L'américaine -- Homard à La -- À La Estrella Calabasa Pumpkins La Maison Dorée La Ratte La Spagna Beans La Tur Cheese La Varenne Labanah LaBelle Potatoes Labineh Lablab Beans Labne Labneh Lacers -- Turkey Lachanophobia LaChipper Potatoes Lachsschinken Ham Lactic Butter Ladies' Fingers Ladies Sweet Apples Ladies Sweet Apples Ladies Sweeting Apples Ladles Ladles -- Wok Ladolia Olives Lady's Finger Lady Apple Lady Balfour Potatoes Lady Blush Apples Lady Christal Potatoes Lady Fitzpatrick Apples Lady Godiva Pumpkins Lady Rosetta Potatoes Lady Sudeley Apples Previous | Next | Cap On / Cap Off© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced![]() Left, cap off. Right, cap on. On a piece of meat such as beef or pork, the "cap" most often refers to a layer of fat on top. Your first reaction might be -- get rid of this, but you need to think twice about it. The cap of fat keeps the meat tender during cooking; the fat will render during cooking and melt into the meat, making the meat tender and flavourful. The arguments against leaving the cap on appear to two-fold: the first is that generic reservation about any fat on the meat being unhealthy. The second is perhaps a bit more concrete in day-to-day terms: before serving, say, a Prime Rib Roast with cap on, you cut off and discard the cap just before serving. That is wastage, and even though meat with "cap on" is generally less expensive per pound / kilo than with "cap off" (to compensate for the fact that you're paying for a measurable amount of fat as opposed to getting 100% "meat"), when you account for the wastage, it pushes up your costs per actual servable portion of meat that can reach your guests' plates. In spite of that, serious beef lovers, especially barbequers, get very upset if they get only get cuts of meat with "cap off." Some try to compensate by "barding" -- tying a slab of other fat on top, but aren't entirely satisfied with the results. Whether talking about roasts or steaks, they want the cap on. And when cooking pork, the cap produces that wonderful, crunchy delicacy that the British call "crackling", which is not discarded, but instead fairly portioned out so that all at the table get a taste. Sometimes, as in Top Sirloin Steak or Rib Steak (as pictured here), Cap On, the "cap" can refer to a piece of less tender meat with some fat. Fans swear this is the tastiest part of the cut. Cooking Tips See Also:Beef Steaks, SteakOther entries for:MeatAffettati, Beef, Buffalo, Cap On / Cap Off, Game, Goat, Institutional Meat Purchase Specifications, Minced Meat, Offal, Paillards, Pork, Potted Meats, Poultry, Roasts, Sausages, Sheep, Steak, Veal, Venison, Yak |
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