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  2. So, plain suet is preferable among suet-loving birds and less desirable to less desirable birds. Suet cakes should include a high percentage of fat and little or no fiber or filler Read the label.

  3. Suet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suet

    Suet is the raw, hard fat of beef, lamb or mutton found around the loins and kidneys. Suet has a melting point of between 45 and 50 °C (113 and 122 °F) and congelation between 37 and 40 °C (99 and 104 °F).

  4. Suet cake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suet_cake

    A blue tit feeding on a suet cake A ring-shaped suet cake being formed in a mold, by adding melted fat to a mix of seeds. Suet cakes or fat balls are nutritional supplements for wild birds used in bird feeders. [1] They commonly consist of sunflower seeds and wheat or oat flakes mixed with suet, pork fat, or coconut oil.

  5. Steak and kidney pudding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steak_and_kidney_pudding

    According to the cookery writer Jane Grigson, the first published recipe to include kidney with the steak in a suet pudding was in 1859 in Mrs Beeton's Household Management. [ 5 ] [ n 1 ] Beeton had been sent the recipe by a correspondent in Sussex in south-east England, and Grigson speculates that it was until then a regional dish, unfamiliar ...

  6. Suet pudding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suet_pudding

    Christmas pudding. The suet pudding dates back to at least the start of the 18th century. Mary Kettilby's 1714 A Collection of above Three Hundred Receipts in Cookery, Physick and Surgery gives a recipe for "An excellent Plumb-Pudding", which calls for "one pound of Suet, shred very small and sifted" along with raisins, flour, sugar, eggs, and a little salt; these were to be boiled for "four ...

  7. Chelev - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelev

    Chelev (Hebrew: חֵלֶב, ḥēleḇ), "suet", is the animal fats that the Torah prohibits Jews and Israelites from eating. [1] Only the chelev of animals that are of the sort from which offerings can be brought in the Tabernacle or Temple are prohibited (Leviticus 7:25).

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