Ingredient: Meats


Beef Tallow Soap

Tallow is a wonder substance! Use in candles, soap, as a healthy butter substitute, it’s all good! Rather than reinvent the wheel, I’m going to leave the explanation of soap making to my friend Jill over at The Prairie Homestead as I’ve found this to be a simple pure tallow recipe for soap. You’ll want to have dedicated soap making tools (i.e. you’ll be using lye and it’s not recommended to then cook with the same materials that you’ve made soap with). An old crockpot and immersion blender are the big things you’ll need. A half-gallon mason jar, safety glasses, gloves and some rubber spatulas are also helpful. I don’t use fancy soap molds, but quart-sized milk cartons and paper cups work well to contain the soap while it goes through the saponification process.
Long story short, soap may seem like an up-front commitment, but once you’ve learned the ropes, it’s a great skill to have. Having an inexpensive, local and pure tallow source goes a long way. Once you’ve done it a few times, it’ll make you wonder why you haven’t been making your own soap all along! Plus, home made soap mades a great gift come holiday season!


Beef Tallow Biscuits

Crusty on the outside, warm and flaky on the inside, you gotta love these biscuits! I’m going to send you to our friends at Southern Bite for this recipe. I’ve found lard and tallow to both work with these, so go with what you have on hand!


Beef Tallow

At Springdell Farm, we have access to some of the best suet going. Making suet into tallow allows this nutritious Paleo-Friendly ingredient to become more shelf stable and provide you with a substitute for butter, shortening, and many other things! It’s also great for non-edible use such as candle wax or soap. Rendering tallow is not a hard task, and rendering it with a slow cooker makes the whole process even more simple.