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Food/Recipes

Anyone rinse Minced beef?

25 replies

dietcokesholidaysarecoming · 12/12/2010 12:54

I am batch cooking today and came across a tip on a forum to rinse minced beef.

Anyone else do this?

Am sickened by the fat that came out of it even after draining pan.

Just wonder if the taste will be affected.

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littleducks · 12/12/2010 12:55

Yes but it is seen as super weird on here!

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mousymouse · 12/12/2010 12:56

never.
the fat will not come off and you will contaminate your kitchen with ecoli, salmonella etc.

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usualsuspect · 12/12/2010 13:01

never

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WhatsWrongWithYou · 12/12/2010 13:01

If the fat in mince disgusts you, you can always fry it first and then drain it off. To me, washing raw meat unnecessarily is risky - I'd imagine all sorts of lurgies spreading around the kitchen.

And the fat is surely a sign that the animal has been fed properly - lean meat has to be the product of a hungry animal and I wouldn't want to perpetuate that by buying it.

Too much emphasis is placed on eating 'diet' junk food these days instead of following a truly healthy, balanced diet, which includes the healthy levels of fat our bodies need to function.

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lal123 · 12/12/2010 13:02

Why on earth would you? Water won't get rid of the fat - unless of course you're going to scrub each wee bit individually with some washing up liquid??

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dietcokesholidaysarecoming · 12/12/2010 13:03

Sorry I meant cooked minced beef not raw.

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SleepyCaz · 12/12/2010 13:04

After it's cooked i put it in a strainer and pour boiling water over it. Then transfer back to the (drained) pan and just carry on making whatever I'm making. Zero fat, almost.

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RockinRobinBird · 12/12/2010 13:04

Why would you do that? It's nuts.

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lal123 · 12/12/2010 13:04

but doesn't that remove any little taste it had in the first place?

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dietcokesholidaysarecoming · 12/12/2010 13:07

SleepingCaz.....thats what I meant.

Apparently an italian mother in law does it and it reduces fat (googling a recipe I came across it)

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MrsDmitriTippensKrushnic · 12/12/2010 13:31

My friend boils and drains mince before she uses it. I'd rather spend more for the extra lean mince and have a bit of flavour in it tbh.

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thumbplumpuddingwitch · 12/12/2010 13:35

I wouldn't rinse it once it's cooked, no. You could fry it on its own and pour the excess fat away though, if it bothers you; or you could buy extra lean mince if you can afford it.

I have heard about standing it in water overnight to remove some of the fat, it's supposed to float to the surface, but unless the water was hottish in the first place I can't see how it would work and have never tried it.

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Slobbadan · 12/12/2010 13:36

I think it depends on the mince tbh, as i used to by normal mince and now buy lean mince and you are lucky if you get a teaspoon of fat after you brown it (its morrisons lean mince nothing fancie) where as the normal stuff has quite a lot of fat coming out.

I would not pour water over tho, just strain it and give the pan a wipe with kitchen roll to get rid of the exess.

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bacon · 12/12/2010 14:23

You need fat in slow cuts of beef, ie mince is produced from cuts of beef that are unsuitable for quick cook. The fat bastes the meat and enhances flavour. Otherwise it'll be dry and rough. Lean mince must be very very tastless.

If you buy quality mince say from small beef farmer then the quality of the fat will be superior of a usual milk animal.

I cant beleive people worry about beef fat with all the complete rubbish that is saturated in all our other foods. Beef fat isnt such a concern as other fats. Fats from predigree animals is better than god only knows what fats are on crossed and messed with animals. Chicken for instance contains more fat and bad fats in relation to when we used to eat proper bred chicken not those hybrid white ones you see in the supermarket.

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meltedmarsbars · 12/12/2010 20:05

hear hear!

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WhatsWrongWithYou · 12/12/2010 20:19

Bacon, I'm on your team!
Low fat meat = rubbery texture and starving animal.

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OTTMummA · 12/12/2010 21:55

one of my guilty pleasures i aquired from my nanna, was beef dripping on toast for tea on mondays!
Fat is gooooooood.
So long as your not a glutton for it.
i wouldn't soak meat in water, thats just a bit weird tbh.
you can scrap the mince beef onto one side of the pan and tilt it so the fat runs to the bottom side and spoon it out.
I do that when i have a fatty piece of mince, but i don't take it all out, its got the flavour in it the fat has!

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panettoinydog · 12/12/2010 22:06

No, that would be a daft thing to do.

If you don't like any fat in your food, then don't cook mince. Cook something else.

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missmoopy · 12/12/2010 22:20

I do.

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dietcokesholidaysarecoming · 13/12/2010 11:09

Well it didnt taste awful but it didnt taste great either.

In future I wont be rinsing!

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Natalie6969 · 21/12/2020 22:18

Yea always! A quick 15 minute rinse in the washing machine followed by a 5 minute high power tumble dry.

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MirandaMarple · 22/12/2020 03:36

Yummy 🥴

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Georgyporky · 22/12/2020 18:47

The flavour is in the fat, I've never heard of rinsing mince either raw or cooked.

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TuxedoPanther · 23/12/2020 04:27

Not this again. Magic chicken and rinsed mince.

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grassisjeweled · 24/12/2020 01:39

Ain't got no time for dat!

Rinsing mince Hmm

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