How to render tallow from an intact piece of beef suet from your grassfed farmer. This traditional recipe with video how-to makes several jars of tasty pastured beef tallow to last you many months or even a year!
Tallow is hands down my favorite traditional fat to use for frying. I like it even more than lard. It is ideal for this purpose as it has less than 3% polyunsaturated fats. This amount is just a bit less than coconut oil.
Whatโs more, if your tallow comes from cattle finished on grass or given grain for a very short period of time (a few weeks at the most) before processing, a good share of those polyunsaturates are in the form of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA).
This fatty acid helps build muscle, assists with weight loss, and drastically reduces cancerous tumor risk.
These are just a few of the many health benefits.
Beef Tallow: Not Just Any Fat
Tallow is a very special type of beef fat.
It is the rendered form of suet, which is the nutrient-rich beef or mutton fat found around the organs, particularly the kidneys.
It is the highly prized nourishing fat used in pemmican,ย a traditional food used by Native Americans to survive harsh winters. Sometimes they subsisted on nothing else for weeks on end with no loss in health!
Traditional pemmican includes tallow in a 1:1 ratio with dried and powdered, ideally, grass-fed muscle meat. It is the ultimate survival food.
Besides CLA, another notable fat present in high amounts in beef tallow is palmitoleic acid, which is highly anti-viral and anti-bacterial. ย
Fatty Acid Profile
The fatty acid profile of beef tallow is approximately 55% saturated fats and 40% monounsaturated fats.
Both of these fatty acids are very heat stable and do not easily produce free radicals when heated, unlike toxic liquid seed oils.
The smokepoint for tallow is at least 350ยฐF (177ยฐC). Some sources put it as high as 400 ยฐF (204ยฐC), making it an excellent choice for frying.
Preparation and Storage
Rendering pastured tallow is a simple process. It is very similar to the method for rendering pork lard.
From start to finish, the how-to video demonstration in the recipe below shows you exactly what you need to know to produce several jars full that will last you a very long time!
My favorite dishes for using homemade tallow are stovetop french fries, roasted vegetables, hush puppies and shelf-stable pemmican (for the emergency pantry).
Note that pastured tallow is a beautiful yellow color when liquid immediately after you render it. The color lightens to beige at room temperature and in the refrigerator. It whitens a bit further in the freezer.
If you live in a cool climate, tallow keeps well in the pantry.
I choose to refrigerate as this is my preference in hot, humid Florida. ย
In my experience, rendered beef tallow will keep many months in the refrigerator and years if you freeze some!
Tip: Dehydrate the leftover kidney and organ tissue in the oven and then pulse in the food processor to make pastured organ meat powder. Blend 1-2 tablespoons of the powder into soups and sauces for extra flavor! Store the powder in a mason jar in the refrigerator.
Alternatively, mix the leftover kidney and organ tissue from rendering the tallow with homemade dog food.
Where to Find Beef Suet to Make Tallow
Before you can make your own tallow, you first need to source an intact piece (or coarsely chopped pieces) of beef suet from a pastured farmer.
Below is a picture of what a full piece of beef suet looks like (sitting on my counter, ready to be rendered!).
The absolute best way to source suet is to โsplit a cowโ, otherwise known as buying beef shares directly from a grassfed beef farmer. The linked article provides the details on where/how to do this if you are a newbie to the process of buying farm-direct products.
How to Render Tallow
The traditional method for rendering tallow from an intact piece of suet that you can obtain from a pastured farmer.
Ingredients
- 1 intact piece of suet preferably grassfed
Instructions
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Take an intact piece of suet and cut into medium to small pieces on a large cutting board. Remove the kidney and set aside.
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Place the suet pieces in a large pan.
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Place pan in an oven preheated to 175-200ย ยฐF/ 79-93 ยฐC
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Every hour or so, remove the pan and pour off the melted tallow. Sieve through a cheesecloth to remove any tissue.ย
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Continue the process until all the fat has rendered. This will take a few hours. Tallow is quite yellow when it is liquid.
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Pour strained tallow into glass mason jars after it has cooled. Screw on the lids and refrigerate. As it hardens in the fridge, tallow turns a whitish beige color. Tallow will keep for many months in the refrigerator and a year or more in the freezer.
Mack
what about rendering fat from large cuts of beef? I cook large beef briskets a few times a year. several I get several pounds of fat from trimming the cut.
Elsa perry
Hi, I was wondering if I could use the fat from my bone broths (marrow or soup beef bones) for body butters or frying? I will be buying tallow next time I go to farmers market. Thanks for your video and sharing the information.
Sarah Green
Thank you for the video, Sarah. I am ordering some beef fat from a farmer I know so I can render it for deep frying. In your video the tallow was in the oven at 200 degrees for 9 hours. Is that how long it should be in the oven? You mentioned when putting it in the oven that there would be lots of little steps, but it seemed very simple… Did I miss something?
Karla Von Fumetti Staudt via Facebook
I just recently rendered some beef tallow – WOW. What flavor.
Lisa Michelle Durey via Facebook
I recently made my own from organic grass fed suet. To buy it would have cost a bomb but rendering my own cost me about $12 to fill my deep fryer…messy business tho!
Roger Stiefel via Facebook
They changed after they were sued by vegetarians that wanted to eat their fries.
Mary Stoy via Facebook
Oh, thanks. That is what my grandmother used. Makes great fried chicken!
Mary Stoy via Facebook
Is tallow the same as lard?
Dorie Gamble via Facebook
I use it for making soap. Don’t eat a lot of fries.
Aurelie Cous via Facebook
yes i come from France near the belgian border (where fries where invented!!!) and we always made them with beef tallow!!!