Lard is like the gooey, yellow friend that comes from a pig’s belly, think of it as butter’s cousin who loves to be fried.
Imagine you have a pig, and inside its tummy there's a layer called the belly fat. When this pig gets cooked, that fat turns into lard. It’s like when your favorite snack melts in your hand, soft, squishy, and ready for action.
What Lard Feels Like
If you’ve ever touched marshmallow fluff, you know what lard feels like when it's warm. It's smooth and stretchy, just like the inside of a chocolate bar before you bite into it.
How We Use Lard
People use lard to fry things, like potatoes or donuts, because it makes food extra crispy on the outside and soft on the inside, kind of like how your toast gets that perfect crunch when it's buttered just right. Lard is like the gooey, yellow friend that comes from a pig’s belly, think of it as butter’s cousin who loves to be fried.
Imagine you have a pig, and inside its tummy there's a layer called the belly fat. When this pig gets cooked, that fat turns into lard. It’s like when your favorite snack melts in your hand, soft, squishy, and ready for action.
How We Use Lard
People use lard to fry things, like potatoes or donuts, because it makes food extra crispy on the outside and soft on the inside, kind of like how your toast gets that perfect crunch when it's buttered just right.
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See also
- Why Do We Say 'Bless You' When You Sneeze?
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- Why Do We Have So Many Different Kinds of Languages?