Dan’s post was in line with what I was thinking. Tallow / Rendering makes one think you are discarding the solid chunks and reserving the liquid fat. If this is the case, and you haven’t heated the fat at a high enough temperature, then some of the more saturated fatty acids may not fully liquefy and you’ll be discarding them with the remaining tissues.
OK, thanks for the warning, Lex. I won't bother with a rheostat then. So I'll have to decide whether I go back to higher-heated tallow or try to again to get used to raw suet. What do you think the minimum temp I can get away with on the tallow is?
I like air-dried meat (I sometimes leave my ground beef out so it gets an air-dried crust), but not yet fermented meat or fat. The Inuit reportedly think that if you haven't learned to love raw meat by age 3 you never will, so they would be shocked by us.
They were shocked by an English man who visited them and acquired a taste for raw meat as an adult. Some day I would like to get a meat locker to age most of my meats, instead of refrigerating them, like the Paleo guy in NYC, but the only one on the Internet was very expensive, so I'll probably have to get lucky.
I never make a decision on one or two meals.
It was more meals then that, actually. It was one batch of tallow. But one batch is also not enough to go on.
Stress at work or in a relationship ...
Do you still get that badly stressed? I can get stressed for a brief period now, but it passes quickly, even if the situating is very bad (like a physician screaming at me at the top of his lungs). It's a weird feeling to feel happy when things are bad. So different from the past when I would feel bad even when things were going good and there was no environmental stress. I tell my body, "Why are you feeling happy, you stupid body! Things are really bad right now, don't you know that?" LOL Now I know why the explorers reported that the first-contact Inuit and Bushmen laughed a lot, often for seemingly little or no reason. I noticed that in Inuit videos after the people eat seal, whale or caribou that they've hunted, they start smiling, laughing, dancing, singing, and even lifting their arms up in thanks to "the Creator." Especially the older folk (who benefited from traditional foods in their youth much more than the youth of today, unfortunately for the youths) I get this feeling after I eat good meat/fat too, and I feel like humming, singing and dancing. Many of the Inuit youth are committing suicide and I suspect that dramatic drop in D3 consumption as vs. the traditional diet is part of the reason (in addition to an increasingly desperate situation, etc.).
Depends on the temperature I’m rendering at. If I’m in the mood to keep it low – around 220F, then I have to render for 8 to 10 hours, or maybe longer if it’s a big batch, to remove most of the water. If rendering at 240F then usually 3 hours is enough.
Do you think that I could do 190F for a longer period, or is that too low?