I used to pour it into a glass jar. But these days I’m just using a paper towel or 3 after it dries and chuckin it in the bin.

  • actionjbone@sh.itjust.works
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    22 days ago

    Depends on what kind of leftover fat.

    If frying something in measurable quantities of oil, the oil can be filtered to remove solids, then stored to re-use later.

    If cooking something greasy like bacon or sausage, either I’ll cook other things in the same pan after, or I’ll pour it through a strainer, let it cool, and freeze it. Once I’ve saved a bunch, I clarify it.

    Fat is flavor. In my house, it doesn’t get thrown away. There are lots of ways to reuse it.

  • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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    22 days ago

    I let it cool off and then scrape it into the trash/compost. Sometimes I use a paper towel, sometimes I just scrape it.

  • jbk@discuss.tchncs.de
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    22 days ago

    Our city’s trash disposal also provides free plastic buckets for cooking oil. I try to use that as often as possible. I love it

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    22 days ago

    Depends how much is left. Alot then filter and jar. A little then paper towel and trash.

  • ChicoSuave@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    If it cools into a solid fat then it goes in a bowl and put it outside for wildlife to enjoy some easy calories. A trail cam and some time has given me a good chunk of backyard nocturnal drama, like the falling out of two tomcats.

    Liquid fat/oil is used to re-season pans or soaked up with a paper towel and dumped.

  • BlameTheAntifa@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    You can compost it if you aren’t generating huge amounts. Mix it with something absorbent like sawdust or used coffee grounds and mix into a composter, and add extra “green material” like leaves or lawn clippings.

  • ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml
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    22 days ago

    Saw this thread from a mile away and ran to tell everyone I don’t have that problem because I own an air fryer

  • paequ2@lemmy.today
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    22 days ago

    I currently use (probably too many) paper towels to absorb the oil and then toss them into the trash can. I’m not happy with this solution, but I don’t want to pour it down the drain.

    I found this the other day https://fryaway.co/ but I haven’t tried it yet. It’s supposed to make the oil solid so you can more easily toss it.

    • phonics@lemmy.worldOP
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      22 days ago

      Looks interesting but not at that price point for me. Seems more expensive than paper towels and probably worse overall for the environment since it’d be heavier than paper towel to transport to the store. Would be interesting to compare the carbon footprint. I also like how nowhere on the page did it compare it to paper toweling it into the trash. Just pouring it down a sink or putting it in a jar lol. That’s marketing

      • paequ2@lemmy.today
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        20 days ago

        Would be interesting to compare the carbon footprint.

        Yeah, definitely. I thought this was interesting because cleaning up certain dinners requires A LOT of paper towels. And then there are dinners where I end up with a small jar of oil, which is too much oil for paper towels. Thought this may save a few trees.

  • Zephorah@discuss.online
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    22 days ago

    I use an iron skillet for most things, it gets cleaned then takes up real estate on a stove burner until the next day.

    Most of the time it’s just enough oil to sear things. Salmon. The white meat chicken with a bacon iron on top. Each needs some oil for Maillard rxn on the hot iron and non-stick, in addition to flavor and moistness.

    It’s liquid at room temp. It’s minimal. When the pan is cool enough, a dollop of dawn, a light abrasive without a lot of pressure (it’s a tactile thing, cast iron people know) and the soap slurry goes right down the drain. I’ve owned for 25 yrs, no issues.

    (Because someone is about to start text screaming: If it’s a new cure or a cure done in 1-2 layers or a weaker fat, any abrasive or cleaning will likely kill it. I use lard for my cures while lightly washing with hot soapy water in between. 5 layers/rounds of cure. Then oil it after each use for the first month post new cure. Then, it’s solid, just wash and dry, and you can use a light abrasive. We have a 12, a 10, three 8s, and three 5s in circulation.)

    Now, if I make Pho, I’m not skimming the beef tallow/oil off into the sink. I wait for the broth to cool, crack the disc of solid lard off the top, and drop it in the trash.

    Popcorn pan, sink. Salmon in the pan, sink. Dark meat chicken in the pan, cool and scrape those solids into the trash.

    It’s about amount and what it does at room temp.

    • KittenBiscuits@lemmy.today
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      22 days ago

      I respect that you were brave enough to admit on the internet to using a little soap now and again with your cast iron. It took me about a year after I rehabbed mom’s pans to work up the courage to gently swipe a little soap on them now and again. They still get dried in the oven and moisturized with avocado oil. Mah bebes.

      • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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        22 days ago

        I do not baby cast iron at all. I use plenty of dish soap and scrub it. But then again, I’ve also to completely refinished cast iron before. You learn to appreciate how durable seasoning can be when you actually try and remove it. My main skillet I’ve in the past taken it down to bare metal with an angle grinder, then built the seasoning back up from nothing.

        • Fondots@lemmy.world
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          22 days ago

          My first exposure to cast iron was through boy scouts with cast iron griddles and Dutch ovens cooking on an open fire.

          They got left out in the rain, blasted with heat hot enough to melt lesser metals*, had all manner of acidic foods cooked in them, got scrubbed clean with steel wool and dish soap, spent most of their lives when they weren’t in use in a garage with no climate control where the humidity often got pretty gross, and generally got used, abused, and neglected. Never had any issues with the seasoning, rust, etc. I think one time after a camping trip by the beach where they sat out getting lightly twisted with salt spray all weekend, they picked up a bit of rust, so someone’s dad got them sandblasted at his job, and after a trip or to through the oven for reseasoning they went right back in service, and that was the only special treatment they ever got.

          So it was really weird to me when I got older and got some pans of my own to see people talking about babying their cast iron like they do. I’m a little more careful with my pans than I was with the ones we had in scouts, but not by much. And when I take them camping I’m not above throwing them into the fire to burn off any really stubborn, burnt-on crud.

          And at the end of the day, there’s not much that you can realistically do to a cast iron pan that you can’t fix with some sandpaper and elbow grease and a quick reseasoning.

          *At one point, we somehow ended up with an aluminum griddle in one of our cook kits. It was a pretty much indistinguishable from our iron ones except that it weighed less, it was a pretty solid griddle. On one camping trip it was left on the fire after breakfast, and I don’t know exactly how it came to pass because it was another patrol, but they somehow got the fire up hot enough to melt it. I still have a blob of aluminum somewhere that we fished out of the ashes.

        • KittenBiscuits@lemmy.today
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          22 days ago

          I did the same with these pans too. Though I didn’t need an angle grinder. A day or two in a trash bag marinating in oven cleaner, then some steel wool and elbow grease. That’s why I call them my babies, they are antique pans that sadly had gotten rusty and I gave them new life. They were my mom’s, and before her, her great-grandma’s pans (and maybe someone else’s before then but we, the family, have lost track).

      • Zephorah@discuss.online
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        22 days ago

        I’ve tried olive oil. Idk what it is, maybe user error, but those cures seem to be very delicate. Like the olives are all primadonna about touching such a base metal like iron.

        I don’t use lard with cooking. My beef these days is limited to pho and a bi-yearly burger, but my rationale was, what did grandma use? Why was she soaping hers up in the sink with impunity?

        Lard. And layers.

        I respect the baby it approach too, and vegans, if that is your way.

        Whatever works, it’s in.

        • KittenBiscuits@lemmy.today
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          22 days ago

          Pretty much the same rationale. WWGD. But I used shortening for my base coats only because that’s what I had on hand. Then I basically only cooked bacon, sausage, ham, and pork chops in them to build up the seasoning.

  • Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe
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    22 days ago

    Other than pan frying something like chicken, I don’t really have “leftover fat”.

    Bacon - ya pour that right into the bacon fat container that has its own strainer.

    Most other recipes the fat is part of the dish. As someone else commented - fat is flavor. Say you brown chicken parts for something like Gumbo, the next thing in the pan will be vegetables that get glazed, and you’re gonna need a fat for that which is already there in the pan.

  • mechoman444@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    What I totally don’t ever do under any circumstance at anytime for any reason even though it’s super convenient and easy is pour it down the sink. Yes sir. That’s not something I ever, ever do! Wouldn’t it be crazy if I did? Omg. So crazy!

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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    22 days ago

    Left… over?

    If I’m deepfrying, I set it aside and reuse it.

    If I cooked something like bacon that gave off fat, I save it and use it to cook other things later.

    If I was sautéing something, I used the correct amount of oil and there’s none left over.

    If I was roasting something, I turn the pan drippings into a sauce.

    I will say, if you’re having this problem a lot cooking meat, you’re probably not trimming the cuts properly before cooking. Trim those and throw the scraps in the freezer until the next time you make stock.

    • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      22 days ago

      I have fat in my freezer and am a total noob at stock making. The fat is leftover from a slab of pork I cut up into 8oz portions and froze.

      I would like to hear / read more about this earth thing called stock, if you are willing to share.

      • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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        19 days ago

        Get a bunch of bones: Your local butcher is probably willing to give you some for free if you’re buying something as well. If that’s not an option, look for packaged of chicken backs and chicken feet. Backs on their own are fine, feet you should mix with backs and not use alone.

        Get a big pot. Bigger than you’re thinking. The biggest, basically. Must have lid, lid need not fit tightly. Whack on the heat medium high and throw a small amount of oil in and then the bones, backs, feet, whatever you’re using. This is the time to throw in fat scraps, too, or old Parmesan rinds.

        While that’s sizzling, browning, defrosting, whatever, wash three large carrots and three or more large stalks of celery. Roughly chop and throw 'em in. One very large yellow onion or two medium ones, leave the skin on if it’s not dirty, cut in eighths while leaving ends intact and throw in. Take a whole head of garlic, don’t peel it, cut in half across the cloves and throw both halves in. Bay leaves if you have 'em, two or three. Twelve whole peppercorns. Rough chop and apple. Thin slice whole ginger, no need to peel — this is a great way to use up older ginger that’s gone dry. Good way to use up old wrinkly veggies in general.

        Do not!!! add beets or radish, the flavors are too strong. Do not add potatoes, it’ll ruin the texture of the stock; you can add them later when you’re turning stock into soup.

        Get your largest stirring thingamajig and stir the veggies around with the meat. Salt everything and stir again. Don’t worry about using too much salt, it’s almost impossible to make homemade stock and end up with more sodium per serving than packaged broth.

        When evertting smells sizzlin’ good, add as much water as physically fits in the pot. Cover, bring to a low boil, reduce to a high simmer and leave the lib slightly cracked so pressure doesn’t build but not too much steam escapes. You want to eat that steam, after all. Then basically ignore it for four or more hours. Seriously, go to bed and wake up in the morning to a house that smells amazing.

        Skim off any grit or scum that floated to the top, kill the heat, let cool somewhat, then strain through a collander. Press the veggies and bones slightly to extract maximum goodness, then bag them up and throw them out. Strain it again through a fine mesh strainer, or if you want to get fancy, a cheesecloth or tea towel overtop of a fine strainer. Throw out the slime left behind and admire your delicious stock. Drink some from a mug. It’s delicious.


        Now this last part is both optional and advanced, it’s called “clarifying”. You can crack an egg or two in a bowl and whisk it together with the eggshells. Bring your stock back to a rolling boil, throw the egg and shell in there, and it will soak up all the remaining particulate matter. The eggs turn a horrible grey color and the stock turns to liquid gold. Skim off the egg raft, filter through a cheesecloth again, and impress your Parisian friends. I urge again, this step is only if you need to feel fancy, because you can absolutely bork your hard-earned stock if you do it wrong.

        Good luck and enjoy!