Removing fat from a recipe

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If I see a recipe I like and it includes a marinade or sauce where butter or oil is a significant ingredient, is there any way to substitute that fat and preserve a similar taste and texture? For example, I recently cooked a citrus shrimp recipe and simply skipped 90% of the recommended oil and it tasted pretty good, but I don't know what I may have missed out on. I know fat is pretty fundamental to food, so maybe the answer is no.



Best Answer

It depends entirely on the recipe and how it will be used. Fat can work as a medium for flavors and heat, to provide texture (especially in the case of emulsification), and for its own flavor. Blindly removing it from a recipe may "work", but leave you with something quite different from what was originally intended - whether that's ok with you is a personal decision.

Rather than looking to eliminate fat, look to maximize your benefit from it. Find out what purpose it serves in a given recipe, then find an oil you like that fulfills that purpose and add only as much as is necessary.




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How do you reduce fat in a recipe?

Try baking, boiling, broiling, grilling, poaching, saut\xe9ing or stir-frying cooking methods. Season vegetables with lemon juice, herbs or vinegar. Substitute 100% fruit juice, vegetable juice or low-sodium vegetable broth. Choose lower-fat cheeses with 20% M.F. or less.

How do you remove fat from cooked food?

Perhaps the most obvious solution is to spoon that fat right out of there! Towards the end of the cooking process the fat will often gather at the top of your dish. You can also periodically use a spoon or ladle to gently spoon out this oil and discard it. Use the ice-cube trick.

How do you get rid of extra fat in a casserole?

To remove the layer of fat that floats at the top just chuck in a few ice cubes. The fat goes cold and immediately sticks to the ice cubes. Scoop out with a slottted spoon and throw away, then just bring your casserole/gravy or whatever back up to heat.



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More answers regarding removing fat from a recipe

Answer 2

To add to what @Knives said -- it also affects texture and moisture in baking.

It's also important to remember that butter has water in it, so removing butter from a baked good might remove water vapor that's needed for lift -- and you can't just add water back in or it'll mix with the flour.

All that being said, in quick breads you can get away with replacing about 1/2 of the oil with applesauce or mashed banana. You might need to experiment to figure out how far you can get away with it. (and remember to write down what you did! I'm still kicking myself for the time when the low-fat apple/carrot muffins came out perfect and I have no idea what I did).

This will not work for other baked goods, such as those where you have to cream the butter first.

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Oh ... and when you see butter being stirred into a sauce right at the end ("mounting" the sauce ) -- it's actually being used as a thickener, which will affect mouth feel. You might be able to use a starch to thicken it slightly, but won't have the same feel.

Answer 3

I think it is more important to look for what fats are in your ingredients. You should avoid transfats (mostly in prepared foods) and saturated fats, but unsaturated fats are very important for your health. See also this website as an example were to find information about this.

Answer 4

For a sauce, fat can release a lot of flavor and color ( tom sauce). Working around that, toasting spices first before grinding and sauteeing ing in the reduced portion of oil can mitigate the change.

As for body in a savory sauce, onions to the rescue: sauteed in min fat to desired color then cooked in own juice slowly under lid. Puree til silky smooth. I've cut my cocont milk way down this way. Even aglio olio.

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