"Recipes" for Liver: How to Eat Beef Liver (Without Tasting It) (2024)

Table Of Contents

  1. My Liver Eating Story
  2. Capture the Liver's Nutrients in Stock
  3. Why I Don't Eat Liver Once a Week
  4. Take Two: Liver and Onions Recipe
  5. Take Three: Gradual Integration
  6. It's Okay to Cheat: Organ Meat Capsules
  7. Does the Source Matter?
  8. A Note on Raw
  9. What about Other Organ Meats?
"Recipes" for Liver: How to Eat Beef Liver (Without Tasting It) (1)

If you’re not ready to look at raw liver, you might want to find something else to read today. Strap on your big girl pants today, folks, it’s time to get that package out of the freezer and feed it to your families!

We’re going to talk about how to prepare and eat beef liver in particular today, simply because that’s what I have experience with. Beyond “liver and onions,” there are plenty of other meals we could call “liver recipes” that won’t get you kicked out of your house (or at least your kitchen) by your families or loved ones. You might recognize some of them:

  • Spaghetti
  • Shepherd’s Pie
  • Chili
  • Tacos
  • Meatloaf
  • Beef Jerky

My Liver Eating Story

Like many of you, I knew organ meats were supposed to be healthy to eat, and the liver at the farm where we get our grassfed meat was so doggone inexpensive, I was certain it was the one to try. (The heart was inexpensive, too, but I didn’t realize it wouldn’t come “ground”…and that’s another story the size of a soccer ball that I might tell before the post is out!)

I bought a package of beef liver, and there it sat. In my freezer. For months.

Sound familiar?

I finally figured out a few ways to get it out of the freezer and onto the table, and only one of them got the, “Don’t ever do this to us again,” treatment.

If you’re determined to complete this week’s Monday Mission: Try Organ Meats, you’ll find some inspiration here for sure!

"Recipes" for Liver: How to Eat Beef Liver (Without Tasting It) (2)

Capture the Liver’s Nutrients in Stock

The very first strategy I tried was to use the liver in my first attempt at beef stock. I figured that some of the nutrients from the liver had to get into the stock, which would be better than not eating it at all, right?

I used Kelly’s method and Nourishing Traditions and simply slipped the ubiquitous meat in there (slipped being the operative word – this operation is not for the squeamish). It came out looking a little bit like a very thick rubber shoe insert. I didn’t take a photo because I was rather afraid of the whole process; sorry to deprive you of its loveliness.

I also figured there had to be something left in the liver, too, right? I’m guessing iron probably doesn’t cook out of the meat and into the stock. I used my food chopper to hack the liver into very, very tiny pieces, then froze it in ice cube trays. Whenever I remembered, I’d add a few cubes – only 1-3 at a time! – to any recipe that called for ground meat. It is noticeable sometimes, but not bad.

While I don’t think is the perfect system for eating liver properly, it’s better than giving up and throwing away the frozen package after a year, right?

Why I Don’t Eat Liver Once a Week

"Recipes" for Liver: How to Eat Beef Liver (Without Tasting It) (3)

source: Kevin Walsh

Although many Weston A. Price Foundation sources recommend liver once a week, I don’t stress out about that figure. Considering traditional foods, the way it seems that God created certain things to be eaten, I think we have to keep ratios in mind. There’s ONE liver in each cow. One. A cow typically has over 200 pounds of usable meat. So for every 200 pounds of beef you eat, you should consume one or two pounds of liver. That’s not going to come out to 3 oz. per week for anyone I know. Correction: 200 pounds was the amount of ground beef last time I priced a whole cow. How much meat is in a cow? Maybe it’s more like 400-500. However, as one commenter taught me, the liver itself could be 13 pounds! So perhaps my theory is flawed. Drat. 🙂

For a person to eat liver one or even two times a week, they’d have to have more than their fair share of the cow. That means someone’s got to go without, and then we’re creating food inequalities and relegating the less healthy eating habits to the poor or uneducated, most likely. I’m okay with getting a little liver in here and there until it averages out to one per cow.

Take Two: Liver and Onions Recipe

In case you haven’t guessed, it was the time I went with the standby of liver and onions that my family revolted. Even my 5-year-old, who would eat practically anything at the time, wasn’t having it.

"Recipes" for Liver: How to Eat Beef Liver (Without Tasting It) (4)

source: Edible Aria, used with permission

I picked an amazing liver recipe that I thought would give the best chance of success. A quick, quick fry, a little bacon, caramelized onions, unique herbs…and it was still an 80% fail. Three out of four Kimballs wouldn’t eat more than their “no thank you bite” and I could eat it, almost appreciate it, but not relish it.

The problem with cooking liver, if you want to know, is that when no one eats it, the leftovers get progressively worse every second they’re in the fridge. So even though I liked the liver recipe on day one, I could only tolerate it by day two, and the next time I attempted to finish the leftover, I couldn’t do it anymore.

Take Three: Gradual Integration

My most recent eating liver method is probably the one I recommend you try if you’ve got that package staring you down from the deep freeze.

I thawed the liver, but just barely, cut it into chunks, then did this in a food processor, then this …

"Recipes" for Liver: How to Eat Beef Liver (Without Tasting It) (5)

And into the freezer.

I use 2-4 liver cubes at a time in any recipe that calls for ground beef. The hardest part is remembering to grab it out of the freezer! You can add the frozen cubes without thawing right to the pan where you’re browning ground beef, which helps.

The very best way to hide the flavor completely is something spicy like chili or tacos. I highly recommend starting there. I don’t ever lie about whether there’s liver in a meal, by the way, because I don’t like being sneaky about food…but I don’t exactly shout it from the rooftops if no one asks. My husband would rather not know most of the time, so this arrangement works out well.

Be sure to start with small amounts until you learn your family’s flavor threshold. I recently added quite a bit of liver to my beef jerky, and although my husband likes it, it turns me off just a little (may be the over-sensitive pregnancy tastebuds working there). A colleague tried a piece en route to a conference, and she wasn’t having any of it. I tried not to be offended when she spit it out and said, “Oh, no. No way.” "Recipes" for Liver: How to Eat Beef Liver (Without Tasting It) (6)

It’s Okay to Cheat: Organ Meat Capsules

"Recipes" for Liver: How to Eat Beef Liver (Without Tasting It) (7)

Most of the time, our family leans toward an easy solution that makes the whole eating liver thing much easier to swallow, literally.

We buy Paleovalley’s organ complex capsules containing grass fed liver, heart, and kidney for a more diverse array of nutrients, gently freeze-dried.

Six capsules equals about an ounce of organ meats, so a daily supplement of 3 pills would easily get you 3 ounces a week. Organ meats are especially important foods for fertility and during pregnancy, so I feel like even traditional cultures might have saved a greater percentage of that one liver per cow for those of child-bearing age.

You can also cheat by using Pluck Seasoning, an awesome product created by Chef James Barry, instead of salt and pepper on your food! (Get 15% off at Pluck by using my link!) I’m so excited that they now come in large sizes as of December 2023!

Does the Source Matter?

Most sources I read recommend sticking with organic, grassfed liver for a variety of reasons. Although it may be a myth that hormones/antibiotics/chemicals/toxins build up in the liver of animals – many say they only build up in the fat – it still seems safest to find a well-sourced farm for your liver purchases.

Here’s one source that recommends organic calves’ livers only, because their short lifespan would make them less likely to have buildup of toxins.

Here’s 10 Questions to Ask Your Farmer to help you find a good source of meat in your local area. If you’re in a dead zone for local foods, there’s always ordering online, either actual liver from U.S. Wellness Meats or the Paleovalley capsules or desiccated liver powder from Perfect Supplements.Use the code KS10 for 10% off at Perfect Supplements (use the coupon KS10 for 10% off!)

A Note on Raw

Many people also recommend cutting raw, frozen liver into capsule sized pieces and popping them like pills. Well. If you’re going to try it, apparently you have to freeze the liver at least 14 days to kill bacteria. I have no idea how that works. Please don’t sue me for sharing that. "Recipes" for Liver: How to Eat Beef Liver (Without Tasting It) (8) You know what the government would say in an asterisk about consuming raw meat.

EDIT: A few helpful commenters have pointed out what I already know if I had considered this for a minute – no, freezing does not kill bacteria. I culture yogurt from frozen starters all the time. So…interesting. What’s with the recommendation to freeze for 14 days? I’m not sure it’s going to do anything. Still not afraid of raw meat that was grown carefully and handled carefully, but it makes you wonder about the recommendation.

I did end up trying this method for pregnancy 4! See here for details.

What about Other Organ Meats?

I realized I didn’t list many options in the Monday Mission but got hung up on the health benefits of liver. You can visit that post for the update listing other options, including beef heart, which is in my opinion the best place to start if you’re afraid of strong flavors.

I tried a pound of beef heart from a local butcher, but it seemed a little pricey. I was so excited when I saw $1-something a pound at our farm, but boy, was I surprised when my friend pulled the whole heart out of the bag when she delivered to my house! Gah! That sat in the freezer for a while, intimidating me, let me tell you!

Ultimately I just strapped on the big girl pants, thawed it, cut it into small pieces and food processed it exactly like the liver above. Heart has a much, much milder flavor than liver. It’s a lot like ground beef, but I would classify it as “sweeter.” Whereas I’d only add 2-4 cubes of liver to any dish, it’s pretty easy to add up to a quarter pound of heart to a pound of ground beef, even in grilled hamburgers.

How do you like to eat your liver?

For even more, Kelly the Kitchen Kop has a really good post in her archives on the health benefits of liver, along with some tips on how to prepare it from experts (Kelly herself is kind of in my boat!).

Unless otherwise credited, photos are owned by the author or used with a license from Canva or Deposit Photos.

Category: How-to Tutorials, Kitchen Tips, Real Food Recipes

Tags: beef, grassfed beef, liver, organ meats, organic, traditional foods

"Recipes" for Liver: How to Eat Beef Liver (Without Tasting It) (2024)

FAQs

"Recipes" for Liver: How to Eat Beef Liver (Without Tasting It)? ›

The key is to slice and soak the liver; the soaking removes the pungent taste. After soaking, the liver is battered, fried, and dipped in garlic aioli -- it's a crowd-pleasing, crunchy preparation. Enjoy! Beef liver fry dipped in garlic aioli.

How do you get rid of liver taste in your liver? ›

Soak liver in milk for 1-2 hours before cooking.

If you follow a strict paleo diet, you can use coconut milk instead of dairy milk; you'll get the same benefit of mellowing out the flavor. Buttermilk is also a great option!

How do you cook liver without it smelling? ›

Add in the fresh lemon juice/vinegar. "This will coat the liver, make it slightly crunchy and help thicken the wet fry. "The lemon/vinegar This helps get rid of the bloody smell. In 2 tablespoons of vegetable oil, cook the liver over high heat for about 5-8 minutes until it turns brown.

What takes the bitterness out of liver? ›

Unwrap the beef liver and lay flat on a layer of paper towels. I like to cook it and serve it sliced up. Soak the liver in a dish or bowl of milk for 30-60 minutes. This is an important step in removing the bitter flavor from the liver.

What is the best way to eat beef liver? ›

The classic way to serve liver is to pan-fry it with onions. Adding beef or chicken stock and letting it simmer add flavor to the dish, which will mask some of that meat's flavor if needed. And some bacon slices on top punch up the flavor profile even more.

Why soak livers in milk? ›

Chicken livers are sometimes soaked in buttermilk for adding a more complex flavor. What is universally recognized is removing the thin membrane surrounding the organ.

What do you soak liver in before cooking? ›

While we are used to soaking liver in vinegar or lemon to get rid of the bad smell and kill any remaining toxins, American and European chefs advise to soak liver in milk. Yes, that's right: Milk! They claim that in addition to getting rid of toxins that usually are present in raw liver, milk helps tenderizing it.

How do you cook liver so it tastes good? ›

Cook It With Lots of Flavorful Ingredients.

Cooking it with pungent foods really tones down the "liverness" of the dish. To Do: I believe onions and garlic are almost a necessity when cooking liver. Also try bacon, chilies, and aromatic herbs like thyme or sage.

Why soak beef liver in milk before cooking? ›

Soaking is done to make the flavor less "gamey" and to tenderize the meat. The lactic acid in buttermilk (and milk) tenderizes protein. To soak liver, put it in a dish and cover it completely with milk or buttermilk. Let it soak in the milk for 30 to 60 minutes, then pat it dry and proceed with the recipe.

What is the secret of cooking liver? ›

Note that beef liver tastes best when cooked rare to medium-rare. Since a raw liver has high water content, you have to cook it rapidly with medium to high heat. If you try slow cooking a liver, the meat will become dehydrated, leading to tough fibers and dry, chewy meat.

Who should not eat beef liver? ›

For most people, liver can be enjoyed in moderation as part of a balanced diet. However, it should be eaten in limited amounts if you are pregnant and avoided if you have gout.

How do you eat liver for the first time? ›

If you're new to liver, or you've never tried it before, then the easiest way to eat it is to hide it in and amongst your food. I recommend incorporating it into meatballs, spaghetti mince, rissoles or burger patties.

Why does beef liver taste bitter? ›

The fact liver also produces bile, however, can perhaps also help to explain the slightly bitter aftertaste of this type of meat.

How do you get rid of bitter taste in liver without milk? ›

Remember to soak the liver in milk after rinsing in water then refrigerate it at least 1 hour before cooking, to remove the bitter taste and tenderize the beef. If you do not like milk, you can soak it in apple cider vinegar or lemon juice.

Is it better to soak liver in milk or vinegar? ›

😂 When you soak liver in milk, milk tends to interfere with the iron nutrient you're supposed to be enjoying from the liver. Optionally soak it in some water that has some vinegar. You can remove the liver membrane or just leave it as it is. Fry it as you wish and enjoy.

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