MODES OF FRYING
The usual custom among professional cooks is to
entirely immerse the article to be cooked in
boiling fat, but from inconvenience most
households use the half-fryingmethod of frying
in a small amount of fat in a frying pan.
For the first method a shallow iron frying
kettle, large at the top and small at the
bottom, is best to use. The fat should half
fill the kettle, or an amount sufficient to
float whatever is to be fried; the heat of the
fat should get to such a degree that, when a
piece of bread or a teaspoonful of the batter
is dropped in it, it will become brown almost
instantly, but should not be so hot as to burn
the fat.
Some cooks say that the fat should be smoking,
but my experience is, that is a mistake, as
that soon ruins the fat. As soon as it begins
to smoke it should be removed a little to one
side, and still be kept at the boiling point.
If fritters, crullers, croquettes, etc., are
dropped into fat that is too hot, it crusts
over the outside before the inside has fully
risen, making a heavy, hard article, and also
ruining the fat, giving it a burnt flavor.
Many French cooks prefer beef fat or suet to
lard for frying purposes, considering it more
wholesome and digestible, does not impart as
much flavor, or adhere or soak into the
article cooked as pork fat.
In families of any size, where there is much
cooking required, there are enough drippings
and fat remnants from roasts of beef,
skimmings from the soup kettle, with the
addition of occasionally a pound of suet from
the market, to amply supply the need.
All such remnants and skimmings should be
clarified about twice a week
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