I see a lot of recipes call for adding oil to the pan when cooking ground beef. I never have, figured the fat in the ground beef was enough for cooking and browning. I usually don't buy the lean stuff. I usually buy 80% for general cooking and 70% for burgers. I just never imagined added oil would be necessary. Should I have been adding oil all this time?
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Oil for cooking ground beef?
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Club Member
- Aug 2020
- 7448
- Houston, Texas
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SnS Kettle Grill
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I never use oil for ground beef. It always has enough fat to not stick. Just don’t cook it on high first, give the fat a few minutes to render.
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Club Member
- Apr 2018
- 5825
- Western Mass
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Retired, living in Western Mass. Enjoy music, cooking and my family.
Current cookers Weber Spirit 3 burner with a full insert griddle added. A 22" Kettle with vortex SnS and OnlyFire pizza oven. A Smokey Joe and the most recent addition a Pit Barrel Jr with bird hanger, 4 hooks and cover. ThermoWorks Smoke 2 probe, DOT, ThermoPops and a Thermapen MK4. 3 TempSpike wireless meat thermometers.
I put a bit oil on the burger, then ground pepper. Especially helpful when cooking on Grill Grates. In a CI, I think it helps with the sear.
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Founding Member
- Jul 2014
- 5715
- Maple Valley, WA
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Grill/Smoke/Roast = SnS Grills Kettle + SnS Deluxe Insert & Drip n' Griddle
Grill/Smoke/Roast = Hasty-Bake Gourmet Dual Finish with HB rotisserie and Grill Grates
Smoke = Weber Smokey Mountain 22.5"
Pizza = Blackstone Propane Pizza Oven (Stacy's, but she let's me use it sometimes)
Indoor Cooking = LG Studio 30" gas range
Camp Cooking = Coleman 2 burner white gas stove
Thermometer = FireBoard FBX2 with 2 ambient and 6 meat probes
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Thermapen Mk IV = Black
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PID Controller = Fireboard Drive + Fireboard 20 CFM Fan (FB gen 2 fan)
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Wusthof Classic Ikon set: 9" carving knive, 2X 8" Chef's Knife, 7" Santoku and three utility knives
Kamikoto Kuro set: 7" Santoku, 6.5" Nakiri, 5" Utility
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Favorite wine = whatever is currently in the wine rack
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Best Cookbooks - Meathead's "The Science of Great Barbecue and Grilling", Chris Lilly's "Big Bob Gibson's BBQ Book", Aaron Franklin's "Franklin BBQ"
Cookbooks to check out - Raichlen's "Brisket Chronicles" and anything by Adam Perry Lang.
Current fanboy cookbook - "Chasing Smoke: Cooking Over Fire Around the Levant"
Some Posts in Pitmaster to check out:
Eric's Brisket Method
Eric's Method for Drunken Texas Beans
Stacy's Bouef Bourguignon
Eric's Smoked Texas Chili
Rancho Gordo Beans and Bean Club
Troutman's Ribs - Step By Step Primer
Grilled Pork Chops: Harissa Marinade
Light My (Hasty Bake) Fire
Eric
I normally buy the Costco 90/10 1 lb chubs in the frozen section. I add some grape seed oil to it .... 2 tsp per pound, roughly, cause it’s too lean for my taste.
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Truth be told,:
Deepest, Darkest Secret is:
Whenever I even begin to cogitate upon fixin to commence to begin even kinda sorta utilizin any kinda my cast iron utensils, there's either gonna be butter, lard, tallow, or bacon grease involved...failure to comply is not a currently viable option, at present.
Onliest use I have fer hot dry cast iron is heatin tortillas on my plancha.Last edited by Mr. Bones; April 10, 2021, 08:01 PM.
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The only time I add any fat is when I make hamburger stroganoff. The recipe calls for 3T butter to fry the meat and onions in, and it makes a difference in the final product if you don't use it. Other than that, I start in a hot pan and let it stick. those stuck bits are where the flavor is at.
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Exactly! When I set out to brown a quantity of loose ground meat (cured or uncured), I make it into a big patty and sear both sides before breaking it up. If the meat is unseasoned I salt both sides (about one teaspoon of salt per pound of meat) and let the patty sit for a while before searing.
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I usually go low and with a lid on for the first 5 minutes or so. Once the meat begins cooking, I will gently remove the lid, preventing the condensation from dripping back into the skillet and splatter all over the place. I will also add a small amount on my griddle when making smashburgers.
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coolfins
The Works of John Paul Ritcher are almost unintelligible to any but Germans, and even to some of them. A worthy German, just before Ritcher's death, edited a complete edition of his works, in which one particular passage fairly puzzled him.—Determined to have it explained at the source, he went to John Paul himself, and asked him what was the meaning of the mysterious passage. John Paul's reply was very German and characteristic. "My good friend," said he, "when I wrote that passage, God and I knew what it meant. It is probable that God knows it still; but as for me, I have totally forgotten."
Robert Browning – Quote Investigator
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