Also Lex menioned that the suet he gets looks yellowish white. But when you render and strain it, the rendered fat will be yellow.
Yes, I've noted that myself with US Wellness tallow in the past and one of Lex's discussions on the subject is at one of the links I provided.
I didn't try melting the brilliant-white wild deer suet to see if it turns yellow. Next time I get some I'll try it, as I'd be curious to see whether it also does this. I suspect that there would be at least a little yellow, though likely less than most other grassfed suets.
Not the case with grain fed fat, it will be white. ... It can be a way to test the quality of your fat. All grain fed meat when rendered and strained should be white frsh, white when rendered.
Again, I've bought grain-finished suet that was
bright, deep yellow and I've bought 100% grassfed suet that was rather pale yellow (but the yellowness shows up better if I melt it, just like Lex also reported). Like I said, the idea that only 100% grassfed fat is yellow and that yellowness guarantees that fat is 100% grassfed appears to be a myth. If you don't believe me, you could ask a farmer or check out the reports of farmers at the links I provided. Yellowness in the fat does suggest that an animal was fed at least
some grass, just not necessarily 100% grassfed. I'm trying my best to explain this and this has been attempted multiple times by myself and others at this forum but the message doesn't appear to be getting across for some reason and I don't know how better to explain it, so sorry if this still doesn't do the trick. Maybe farmers could do a better job.
He sent me some rendered fat once, pure yellow.
I think Lex reported that sometimes the fat he gets from Slankers is really yellow and sometimes it's relatively pale.
... Grass fed should be yellow when rendered. ...Heat some fat, then strain it. See what color it is when it solidifies.
Yes, that will bring out the yellowness in a pale grassfed fat. I don't know for sure if it's always yellow when melted, as I haven't tried melting the bright-white wild deer suet yet, but I wouldn't be surprised.
I think the key lesson is not to assume that a yellow fat is 100% grassfed or that a pale yellow fat is not 100% grassfed. If you're not sure that a producer's fats are from 100% grassfed sources, check into it with them rather than just relying on color. Also, if the label doesn't say 100% grassfed, you can be pretty sure it's not, because any operation that goes to the extra expense of feeding only grass has an enormous incentive to advertise that. Of course, a label on meat or fat that says 100% grassfed isn't a guarantee that it really is.
...So while yellow is usually is a sign of good quality, there is no saying that the color of white fat alone is worse than yellow fat, or that white means fed grains or a poor diet/treatment otherwise.
Exactly. I've had some brilliant, bright-yellow organic suet that was not 100% grassfed and it tasted crappy and had lots of connective tissue--almost as much as the cheap feedlot supermarket suet. I've had bright-white suet from a hunted wild deer that tasted great and contained almost no connective tissue.