From Our Pasture to Your Pan: The Case for Making Tallow at Home
posted on
April 25, 2026
There's a quiet revolution happening in kitchens across the country, and it looks a lot like something your great-grandmother would recognize. People are setting aside the seed oils and reaching instead for something older, simpler, and more nourishing — beef tallow.
Here at Parsons Creek Steak, we've been raising Black Angus cattle on the grasslands of northern Missouri for five generations. We know every pasture and the cattle that graze them. So when people started asking us about rendering tallow from our beef fat, we couldn't have been more thrilled. Because tallow isn't just a cooking fat — it's a way of honoring the whole animal, reducing waste, and connecting back to the kind of real-food traditions that built this country.
Let me tell you why tallow deserves a permanent spot in your kitchen.
What Is Tallow, Exactly?
Tallow is simply rendered beef fat. "Rendering" is the process of slowly melting raw fat over low heat until the pure fat separates from any remaining tissue. What you're left with is a beautiful, creamy white cooking fat that solidifies at room temperature — shelf-stable, deeply flavorful, and incredibly versatile.
That's it. One ingredient. No additives, no preservatives, no industrial processing. Just pure beef fat, rendered down to its essence.
Why Tallow Is Having a Moment — and Why It Deserves One
1. This Is How People Cooked Before Processed Oils Took Over
Before canola oil, before vegetable shortening, before seed oils became a supermarket staple, beef tallow was the fat American families cooked with every single day. McDonald's famously fried their original French fries in beef tallow — and food writers will tell you nothing has ever tasted quite the same since they switched.
There's a reason this generation is rediscovering tallow. As people take a harder look at ultra-processed foods and unfamiliar ingredients, many are choosing to return to the foods their ancestors thrived on. Tallow fits squarely in that tradition — and it fits right alongside our family's mission of farming the way it's always been done.
2. The Source of the Fat Matters Enormously
Not all tallow is created equal. Just like you wouldn't buy a mystery burger from an unknown source, you want to know where your cooking fat comes from.
Our cattle are pasture-raised on the open grasslands of northern Missouri. They spend their days outside, in the sunshine, free from routine antibiotics and added growth hormones. The quality of an animal's life and diet directly affects the quality of its fat. Tallow rendered from well-raised, pasture-raised cattle is richer in fat-soluble vitamins like A, D, E, and K2. It contains higher levels of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) — a beneficial fatty acid associated with a range of positive health effects. And it's loaded with oleic acid, the same monounsaturated fat celebrated in olive oil.
When you render tallow from Parsons Creek Steak beef, you're not getting a commodity byproduct. You're getting the result of five generations of careful, intentional farming.
3. It's One of the Best Cooking Fats You Can Use
From a pure cooking standpoint, tallow is exceptional. It has a smoke point of around 420°F — well above the temperatures needed for searing, frying, and roasting. Unlike many vegetable and seed oils, tallow remains stable at high heat and doesn't break down into harmful compounds.
Want a perfect sear on a ribeye? Start with tallow. Making roasted potatoes with a crackling crust? Tallow. Frying eggs with rich, golden edges? Tallow. Wherever you'd normally reach for butter, olive oil, or vegetable oil, tallow is a worthy — and often superior — replacement.
And the flavor. There's a depth and richness that tallow brings to food that's hard to put into words. It's beefy and savory without being overpowering. Once you've made potatoes roasted in tallow, you'll struggle to go back.
4. It's About Using the Whole Animal
On a working family farm, waste is something we simply don't accept. When you raise an animal with care and intention, the way we do, you want every part of it to be used well. Rendering tallow is one of the most meaningful ways to do that.
The fat that surrounds the kidneys — called leaf lard or suet — has historically been the most prized for rendering because it produces the purest, most neutral tallow. Rather than letting that go to waste, rendering it at home is a way of completing the circle. It's a practice that our grandparents and great-grandparents understood instinctively: respect the animal by using everything it provides.
It's what we call nose-to-tail eating, and it's not just a trend — it's a philosophy of respect.
5. People Are Using It for a Lot More Than Cooking
Here's something that might surprise you: tallow has become a darling of the natural skincare world. The fatty acid profile of beef tallow is remarkably similar to the oils naturally produced by human skin, which is why many people find it deeply moisturizing and gentle. A growing number of people are using it as a facial moisturizer, a lip balm base, a healing salve for dry or cracked skin, and even a hair treatment.
If you're someone who reads ingredient labels on your skincare products and finds yourself overwhelmed by the list, tallow is about as simple as it gets: one ingredient, animal-derived, deeply traditional.
How to Make Tallow at Home Using Parsons Creek Beef Fat
Making tallow is a slow, simple process that rewards patience. Here's how to do it:
What you'll need:
- Raw beef fat or suet from Parsons Creek Steak
- A heavy-bottomed pot or slow cooker
- A fine-mesh strainer or cheesecloth
- Clean glass jars for storage
Instructions:
Step 1: Prepare the fat. If your fat has been frozen, thaw it completely in the refrigerator. Trim away any remaining meat or connective tissue, and cut or grind the fat into small, uniform pieces. Smaller pieces render more quickly and evenly.
Step 2: Render low and slow. Place the fat in a heavy-bottomed pot or slow cooker on the lowest heat setting. You're not frying it — you're slowly coaxing the fat to melt away from any solids. Stir occasionally. This process takes 2 to 4 hours on the stovetop or longer in a slow cooker. You'll know it's ready when the fat is fully melted, the liquid is clear golden-yellow, and any remaining solids (called "cracklings") have sunk to the bottom and turned lightly golden.
Step 3: Strain carefully. Pour the rendered fat through a fine-mesh strainer or cheesecloth-lined colander into clean glass jars. This removes any solids that could cause the tallow to spoil more quickly.
Step 4: Cool and store. Let the jars cool at room temperature. As tallow cools, it will turn from golden to a beautiful creamy white. Store at room temperature for a few weeks, in the refrigerator for several months, or in the freezer for up to a year.
Pro tip: Don't discard the cracklings! Season them with a little salt and enjoy them as a snack — they're the original pork rind, except made from beef.
A Fat Worth Knowing
There's something genuinely meaningful about making tallow at home. It connects you to a long tradition of resourceful, whole-food cooking. It puts a nourishing, stable fat on your counter that you made with your own hands from an animal you know was raised well.
That connection between the farm and your table is exactly why we do what we do. Christian and Madison returned to this land to continue a fifth-generation legacy — not just to raise cattle, but to feed families with food they can trust. Tallow is one more way we can do that.
If you're ready to try rendering your own tallow, we hope to be your first stop to make that dream a reality. And as always, if you have questions about our farm, our practices, or our products, we love hearing from you.
From our pasture to your kitchen — thank you for being part of the Parsons Creek family.
Shop our pasture-raised Black Angus beef at parsonscreeksteak.com and follow us on Facebook and Instagram for farm updates, recipes, and specials.
