Chicken fat or schmaltz is a traditional fat, very budget-friendly and quite healthy to use. Be sure to follow these important cautions if you choose to cook with it on a regular basis.
A recurring theme on this site is the critical importance of utilizing Traditional Fats for cooking. Avoiding industrialized factory fats that are rancid from processing and devoid of nutrients is critical to long term health. These frankenfats include margarine, spreads and vegetable oils. Is chicken fat, also called schmaltz, one of these fats?
Let’s take a look in-depth.
Is Chicken Fat Healthy?
The type of fats you choose for cooking can literally make or break your health!
This is the case regardless of other kitchen practices that may be right on target such as sourcing local and organic produce, consumption of antibiotic/steroid-free grass-fed meat, and use of freshly ground flour to prepare traditionally made baked goods.
Factory fats such as hydrogenated/partially hydrogenated oils (trans fats) are obviously unhealthy. Less obviously damaging are the heavily marketed liquid edible oils. These include soy, rice bran, corn, grapeseed, safflower, sunflower, canola, pumpkin seed oil, and others as they are modern fats only recently introduced to the human diet.
Consumption of these industrialized fats can cause cancer, heart disease, immune system dysfunction, fertility problems, learning disabilities, growth problems, and osteoporosis. They are inflammation in a bottle! They must be vigilantly avoided to achieve maximum health and vitality. (1)
Nutrient-rich traditional fats best used for cooking include the following:
- Butter
- Ghee
- Lard from pigs outside in the sunlight (this recipe plus video shows you how to render lard at home)
- Tallow and suet from beef and lamb
- Chicken and goose fat (schmaltz), and duck fat
- Coconut, palm kernel, red palm oil, and palm oil
These traditional fats are primarily composed of saturated and monounsaturated fats. They maintain their integrity when heated, meaning they do not become denatured forming free radicals during the cooking process. This is true as long as the heat remains below the smoke point. These fats have nourished healthy cultures for millennia.
Wondering why olive oil is not on this list? This article outlines the reasons I choose not to cook with olive oil although it is great for salad dressing and is definitely a healthy traditional fat.
Chicken Fat vs Other Nourishing Fats
What many folks do not realize is that all fats are actually a combination of saturated, monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated fats.
Polyunsaturated vegetable oils are the rancid ones full of free radicals that are used in processed foods. They are the bad fats that when consumed to excess as is the case in the Western diet, inflammation and degenerative disease is the result. Vegetable oils also contribute to a tendency to gain weight.
A common characteristic of nearly all traditional fats is that they are all very low in polyunsaturated fats. The one exception is chicken fat which is about 21% polyunsaturated (2).
This compares with a polyunsaturated fat content of the following nourishing fats. (2)
- 4% for butter and ghee
- 4% for beef tallow
- 8% for mutton tallow
- 11% for goose fat
- 12% for duck fat
- 3% for coconut oil
- 9% for palm oil
- 2.3% for palm kernel oil
Cautions using Schmaltz
If you are new to Traditional Diet and your pantry is still fairly loaded up with processed foods in the form of chips, crackers, cookies, etc – even if organic – it is best to use another traditional fat for cooking than chicken fat.
This is because eating even a moderate amount of processed foods will likely result in an excessive intake of polyunsaturates. Cooking with chicken fat will exacerbate the problem as it is the highest in polyunsaturates of all the traditional fats with the exception of sesame oil. A much better choice would be to cook with one or more of the traditional fats listed above that are very low in polyunsaturates.
On the other hand, if you have eliminated most processed foods from your diet and are eating nearly all whole, home-prepared snacks and meals at home, then cooking with schmaltz poses no problem whatsoever.
The reason? There isn’t an excessive amount of polyunsaturated fats in your diet already.
Healthful and Budget Friendly
I hope this article has not put anyone off chicken fat! That was certainly not the intention.
This wonderful traditional fat is fabulous to include in the diet. However, the caveat is the high polyunsaturated content that is not common knowledge for many people.
Instead, I hope this information motivates you to further reduce your family’s use of any remaining processed foods.
Then, you can fully enjoy and utilize the budget-friendly convenience of chicken fat with complete peace of mind.
It is so simple to gather rendered schmaltz into a jar. Simply peel it off the top of a quart of chilled homemade chicken stock! Then, use it for vegetable sautes, stir fry and other savory dishes. It keeps for weeks when refrigerated.
How to Use for Maximum Health Benefits
Think you’re ready to use chicken fat? A good rule of thumb to know for sure is to open your pantry and take a look. If you see a lot of boxes from the store, you should be doing your cooking with a traditional fat.
These fats include butter, ghee, coconut oil, tallow, lard, and suet. Palm, goose and duck fat, while a bit higher in polyunsaturates, would also be fine for cooking occasionally even if some processed foods still remain in your family’s diet.
Save the chicken fat for when you are more fully transitioned to Traditional Diet. This approach ensures that no overconsumption of polyunsaturates occurs which would keep the brakes on your journey to optimal health.
Once you get to that point, there is quite possibly no cooking fat that is easier on the budget than schmaltz!
References
(1) Principles of Healthy Diets
(2) Chicken Fat Nutrition Data
(3) Schmaltz
More Information
Selecting a Healthy Cooking Fat and Reusing it Safely
Argan Oil Benefits Health
Walnut Oil: Healthy Sub for Flax Oil
Elisabeth
Would you mind elaborating a bit on how to use chicken fat. Once you remove it from your stock… how long can it be stored? What is the best way to store it? Thank you for all the great info!!
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
It lasts for quite some time in the fridge. I’ve always used it up long before I ever had to possibly consider throwing it out.
Deb Whitson via Facebook
Could someone tell me how long chicken fat and bacon grease can be kept in the refridgerator before it goes rancid?
Miranda Cj Harding via Facebook
Great article! So glad someone led me to you. Your posts are always very insightful and packed full of good information.
Sally
Hi, Sarah,
I’m curious about your thoughts on grapeseed oil.
I had heard that it has a high smoke point; so it
doesn’t become a trans fatty or hydrogenated oil
at high heat. (I’ve been popping pop corn in it,
but don’t fry food at this point.)
Also, I read somewhere that mayonaise made with
grapeseed oil (Veganaise) is healthy, or at least
healthier than mayonaise made with canola oil.
Please offer us your insights. Thanks so much!
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Grapeseed oil is extremely high in polyunsaturates (70%) and really should be avoided by everyone.
TanyaC
I have been using grapeseed oil for high temps due to smoke point argurment. But I won’t be buying that anymore! I made my first bone broth last week with pastured beef & chicken bones. I have been using the fat to cook. The broth fat (and of course fermented salsa) are great compliments to my pastured eggs! I am new to this life style and enjoy learning from you! I’d be curious what a week at your dinner table would look like?!
Abi Aars
What about cooking with bacon grease that is left over from cooking sliced pork belly? Do you know the breakdown for it?
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Similar to lard … fine as it is generally less than 10% polyunsaturated.
Elizabeth Dalton
I was disappointed to see palm oil listed. :/
It is one of the items our family won’t consider using b/c of the impact on the environment. I wish blogs would stop pushing and touting it as a healthy oil- the harvest of palm oil is devastating to the environment and if the demand stops the harvest stops too.
Maybe a better alternative is coconut oil and coconut butter- made in the blender..
🙂
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
There is such a thing as sustainable palm oil. Know your sources and seek an environmentally friendly choice.
Bob
Thank you for this article Miss Sarah. Might wanna zip up “David”. your ignorance is showing. Folk might mistake it for “something else”…..
Helen T
People live David are plants – just read an article about people employed to wreck havoc on the net. Easy to spot: only insults and brings nothing to the discussion.
Sean Flanagan Health & Nutrition Coaching via Facebook
Very important stufft! The real food versus non real food concept is a great broad brushstroke approach for guiding choices – but is insufficient. Looking at polyunsaturated fat load is crucial.
Cathleen
Great saying from a few other websites I read. “Don’t feed the trolls. It just goes to their thighs.” Ignore them and they will go away.
Thanks for another informative post, Sarah!
Bob
Yes Miss Cathleen, Mr David has chosen to be, rather than to just have.
His career of being wrong seems to be going swimingly for him, as I do not have a pot belly. But then, that particular career doesn’t hold truthfulness or manners as a mainstay.
Still as you say, so it should be.
Diane
Hi, Sarah. In the paragraph above where you list the polyunsaturated fat content of various fats, you don’t mention lard. Do you know the polyunsaturated fat content of lard?
Thanks, Diane
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Whoops! Meant to put lard and didn’t. Lard is 6-10% polyunsaturated.