Posted on 08/13/2017 10:57:06 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Hear, hear! They were SO MUCH BETTER than today’s.
And he was wrong. When frying at high heat, it's healthier to use fully saturated fats in order to avoid the formation of transfats from polyunsaturated fats like with canola oil.
It's like how 40 years ago we were told that margarine is healthier than butter and to eat a low fat high processed carb diet. Wrong.
Gladwell is an American hero. Canola oil and GMO soy are poisons we have been lied into embracing.
He is British.
When I make french fries at home, I grind a beef bullion and add it to a shaker of salt. After frying my fries in peanut oil, I shake my mix over the hot fries. It saves me from having to look all over for beef tallow.
Well... English born but he grew up in Canada after age 6.
I’d be shocked if McD’s ever brought back beef-tallow fries, but, yes, the old fries were way better. The article says July 1990, but I’m not sure if all locations switched right away. I kind of remember my local McD’s switching in 1991. The difference in taste was immediately noticeable. The texture was different too, as the beef-tallow fries were a bit soggier. Now, if you don’t eat McD’s fries right away when they’re still hot, they become hard, almost potato chip-like.
Homemade cornbread with lard spread on it and a shake of salt..yummy!
You can make some very nice bars of soap if you have access to cheap or free lard.
Hogfat and ashes soap is wonderful!
Granny Clampett was right :-)
Beef tallow is healthier than the trans fat veg oils (ie hydrogenated veg oils) they currently use.
Agreed!
FADScience is everywhere. There are popular food agendas such as:
Dietary Fiber
Cholesterol
Omega 3
Calcium
Caffeine
Sugar
Salt
Preservatives
One day the advertisers get in a frenzy for about a year or two and they “push” a food substance saying it’s unhealthy.
A few months or years later they say it’s OK, then there is counter research to the contrary of the contrary. Sound confusing?
Suddenly you’re buying processed foods that have a long list of “No X”, no cholesterol, no sugar, no blah, blah, blah.
Suddenly you see products like Tums with Calcium added or fish sticks with Omega 3.
They’re trying to convince us that what is very unhealthy is indeed healthy and we buy into it.
When you see a product that has a long list of “Does not contain...” you know it’s a farce already.
Buy butter instead of margarine.
Use sugar (in small quantities) instead of an artificial sweetener, eat healthier foods and more importantly, REDUCE the quantities.
Oh no, not carboxylic acids!
You mean things like vinegar or citric acid?
I saw beef tallow in the health food store yesterday and it was expensive! Of course, it was made from grass-fed beef, so that’s probably why.
Margarine. Yech. Whoever thought it was a good idea to feed people a product bacteria can’t eat?
He mentions the drywall guy. Anyone remember the problem some 10 years or so with the Chinese drywall? Is this the guy that was involved in all that? I’m wondering if someone made millions importing toxic crap and then offloaded the problem on the taxpayer.
The drywall magnate threatened to quit supplying McDonald’s with their hamburger “meat.”
Lard makes the best fries...Coconut oil the best popcorn.
Seriously, the reason McDonald’s french fries don’t taste like they used to is because they use far less salt. And adding the salt yourself after they’ve cooled down doesn’t work; the salt has to dissolve into the hot oil to deliver the flavor the same way.
A long, long time ago, I tried using bacon fat instead of oil to fry food one time. I was very disappointed. It tasted EXACTLY the same. Turns out, beef tallow or bacon fat has no flavor on its own. None. Nada. Beef tallow is, however, extremely high in saturated fats.
Modern Twinkies suck because the less-saturated fat formulation they use no longer forms a frosting-like “cream” in the Twinkie, but instead, a mere sweet goo. That’s not a flavor issue, though: that’s a consistency issue. And saturated fats do have a very different consistency than oils and unsaturated fats.
If you think I’m making this up: which tastes better, the fat on the edge of a steak, or the fat on the edge of bacon? NOthing tastes better than a well-marbled steak, but a fatty edge of steak doesn’t taste like all that. The fatty edge of bacon or a pork chop: YUM! Here’s the thing: pork fat is LOWER in saturated fat than beef fat. It’s much more similar to chicken fat or even vegetable oil. That’s why pork gets away with calling itself the other white meat, in spite of being much fattier than chicken breast. The bacon fat tastes better simply because the bacon itself has a stronger flavor.
Of course, he’s British. Americans would’ve named him Happygood.
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