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I've heard a lot of people make tallow with it, but I'm interested in cooking with it. Based on a bit of research a common use is part of a meat pie filling. However, I'm looking for an alternative to seed oils for sauteing. Butter is an obvious choice but it can be easy to burn and I've heard the rendered fat of suet has a high smoke point.

Does anyone have experience using beef suet this way? I was using bacon fat previously but was getting complaints about the whole house reeking of bacon afterwards, and I-ve also heard suet has a milder taste and aroma. I noticed a local market has suet here and I'd like to try cooking with it, but haven't found much information about using it to sautee.

I've heard a lot of people make tallow with it, but I'm interested in cooking with it. Based on a bit of research a common use is part of a meat pie filling. However, I'm looking for an alternative to seed oils for sauteing. Butter is an obvious choice but it can be easy to burn and I've heard the rendered fat of suet has a high smoke point. Does anyone have experience using beef suet this way? I was using bacon fat previously but was getting complaints about the whole house reeking of bacon afterwards, and I-ve also heard suet has a milder taste and aroma. I noticed a local market has suet here and I'd like to try cooking with it, but haven't found much information about using it to sautee.

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[–] 1 pt

Long time animal fats renderer here. Yes suet, aka leaf fat, is preferable for soaps, body butters, et al. It also works perfectly for cooking. Non-leaf fat is great for cooking, but not preferable for other applications. Sounds as if you have a potentially viable local source. Awesome. Stay faaaar away from any supermarket fat sources. Also, pastured pig fat renders perfectly into lard, which, along with tallow, is a superior cooking oil. Below, I'll repost a how-to methodology for rendering any animal fat. I've honed this method over years of trial and error. I'll gladly answer any additional procedural or nutritional questions you may have. Happy rendering!

>Long time lard and tallow renderer chiming in here.... Yes, to glean the vitamin d benefits, the lard must come from pastured piggies. If possible, head to your local farmers market and cultivate a relationship with a local pig farmer. Buy or barter the fat from his freshly slaughtered pigs. Do the same with a local beef rancher if you want tallow (and you totally want tallow). Particularly the leaf fat, as it lends itself to a multitude of applications beyond consumption.

Here follows a comparatively quick and easy recipe to render animal fats into lards or tallows, respectively:

Necessary tools: -A good sharp knife or two -Cutting board -Meat Grinder -Instapot -Pyrex Measuring cup (4 cup) -Fine mesh wire strainer -Wide mouth 1/2 pint ball jars

Procedure: -Take your slightly frozen fat and cut it into meat grinder serviceable sized chunks. Trim as much of the meat away as possible. *Note: Fat will quickly dull a blade, so have a couple on hand or sharpen frequently as you go. **Note note: fat makes everything it comes in contact with slippery. Exercise an overabundance of caution while cutting.

-Feed the Fat into the meat grinder -Put the ground fat into the Instapot (no lid) and use the saute setting, stirring occasionally to keep the fat from sticking to the bottom. -In manageable batches CAREFULLY strain the liquid fat through a wire mesh strainer into a 4 Cup Pyrex Measuring cup -Pour the liquid fat into Ball Jars, cover with a cloth to cool. -Once cooled, lid them and store them. - If you so desire, you can salt and continue to fry the remaining fat in a good cast iron skillet for some legit cracklins.

Results: https://pic8.co/sh/kL70lf.jpg