen without bacon grease.
Bill
Leftover potatoes fried in bacon grease along with some finely chopped onion, a leaf or two of fresh sage and a good sprinkling of fresh black pepper is delicious, and hard to beat.
I always have a jar in the fridge. It makes wonderful pancakes, biscuits, corn bread. Indispensable in green beans, limas, succotash, and for making roux.
It also is the best thing going for seasoning cast iron.
As a kid, I remember my grandma used to add it to pancake batter to make the fluffiest pancakes ever with a unique flavor. I also like to fry eggs in it but other than that, I don't use it for anything else. It seems a shame to waste it.
Anybody got any ideas?
I save it and use it as lard. I've got a container specially designed for its saving in the fridge, with a strainer top so you get relatively pure lard without the bits in it. To the right you can see the fitting strainer and lid.
my grandmother had a small aluminum canister on her stove with a strainer on the top...she would pour the left over bacon grease thru the strainer and it would filter out the bits of bacon and the pure grease would run down in the bottom, cool and solidify...she used it for just about everything...haven't seen one of those little grease pots in years.....
This is the one that you will find in our fridge.
Link. Mike
Oh my god- I dearly love bacon in all shapes and forms but one heart attack and a several-year struggle to get my cholesterol in line keeps me away from it (that and a whole lot of other not so good for you things I used to live on). Now I use it as a once-in-a-while treat, and don't even think of saving the grease for anything.
Back when I did revolutionary war re-enacting, one of my buddies insisted on using bacon drippings to "oil" the outside and inside of his musket barrel- in the interest of "historical" (hysterical?) accuracy. I used to scold him for that inane trick but he didn't listen, his perpetually rusty gun not-withstanding. He just couldn't grasp the fact of its high salt content... (Brown Bess musket barrels are left bright- no browning or bluing, and they were hard enough to keep nice using good products.)
one of my buddies insisted on using bacon drippings to "oil" the outside and inside of his musket barrel- in the interest of "historical" (hysterical?) accuracy.
I would think that few did that and used lard instead, without salt. miles
Oh my god- I dearly love bacon in all shapes and forms but one heart attack and a several-year struggle to get my cholesterol in line keeps me away from it (that and a whole lot of other not so good for you things I used to live on). Now I use it as a once-in-a-while treat, and don't even think of saving the grease for anything.
Your doctors are still advising based on flawed 1950s dietary science originating in a flawed study by Ancel Keys. The cause of cardiovascular disease isn't dietary saturated fat or cholesterol. It's an inflammation inducing, high starch, high processed food, high sugar, diet that causes it. The science proving this has been generally available since Dr. Atkins recommended the change in medical thinking on this starting in the middle 1960s, but is only now starting to be accepted by the mainstream of contemporary medicine. Some doctors are still behind the curve, though.
"The myth that saturated fat causes heart disease has undoubtedly harmed an incalculable number of lives over the past several decades. While it may have begun as an unsupported marketing strategy for Crisco, this mistaken belief began solidifying in the mid-1950's when Dr. Ancel Keys published a paper comparing saturated fat intake and heart disease mortality. Keys based his theory on a study of six countries, in which higher saturated fat intake equated to higher rates of heart disease. However, he conveniently ignored data from 16 other countries that did not fit his theory.
Had he chosen a different set of countries, the data would have shown that increasing the percent of calories from fat reduces the number of deaths from coronary heart disease. And, if all 22 countries for which data was available at the time of his study are included, you find that those who consume the highest percentage of saturated fat have the lowest risk of heart disease.
Unfortunately, the idea that saturated fat is bad for your heart has become so ingrained in the medical and health community that it's very difficult to break through that misinformation barrier. Still, the fact of the matter is that the saturated fat-heart disease link was a hypothesis that did not stand up to further scrutiny."
Link
one of my buddies insisted on using bacon drippings to "oil" the outside and inside of his musket barrel- in the interest of "historical" (hysterical?) accuracy.
I would think that few did that and used lard instead, without salt. miles
Yep. Bacon wasn't a particularly popular food in the US till Beech-Nut Corp hired publicist and advertizing genius Edward Bernays to popularize it as a breakfast food (in combination with eggs) in the 1920s.
oh goodness gracious. that is gold to a cook.
saute some onion in it and add fresh green beans with some fresh ground pepper.
use it in a cast iron pan for cornbread. put a tablespoon and a half in pan and let it preheat in oven while getting your cornbread mix ready. gives cornbread a mighty fine crunchy crust.
season turnips, collards and mustard greens with it.
peel and slice a rutabaga into slices about a half inch thick. then cut into large diced pieces. put two tablespoons of bacon grease into a four quart sauce pot. add a half cup to three quarter cup of sugar and enough water to cover top by and inch or so. bring to slow boil for about thirty to forty-five minutes covered. serve with fried pork chops, black-eyed peas,cornbread, fresh sliced tomatoes, mild chow chow and sweet tea!!
couple tablespoons in the saucepot with enough water to steam green cabbage. add fresh ground pepper to taste and a little salt.
keep stored in fridge and it will last forever.
I use as vegetable seasoning, as mentioned above. I also will slice up some red potatoes into medallions and fry in a tablespoon of bacon grease with salt and pepper. Makes really good "home fries". My house eats a good bit of bacon and we can never use up all the grease.
Use it to brown a rue when gravy for your biscuits.
My cholesterol is way too high to use it often, but it's wonderful stuff!
No cholesterol issue here but it can't be good so I don't touch it.
Makes great fried taters. You just can't run a decent kitchen without bacon grease.
Bill
Leftover potatoes fried in bacon grease along with some finely chopped onion, a leaf or two of fresh sage and a good sprinkling of fresh black pepper is delicious, and hard to beat.
I would guess that we have 2-3 pint jars of it at any given time in the fridge. We do the fried taters regularly and as stated above, a kitchen isn't complete without it!
it's the greatest for frying liver too. saute some onions (butter or bacon grease) then lightly fry your liver in the bacon grease. out of this world.
My house eats a good bit of bacon and we can never use up all the grease.
Don't let my dog hear you say that.
Liquid Love along with Duck Fat, I use it in just about all my cooking, you don't need much, just use and eat in moderation. One of my favorite things for Lunch is a BLT on toast, with a little mayo that I make myself, Soon the local tomatoes will be ready and well its going to be some good eats for a while, Good stuff!
Mustard greens wilted in bacon grease will make you slap your mamma.
Mustard greens wilted in bacon grease will make you slap your mamma.
Love mustard greens. Will have to try that. I usually use butter.
my grandmother had a small aluminum canister on her stove with a strainer on the top...she would pour the left over bacon grease thru the strainer and it would filter out the bits of bacon and the pure grease would run down in the bottom, cool and solidify...she used it for just about everything...haven't seen one of those little grease pots in years.....
OMG, I haven't seen one like those in years. I remember them very well. My Grandma, aunts, and my Mom always had one by the stove. My Mom's was a staple in our house for decades. The handle broke off and she still continued to use it for years.
Forgot to mention that I have a hard time keeping enough around. Seems I am perpetually out of bacon grease because I use it in nearly every dish. I have even been known to fry a pound of bacon just for the grease.
Forgot to mention that I have a hard time keeping enough around. Seems I am perpetually out of bacon grease because I use it in nearly every dish. I have even been known to fry a pound of bacon just for the grease.
Too bad we're not neighbors. Although I use it pretty regularly, I collect it faster than I use it, so have to throw away big gobs of it from time to time.
Forgot to mention that I have a hard time keeping enough around. Seems I am perpetually out of bacon grease because I use it in nearly every dish. I have even been known to fry a pound of bacon just for the grease.
Too bad we're not neighbors. Although I use it pretty regularly, I collect it faster than I use it, so have to throw away big gobs of it from time to time.
Stupid is as stupid does......
Forgot to mention that I have a hard time keeping enough around. Seems I am perpetually out of bacon grease because I use it in nearly every dish. I have even been known to fry a pound of bacon just for the grease.
Too bad we're not neighbors. Although I use it pretty regularly, I collect it faster than I use it, so have to throw away big gobs of it from time to time.
Oh the blasphemy!!! I wish you hadn't told me that....lol
Too bad we're not neighbors. Although I use it pretty regularly, I collect it faster than I use it, so have to throw away big gobs of it from time to time.
Stupid is as stupid does......
No chit. And this from a guy that claims to be a dog man.
Geeez guys, after all this I'm going to have to rethink my way of doing things around the kitchen.
So much for the margarine and evoo.
So much for the margarine
Not sure what you're insinuating there.
As far as bacon grease, no reason to strain it...
As far as bacon grease, no reason to strain it...
True. When I do green beans I french them first and then saute' using the bacon grease from on top of the strainer with all the little bits of goodness in it. Toss in some almond slices and shaved parm when beans are almost done.
Mike
I like to fix green beans the way my Mom did - just cut bacon into small strips, fry it up and when the bacon is almost done, add some diced onion. Then add either drained canned green beans or cut up fresh ones. By no means ever strain the grease off.
make a roux (bacon grease and flour), then add seeded, diced tomatoes and let them cook down. pour in couple cups of milk add salt and pepper (heavy) to taste. serve with bacon and cathead biscuits. eggs and grits optional.
tomato gravy southern style not northern tomato gravy for pasta.
make a roux (bacon grease and flour), then add seeded, diced tomatoes and let them cook down. pour in couple cups of milk add salt and pepper (heavy) to taste. serve with bacon and cathead biscuits. eggs and grits optional.
tomato gravy southern style not northern tomato gravy for pasta.
Man, velvet_tines, that sounds pretty good.. and easy to make! I make a shrimp & bacon curry that I use flour to make a roux and it's pretty simple, too.
i even use bacon grease or lard to start fryin bacon. without it bacon sometimes wants to stick to the pan so i just throw a little in while heating the pan. i think i have 15-20 pints in my shop for the bear. i also have a friend that sends me 5gal of hog lard every winter. fried taters,deep frying is great with lard. i deep fried about 5lbs of catfish and sweet onion hushpuppies sunday evening in some good ol' hog lard.
It's good to put on minor cuts and scrapes on horses. Keeps flies off and makes the hair grow back.
BOBBALEE, who would'a thought you'd know that...???!!!
It needed to be brought up.
Bacon grease is a must for cooking some things at my house. All the deer loin that gets fried is done in bacon grease. All the green beans get a teaspoon among some other things.