Ghee has been the MVP in my kitchen. It’s a type of clarified butter, where the water is boiled off and the milk solids are toasted before being strained out. This gives ghee a slightly nutty flavor and greatly raises the smoke point, making it suitable for high heat cooking. It’s easy - if a little tedious - to make at home, and it’s great for cooking (and seasoning, IMO) with cast iron.

You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments
0 points

Heard good things about ghee, but never tried it. How long can you store it afterwards?

permalink
report
reply

Cast Iron

!castiron@lemmy.world

Create post

A community for cast iron cookware. Recipes, care, restoration, identification, etc.

Rules: Be helpful when you can, be respectful always, and keep cooking bacon.

More rules may come as the community grows, but for now, I’ll remove spam or anything obviously mean-spirited, and leave it at that.

Related Communities: !forgediron@lemmy.world !sourdough@lemmy.world !cooking@lemmy.world

Community stats

  • 182

    Monthly active users

  • 71

    Posts

  • 97

    Comments

Community moderators