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    Can you fry something battered in milk powder?

    The Kitchen
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    • K
      KillaJ
      last edited by

      When I was a kid, my mom always got fried chicken livers from Popeye’s. I ate them and they weren’t bad. I’m trying to add liver to my diet now, but it’s just unappetizing. I’m not about forcing myself to eat things because they’re healthy. Would a mix of egg and milk powder work as a batter for chicken livers or would it burn? I won’t deep fry them because beef tallow and coconut oil are a little pricey for using that much. But I probably wouldn’t mind some pan fried chicken livers if the batter and oil were healthy.

      LucHL alfredoolivasA 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • LucHL
        LucH @KillaJ
        last edited by LucH

        @KillaJ said in Can you fry something battered in milk powder?:

        I’m trying to add liver to my diet now, but it’s just unappetizing. I’m not about forcing myself to eat things because they’re healthy.

        Change the way you prepare it and the kind. If you still don't appreciate, don't force ...
        I lightly fry 2 chicken livers in coconut oil with one shallot.
        I add 240 ml warm water with species, sea salt and olive oil or butter. Cooked for 10 minutes more, covered.
        Chicken is less powerful (taste) than beef.
        The broth is the the most interesting here, for the taste. So mind the species.

        If you warm milk above 44° C too long you're going to change the protein configuration.

        From Google IA:
        Yes, the statement is correct; prolonged heating of milk above 44°C will alter its protein configuration, primarily by denaturing whey proteins, which can lead to changes in the milk's texture, solubility, and potential loss of bioactivity. This denaturation is a disruption of the protein's structure, influenced by both the intensity and duration of the heat treatment.
        How Heat Alters Milk Proteins
        Denaturation: High temperatures, especially above 55-65°C, can cause whey proteins to unfold from their specific secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structures.
        Aggregation: Once denatured, these unfolded proteins can interact with each other and with casein proteins, forming larger aggregates.
        Protein-Casein Interactions: Heat can also trigger interactions between denatured whey proteins and casein micelles, which can alter the milk's colloidal structure.

        K 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • K
          KillaJ @LucH
          last edited by

          @LucH

          I’m going to assume that means No. I don’t plan on frying often, but is there a healthy way to batter something for frying? Coconut flour? Nixtamalized corn flour?

          LukeL LucHL 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • LukeL
            Luke @KillaJ
            last edited by

            @KillaJ
            You could try slicing the chicken liver into very small pieces, fry them with ground beef, some onions, garlic, salt etc. and eat it in a burrito or something like that.

            I've never tried it myself, but I doubt you would notice much of the liver taste that way. Especially as, like LucH said, cicken liver has the least strong liver taste.

            I've never been a big party attender, but I never went to a party where I didn't probably offend most of the people there by talking about what I was interested in. (Ray Peat)

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            • LucHL
              LucH @KillaJ
              last edited by

              @KillaJ said in Can you fry something battered in milk powder?:

              I’m going to assume that means No.

              If you aren't allowed to heat milk (except for a very short time, not at a too high temperature), I won't do this with protein powder. Logical.

              NB: Th way proposed by Luke is very interesting. Fine like a burritos. Add some appropriate veggies to get volume. What you like, of course.
              I repeat: chicken liver has a less strong taste and contains less toxins if not bio (3 months old).

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              • alfredoolivasA
                alfredoolivas @KillaJ
                last edited by

                @KillaJ Are you aware how little flour is used in deeping frying / frying? It's litterally a dusting on the surface of the piece of milk. Just use flour

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