Where can I get chicken fat?

Ophelia wrote:


Can you get lye? (it totally disappeared off the shelves here for a
few years and just recently came back.) If you can't buy lye, there's
no point in posting the directions. :-(

Chicken fat doesn't make very good soap (I just found that out.) Beef
fat works very well. I mixed them about half-and-half this time and
the soap is OK but not great. I should have added a little coconut
oil; that would have fixed it.

-Bob
 
"Steve Pope" wrote





Actually you can 'raw feed' a cat but it's not as easy as a dog and almost
mandates a variety of suppliments. Taurine for sure as they do not produce
it and can only get it from meats that she has to restrict due to other
issues.

Also there was a dangerous mix and match of posts between raw feeding dogs
and cats. Raw eggs for example, never to dogs!
 
On 2/10/2011 7:49 PM, Brooklyn1 wrote:

BMT? Brooklyn Manhattan Transit?

--
Janet Wilder
Way-the-heck-south Texas
Spelling doesn't count. Cooking does.
 
In article ,
"Julie Bove" wrote:


No, it's the main sweetening ingredient. TaB has *natural flavors*!


(snip)


Ingredients: Carbonated water, caramel color, natural flavors,
phosphoric acid, calcium saccharin, potassium benzoate (to protect
taste) caffeine, aspartame.

More saccharin than aspartame.

Interesting article about it in "Chemical & Engineering News," 6/2004:
http://pubs.acs.org/cen/whatstuff/stuff/8225sweeteners.html

--
Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
Holy Order of the Sacred Sisters of St. Pectina of Jella
"Always in a jam, never in a stew; sometimes in a pickle."
Pepparkakor particulars posted 11-29-2010;
http://web.me.com/barbschaller
 
On 10 Feb 2011 18:17:14 GMT, notbob wrote:


I used to be able to buy them by the pound. Made great stock. It's
not as easy anymore, but I can still find them at the Asian markets.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
notbob wrote:

Yeah, she probably had a family pack of plump chicken breasts. ;)

None of my cats have ever refused plain old roast chicken, even when
not feeling well and won't eat much of anything else they will if I
let them gorge on roast chicken, especially the dark meat. Don't feed
cats raw chicken, dogs neither... domestic cats and dogs do not have
immunity to salmonella typically in marketed poultry. Cats will eat
many people foods but for a proper feline diet it's very important to
feed them mostly cat food, and buy the high quality brands. And even
though it costs less do not feed cats dog food. Feline dietary needs
are very different from canines, cats are carnivores, dogs are
omnivores.
 
On Thu, 10 Feb 2011 14:24:57 -0800, sf wrote:


I used to (before I began traveling again) save all the chicken fat
globs from the whole chickens I would buy. I would hoard it all in
the freezer in a ziplock baggie and then render it all when I had a
lot of it. I am hoping to start that again, when I settle down
again... Chicken fat can be a wonderful cooking medium.

Usually the fat on the boneless, skinless chicken is minimal...at
least the ones I have gotten. Thighs seem to have more fat.

Christine
--
http://nightstirrings.blogspot.com
 
In article , cshenk1
@cox.net says...


Also there was a dangerous mix and match of posts between raw feeding
dogs

Whyever not?

Janet
 
On Feb 10, 7:01?pm, [email protected] (Steve Pope) wrote:

Dark meat seems about as low as meat goes.

For some reason hot dogs are lower than the meat they're made from.
Strange.

I ain't eatin' brains no matter how low in purines they are.
 
In article ,
notbob wrote:


It's a local term, nb: Fleet Farm. If Fleet Farm doesn't have it, you
don't need it.

--
Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
Holy Order of the Sacred Sisters of St. Pectina of Jella
"Always in a jam, never in a stew; sometimes in a pickle."
Pepparkakor particulars posted 11-29-2010;
http://web.me.com/barbschaller
 
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