Fat Is Not Optional
A sample chapter from a book I'm planning to release.
Lean meat is incomplete.
Without fat:
- meat becomes dry
- meals become unsatisfying
- hunger returns too quickly
Fat provides:
- calories
- texture
- flavor
- satiety
- hormone-building cholesterol
This kitchen is built around: 80/20 fat-to-lean as a minimum.
Below that:
- burgers crumble
- meatballs turn dense
- ground beef dries out
- cooking becomes harder
Above that:
- meat self-bastes
- flavor improves
- texture becomes forgiving
Fat is also:
- stable at high heat
- resistant to oxidation
- essential for cooking technique
That is why this book relies primarily on fats from ruminant animals:
- beef tallow
- butter
- ghee
These come from animals that naturally eat grass and forage.
Fat from monogastric animals, such as pork, reflects what the animal eats. A pig fed an unnatural, industrial diet will produce a softer, more unstable fat.
Lard can work, but its quality depends heavily on how the animal was raised and fed. This kitchen favors fats that are naturally stable.
This chapter is a sample section from a book I’m planning to release.
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