Where can I get chicken fat?

Omelet wrote in news:ompomelet-E58753.20465611022011
@news.giganews.com:





Heathen!!

The idea is to chew them, before swallowing. That way you get the
smoothness, and texture, and the full taste.

And there *really* is a difference in taste..... I had an oyster tasting
(awhile back) with oysters from approx 6 different locations. It was good
to have them all in one spot and trying them al together to see the
differences.

The only time I cook oysters is if they are the *huge* ones from my secret
location, or the SO wants to have some. I'll just have them raw, with
maybe a small squeeze of lemon juice.


http://s199.photobucket.com/albums/aa216/PeterL_2007/Breakfast 23rd%
20August/


http://tinyurl.com/68phg8


--
Peter Lucas
Hobart
Tasmania

"As we weep for what we have lost, and as we grieve for family and friends
and we confront the challenge that is before us, I want us to remember who
we are.

We are Queenslanders.

We're the people that they breed tough, north of the border.

We're the ones that they knock down, and we get up again."
 
"Steve Pope" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

Ah, well that won't go over well. I can get him to eat cottage cheese once
in a while but he is mainly a meat eater. The current problem is that he
won't eat vegetables, ever. He's worse than many kids.
 
"Storrmmee" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

I don't have it offhand. Angela found it. It's not for regular cats. It's
a renal diet. I do remember that it had white rice, canned clams, chicken,
the chicken fat and a couple of kinds of vitamins. One was C and the other
was some kind of eggshell thing. Not sure if those were for cats or people.
I don't know what search parameters she used. I looked and didn't find it.

Right now I am giving her white rice cooked with a little margarine and some
canned chicken mixed in. Also her renal canned food with a gravy that I
made from butter, sweet rice flour and chicken broth. She seems to like the
gravy but it isn't helping her to eat the food.

I need her to gain some weight. She has lost half a pound since Dec. She
is eating, but not very much.
 
Julie Bove wrote:


No meats are low in it. A gout diet is always a semi-vegetarian diet,
if not vegetarian. Things like sausage and salumi are reasonably
low purine because they are mostly fat. There is some variation among
the different types of meat and fish. But you pretty much can't
plan on getting most of your protein from meat/fish/legumes with a gout
diet.

Dairy and egg whites are the lowest purine protein sources.


Steve
 
"Cam" wrote in message
news:2b3e4304-ec1b-49df-af4b-cee831998530@t13g2000vbo.googlegroups.com...
On Feb 10, 10:13 am, "Julie Bove" wrote:

I buy raw chicken backs for my dogs. For $1 at the Chinese grocer I
get the spine, ribs and pelvis from four birds. They sell them for
soup stock. I tear off the hunks of fat hanging from the skin with my
bare hands and give the remainders to my dogs. They can crunch through
the raw bones, cartilage and meat scraps in under two minutes. A
chicken back is a real treat to them and quite a healthy addtion to
their diet. I then take the fat chunks and slowly simmer them in a
cast iron skillet, adding some onions near the end. This process might
not appeal to you, but that's where I get chicken fat.

---

I thought dogs weren't supposed to have chicken bones because they could
split?
 
In article ,
[email protected] says...

Give it a shot, the worst that can happen is that she won't eat it.
Remember, this is a cat, their sense of aesthetics, however highly
developed, is not the same as that of a human, and what works for cat
might taste repulsive to one of us.
 
On Fri, 11 Feb 2011 14:27:14 -0800, sf wrote:


Actually not... there's no point to shallot with garlic... shallot
already adds a garlicy nuance. It's one or the other... if you want
garlic and onions use garlic and onions. Using shallots with garlic
is as wasteful as using shallots with onions. At least ten times a
day sf proves she's afflicted with TIAD and no IQ... actually I don't
believe she ever cooks anything, she makes reservations.
 
In article ,
[email protected] says...

and some

That's because cat physiology is NOT the same as human. Cats digestive
system is very different, it can't digest grains, rice, starch, or even,
dairy food like butter.

Do NOT feed her commercial chicken broth because it contains salt,
which will rapidly worsen renal problems.

You are not feeding her appropriately. Get advice from the vet and
follow it.

Janet
 
Ophelia wrote:


That's strange. I've sent you an email before, haven't I?

It was just a copy of this r.f.c post, so you can delete it.

-Bob
 
Sycophant wrote:


Is *that* why you and Sqwertz aren't living together?



Captain Peter Swallows likes oysters for the same reason you dislike them!
Of course, he does the same tasting method with semen, trying semen from at
least six different diggers in one "session." (I was going to say "sitting"
but Swallows adopts a very different posture for his semen-tasting
activities.) When I say "at least six" it should be understood that six is
the minimum, not the average. The Bukkake Brigade gatherings can number into
the hundreds!

Bob
 
On 2/10/2011 12:48 AM, Julie Bove wrote:
Buy a package of chicken necks. They usually have plenty of fat
attached. You can render it if you need it rendered. Save the necks for
chicken broth.

--
Janet Wilder
Way-the-heck-south Texas
Spelling doesn't count. Cooking does.
 
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