How do you deal with the left over fat/oil in your pan?
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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.
Depends how much is left. Alot then filter and jar. A little then paper towel and trash.
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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.
I let it cool off and then scrape it into the trash/compost. Sometimes I use a paper towel, sometimes I just scrape it.
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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.
Straight down the sink. It's a rental.
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Depends how much is left. Alot then filter and jar. A little then paper towel and trash.
A filter? What you doing with the filter?
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A filter? What you doing with the filter?
Filtering out any chunky bits from the cooking so it doesn't go back into the fat jar
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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.
Wipe with paper towel, toss in trash.
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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.
Goes into the compost.
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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.
wrote last edited by [email protected]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.
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Straight down the sink. It's a rental.
It's not only the rental's pipes that suffer from fat buildup. It's the entire city's pipes.
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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.
Are you renting or do you own?
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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.
Lick it off
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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.
Popcorn made in pre-used oil can be awesome, and an easy way to get rid of 100ml or so.
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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.
If I want to keep the fat, like from bacon, then I strain it through cheesecloth into a small jar and use it occasionally.
If I don't want it, then if it gets solid at room temp it gets to cool and be scraped into the bin. If it is a liquid at room temp it goes into a ziplock bag or something to keep it from leaking.
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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.
Other than saving it for use later when possible, we let it solidify and scrap it into the trash.
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Straight down the sink. It's a rental.
You might be surprised to learn that those pipes connect to your entire community and you're being a dick to all of them instead of doing the bare minimum of effort
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Straight down the sink. It's a rental.
What the fuck
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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.
wrote last edited by [email protected]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.
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Goes into the compost.
But the salt.
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Straight down the sink. It's a rental.
There are better ways to sabotage a rental without screwing with the rest of the plumbing system
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Depends how much is left. Alot then filter and jar. A little then paper towel and trash.