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Whipped Tallow Lotion: Why Ours Is Scented with Real Ingredients, Not Fragrance Oils

Tea Infusion Whipped Tallow Lotion Amber Glass Jar

Whipped tallow lotion is becoming more common in the natural skincare world — but most of what you’ll find is scented with essential oils or synthetic fragrance. Ours is different. The vanilla and tea infusion varieties are scented by infusing whole ingredients directly into the raw tallow before whipping. Here’s why that matters and how we do it.

Why whole ingredient infusion instead of fragrance oils

Fragrance oils — synthetic or natural — are concentrates designed to deliver scent. They do that well. But they don’t carry the other properties of the source ingredient. A vanilla fragrance oil smells like vanilla but doesn’t contain the beneficial compounds found in actual vanilla beans. A tea fragrance oil smells floral but has none of the antioxidants or skin-supporting properties of real pea flower or hibiscus.

When you infuse the whole ingredient into fat at low heat, you get the scent and everything that comes with it. It’s the same principle behind our frankincense face cream — we infuse whole resin rather than use essential oil because the full-spectrum extract is more beneficial than a distilled fraction of it.

How we make the vanilla infusion

Right after rendering, while the tallow is still warm and liquid, we add whole vanilla beans and bring it to 120°F — low enough to preserve the beneficial compounds without cooking them off. We hold it there for 12 to 24 hours so the fat fully absorbs the vanilla.

Just before whipping, we split the beans and scrape the vanilla caviar — the tiny black seeds inside — directly into the tallow. This adds an extra layer of vanilla intensity and is why the vanilla lotion has small black specks throughout. Those are vanilla bean seeds. It’s the same thing you see in a high-quality vanilla ice cream, and it means you’re getting the real thing.

How we make the tea infusion

The tea infusion uses a blend of four dried ingredients: pea flower, hibiscus, blueberry, and apple. We add them to the warm tallow at 120°F and let it infuse for 12 to 24 hours before straining and whipping.

Pea flower and hibiscus are both high in antioxidants. Hibiscus in particular contains anthocyanins and vitamin C, which support collagen production and skin elasticity. The resulting scent is light and gently floral — not perfumed, just fresh. The kind of scent that comes from something real rather than something synthetic.

Why the tallow base works

Beef suet tallow has a fatty acid profile close to human sebum, which means it absorbs into skin rather than sitting on the surface. The nutrients it carries — fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K — and the infused ingredients go with it. Organic castor oil in the formula supports that absorption further and helps give the whipped lotion its light, fluffy texture.

Most conventional lotions are predominantly water with emulsifiers and preservatives. They feel moisturizing temporarily but don’t nourish the skin the way a fat-based product does. Customers with sensitive skin who’ve had reactions to conventional lotions consistently tell us this formula works when others haven’t.

Three scents, two sizes

We currently offer three scents — Vanilla, Tea Infusion, and Unscented — in both a 6 oz resealable refill pouch and a 9 oz amber glass jar. The unscented version is the same tallow and castor oil formula with no infusion, which makes it ideal for sensitive skin, fragrance allergies, use on babies, or anyone who prefers a neutral moisturizer.

Whipped Tallow Lotion — Real Ingredient Infusions, Three Scents, Two Sizes

Price range: $15.00 through $20.00

Light, fluffy whipped tallow lotion — scented with real vanilla bean and whole-ingredient tea infusions, not fragrance oils.

 

Learn more about our whipped tallow lotion here.

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Tallow Lip Balm: Why Beeswax and Beef Suet Make the Best Lip Balm Base

Tallow lip balm is not something most people have tried, but once you have it’s hard to go back to conventional balm. Here’s what makes the tallow and beeswax combination different — and why we offer an unscented version for people who’ve been priced out of the lip balm aisle by peppermint sensitivity.

What most lip balms actually do

The majority of commercial lip balms — including most of the well-known brands — are built on petroleum jelly or synthetic waxes. These ingredients create a barrier on the surface of the lip that locks in moisture, which feels like hydration but isn’t quite the same thing. The moisture being locked in is mostly what’s already there. If your lips are already dry, a petroleum barrier holds the dryness in as much as it keeps anything out.

Some people also find that conventional lip balms create a dependency — you apply, lips feel better briefly, then drier than before, so you apply again. This can happen when the occlusive barrier prevents the lips from producing their own natural oils, making them increasingly reliant on the product.

Why tallow lip balm works differently

Beef suet tallow has a fatty acid profile remarkably close to the skin’s own sebum. Because of that similarity, it absorbs into the lip tissue rather than just sitting on top of it. The nutrients it carries — fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K — go with it. You’re not just coating the surface; you’re nourishing the skin underneath.

Organic beeswax provides the structure that makes it work as a balm — it gives the right consistency for easy application without being stiff or waxy. Beeswax also has its own mild antibacterial properties and creates a breathable barrier that protects without occluding. Unlike petroleum, beeswax allows some moisture exchange, which is why beeswax-based balms tend not to create the reapplication cycle that petroleum-based ones do.

The result is a lip balm that’s smooth, non-sticky, and absorbs well. It doesn’t feel like you’ve coated your lips — it feels like your lips have been taken care of.

Super Mint vs. Unscented — and why the unscented option matters

Our Super Mint variation uses a blend of high-quality mint essential oils — fresh, cooling, and clean without being sharp. It’s become a genuine everyday favorite in our family.

But mint isn’t for everyone. Peppermint sensitivity is more common than people realize — it can cause tingling, irritation, or allergic reactions on sensitive skin, and some people simply don’t like the sensation of mint on their lips. Young children often do better without it. The unscented version is the same formula with no essential oils — just tallow and beeswax, nothing else. It’s completely neutral in scent and appropriate for anyone who needs or prefers a simpler option.

What’s in it

Beef suet, organic beeswax, and — in the Super Mint version — a blend of mint essential oils. That’s it. No petroleum, no synthetic fragrance, no fillers. Made in small batches in Kentucky.

Tallow Lip Balm — Smooth, Non-Sticky & Made with Organic Beeswax

Original price was: $5.00.Current price is: $2.00.

Smooth, non-sticky tallow lip balm that actually hydrates — not just coats.

Learn more about our tallow lip balm

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Tallow Deep Hair Conditioner: How Castor Oil and Rosemary Transform Fine Hair

Deep Hair Conditioner

A tallow deep hair conditioner is a different category of product than a rinse-out conditioner. It’s not something you use every day — it’s a weekly or biweekly treatment that works on the hair shaft and scalp in ways that conventional conditioners don’t reach. Here’s what’s in ours, why each ingredient is there, and who it’s most useful for.

Why tallow works as a deep hair conditioner base

Tallow’s fatty acid profile is remarkably close to the skin’s natural sebum — which is also what the scalp produces to condition hair naturally. This similarity means tallow absorbs rather than just coats, which is what makes it useful as a conditioning base. Most conventional conditioners work by depositing silicones or other film-forming ingredients on the hair shaft, creating the appearance of smoothness without actually conditioning the hair itself. Tallow goes further.

Our deep conditioner is formulated with a higher castor oil ratio than our body lotions, which makes it thinner and better suited to working through hair. The texture allows it to penetrate the hair shaft and reach the scalp without feeling heavy or difficult to distribute.

What castor oil does for hair

Castor oil is one of the most studied natural oils for hair care, and for good reason. It’s rich in ricinoleic acid — an unusual fatty acid with strong anti-inflammatory properties that supports scalp health and circulation at the follicle. Improved scalp circulation is associated with healthier hair growth and reduced hair loss.

For fine or thin hair specifically, castor oil helps with flyaways and texture by smoothing the hair cuticle and adding weight without greasiness. It’s thick on its own but diluted through the tallow base it becomes workable. The conditioning effect on fine hair is noticeable — hair lies better, feels softer, and is easier to manage after a treatment.

What rosemary essential oil adds

Rosemary has become one of the more well-supported natural ingredients for hair in recent years — a study comparing rosemary oil to minoxidil for hair regrowth got a lot of attention and showed comparable results at six months. The mechanism appears to be improved circulation at the scalp and inhibition of DHT, a hormone associated with hair thinning.

Beyond hair growth, rosemary essential oil has antifungal and antibacterial properties that make it genuinely useful for scalp health. It addresses dandruff and dryness at the source rather than just managing flaking at the surface. It also strengthens the hair shaft itself, which reduces breakage over time.

How to use the tallow deep hair conditioner

This is a treatment product, not an everyday conditioner. We recommend using it once a week to once every two weeks depending on your hair’s needs.

For a full treatment, apply to both hair and scalp, working it through from root to tip. Leave it on for a minimum of 15 to 20 minutes — longer is fine if you want to. Then wash it out thoroughly. For a lighter application focused on ends and texture rather than scalp treatment, apply from mid-length to ends only and skip the scalp entirely.

A 9 oz refill pouch at that frequency lasts 3 to 4 months. Because it’s a concentrated treatment rather than a rinse-out conditioner, a little goes a long way.

Who it’s best for

This conditioner works well for fine or thin hair that’s prone to flyaways and lacks texture. It’s also well suited for dry or flaky scalps that haven’t responded to conventional dandruff shampoos. If you have thick or coarse hair, it still works but the castor oil effect is more pronounced on finer hair types where the weight and conditioning are most noticeable.

Tallow Deep Hair Conditioner — Castor Oil & Rosemary for Growth & Shine

$20.00

A weekly deep treatment for fine, dry, or flyaway-prone hair — made with castor oil and rosemary.

How Castor Oil and Rosemary Transform Fine Hair

6 in stock (can be backordered)

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Natural Bug Repellent Tallow Lotion: What’s in Ours and How We Use It

Bug Away repellent lotion

Natural bug repellent tallow lotion was something we started making out of necessity. We have six kids, we live on a farm in Kentucky, and we spend a lot of time outside from spring through fall. The conventional repellents work, but we didn’t want to put DEET on our kids every time they walked out the door. We wanted something that was genuinely effective and that we felt good about using on everyone.

After researching which essential oils have the strongest evidence for insect repelling and testing different blends over a couple of seasons, we landed on what became our Bug Away lotion. This is what’s in it, why we chose each ingredient, and what we’ve actually experienced using it.

Why tallow as the base for a natural bug repellent lotion

Most natural bug repellents are sprays or oil blends applied directly to skin. They work to varying degrees, but they tend to wear off quickly and don’t moisturize — they just sit on the surface until they evaporate or rub off.

Tallow changes that equation. Because beef suet tallow has a fatty acid profile close to human skin, it absorbs into the skin rather than sitting on top of it. When the essential oils are dispersed through the tallow, they absorb with it, which means they’re delivered into the skin rather than just coating it. This improves how long the repellent effect lasts and reduces the amount you need.

The tallow and organic castor oil base also means you’re moisturizing while you repel — not a common combination, but a useful one when you’re applying something to your kids multiple times a day in summer.

The essential oil blend — and why each one is in there

We use seven essential oils in the Bug Away blend. Each one has documented insect-repelling properties, and together they cover a broader spectrum of insects than any single oil would:

  • Tea tree:
  • Eucalyptus:
  • Lavender:
  • Rosemary:
  • Cedarwood:
  • Geranium:
  • Lemongrass:

The blend is dispersed through the tallow at a concentration that’s effective without being harsh. It won’t burn skin, and the scent is present but not overwhelming.

What we’ve actually experienced

We’ve used this through a full Kentucky summer with six kids ranging from young children to teenagers. The honest version of our experience:

For mosquitoes, it works well. One application covers about three hours of outdoor time. We reapply if we’re outside longer than that or if it’s been a heavy-activity day with a lot of sweating. Our most mosquito-prone child — the one who historically comes in covered regardless of what we try — had noticeably fewer bites last season using this consistently.

For ticks, we’ve found it helpful but we won’t overclaim. We do tick checks after every hike in the woods regardless of what repellent we’re using — that’s just good practice. What we can say is that it’s been a meaningful part of our routine and we’ve noticed a difference on wooded hikes compared to going without.

It’s gentle enough that we use it on all our kids without concern. No burning, no skin irritation, no overwhelming chemical smell. Just a light herbal scent that fades quickly after application.

How to use it

Apply to all exposed skin before going outside — legs, arms, neck, and any other areas that will be exposed. Work it in like a lotion. Reapply after about three hours, or sooner if you’ve been sweating heavily or swimming. For young children, apply it yourself rather than letting them apply it on their own.

Natural Bug Repellent Tallow Lotion — Safe for Kids, Effective on Mosquitoes

$20.00

A natural bug repellent lotion that actually works — and is gentle enough for your most mosquito-prone kid.
Read more about Natural Bug Repellent Tallow Lotion: What’s in Ours and How We Use It

18 in stock

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Frankincense Resin Face Cream: Why We Don’t Use Essential Oil

Frankincense Tallow Face Cream (2 Oz Amber Glass Jar)

Our frankincense resin face cream is made differently than most — and if you’ve shopped for natural skincare, you’ve probably seen why that matters. Usually it appears as frankincense essential oil — a common addition to face creams, serums, and anti-aging products. We use frankincense too, but we do it differently. And the difference is worth explaining.

What frankincense actually is

Frankincense is the resin of the Boswellia tree, native to the Arabian Peninsula and parts of Africa and India. The resin has been used medicinally and ceremonially for thousands of years — it is one of the oldest recorded skincare and wellness ingredients in human history.

For skin, frankincense is anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial, making it useful for acne, irritation, and redness. It supports the skin’s natural renewal process, which is why it shows up so frequently in products targeting fine lines, wrinkles, and age spots. It also offers natural protection against UVB rays — the type most responsible for sun damage and premature aging.

And the scent carries its own benefit. Frankincense has been shown to interact with receptors in the brain that regulate anxiety and mood. The calming effect is real, not just pleasant.

Essential oil vs. whole resin infusion

Frankincense essential oil is produced by steam distilling the resin. The process captures the aromatic volatile compounds — what gives frankincense its smell and some of its properties. But steam distillation leaves something important behind: boswellic acids.

Boswellic acids are the compounds in frankincense most strongly associated with its anti-inflammatory and skin-renewing effects. They are large molecules that do not survive the distillation process, which means they are essentially absent from frankincense essential oil. If the anti-aging and anti-inflammatory benefits of frankincense are what you are after, essential oil alone does not deliver the full picture.

How we do it

We take whole frankincense resin and infuse it directly into the rendered tallow at very low heat for 12 to 24 hours. The slow, gentle process pulls the full range of compounds from the resin into the fat — boswellic acids included. No shortcuts, no distillation. Just resin and time.

The result smells like real frankincense — warm, earthy, and grounding in a way that a diluted essential oil rarely achieves. If you have ever smelled frankincense resin burning, you will recognize it immediately.

What the tallow adds

Beef suet tallow has a fatty acid profile remarkably close to human skin, which means it absorbs well and carries the frankincense compounds deep into the skin rather than sitting on the surface. The castor oil supports that absorption further. It is a short ingredient list, but every element is there for a reason.

How to use it

Apply a small amount at night before bed as your last step. It absorbs cleanly with no oily residue. A little goes a long way — a 2 oz jar lasts most people 2–3 months with daily use.

I use it every night. The skin benefits are real, but it is the ritual I have come to value as much as anything — a few quiet minutes at the end of the day that smell like calm.

Frankincense Tallow Face Cream — Anti-Aging, Hydrating, Resin-Infused 2 oz · Amber glass jar

Price range: $20.00 through $30.00

Tallow face cream infused with real frankincense resin — not essential oil. Anti-inflammatory, deeply hydrating, and calming. 2 oz amber glass jar, handmade in Kentucky.

Read more about Frankincense Face Cream, and how it’s helping people.

Also worth reading: What Blue Tansy Actually Does for Your Skin — our other frankincense-containing face cream.

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Why We Use Beef Suet (Not Grass-Fed Tallow) | Mount Wild Things

Frozen ground Beef Suet

If you’ve been searching for grass-fed tallow skincare, you’re asking the right questions — and the answer, for us, is beef suet. You care about what goes into your products, where it comes from, and whether the sourcing actually means something. We respect that — it’s exactly how we think too.

Which is why we want to tell you why we don’t necessarily care if the beef suet we use is “grass-fed.” We are more concerned which fat is being used to make the tallow, what we use instead, and why we think it matters.

What ‘grass-fed tallow’ actually means

Grass-fed is a diet claim. It tells you what the animal ate. That’s genuinely useful information — grass-fed cattle tend to produce fat with a better nutritional profile than grain-fed animals, including higher levels of fat-soluble vitamins and a healthier omega ratio.

But grass-fed doesn’t tell you which fat from the animal was rendered. And that distinction matters more than most people realize.

What makes beef suet different from tallow?

“Tallow” is a broad term for rendered beef fat. It can come from anywhere on the animal — the outer layers, the trim, the fat cap. Suet is specific: it’s the dense fat that surrounds and protects the animal’s internal organs, particularly the kidneys.

Here’s what makes suet different. An animal’s body is constantly filtering and managing what it’s exposed to — environmental toxins, metabolic byproducts, and other compounds the body wants to isolate. One of the ways it does this is by pushing those substances toward the outer fat layers, away from the vital organs. The fat closest to the organs — the suet — is the fat the body has worked hardest to keep clean.

Suet is also harder and more stable than exterior fat, with a higher concentration of the saturated fatty acids that make tallow effective as a skincare ingredient. It renders cleaner, has a more neutral smell, and produces a purer final product.

Where do we source our suet from?

We source our beef suet from Woodland Farm in Goshen, Kentucky — a 1,000-acre farm focused on sustainable agriculture. We actually started buying from here because our favorite burger place in town (Jays Burgers) has also sourced their beef suet from there as well.

Buying from a local farm means we know exactly what we’re getting and where it came from. That traceability matters to us — and we think it should matter to you.

So should you still look for grass-fed?

If you’re choosing between a generic grass-fed tallow product with no sourcing information and a conventional tallow product, grass-fed is the better choice. Diet does affect the fat’s nutritional profile.

But if you’re looking for the cleanest, most nutrient-dense fat available from a known source — suet from a local farm is the more meaningful standard. Grass-fed tells you about the animal’s diet. Suet tells you which part of the animal the fat came from. We’d rather control the latter.

What this means for our products

Every Mount Wild Things Tallow product is made with suet rendered in our own kitchen, in small batches, from a locally sourced farm. No fillers, no additives, no mystery fat from a commercial renderer. Just suet — the cleanest fat the animal produces — combined with a short list of ingredients you can actually read. If you want to know more about the Beef Tallow Lotion, check out this article.

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Blue Tansy Face Cream: What It Actually Does for Acne, Scars & Skin | Mount Wild Things

blue tansy face cream

Blue tansy face cream gets talked about a lot in natural skincare world— usually as a selling point on a very expensive product. The oil is vivid blue, which makes for good marketing. But there are real reasons it works, and we want to explain them plainly.

What blue tansy face cream actually is

Blue tansy (Tanacetum annuum) is a flowering plant from Morocco. The essential oil is extracted by steam distillation and gets its striking blue color from a compound called chamazulene, which forms during that process. Chamazulene is a potent anti-inflammatory — it’s also what gives chamomile oil its blue tint.

For skin, that anti-inflammatory action is meaningful. Blue tansy has been used to calm redness, reduce swelling, and support the skin’s healing processes — which is why it shows up repeatedly in products targeting acne and scarring.

Why we pair it with frankincense

Our Blue Tansy face cream uses a frankincense infusion we make ourselves from raw frankincense resin — not just frankincense essential oil. The infusion process pulls a broader range of beneficial compounds from the resin, including boswellic acids, which are known to support skin cell regeneration and reduce the appearance of scarring over time.

Together, blue tansy and frankincense address two different parts of the same problem: blue tansy calms active inflammation (acne, redness, irritation), and frankincense supports the renewal of damaged skin underneath.

What the tallow does

Tallow is the base of this cream, and it’s not incidental. Grass-fed tallow has a fatty acid profile remarkably close to human skin — which means it absorbs well and carries its nutrients with it rather than sitting on the surface. It’s rich in vitamins A, D, E, and K, all of which play a role in skin health and healing.

The castor oil in the formula helps with absorption — it acts as a humectant and helps pull the tallow (and everything in it) deeper into the skin.

What we’ve heard from customers

We started hearing about the scarring results before we were looking for them. Customers who came to us for acne would come back and mention that old scars — the red or purple kind that stick around long after the breakout — had started to fade. Some described significant improvement within a few weeks of consistent use. A few customers mentioned that scars they’d had for years were nearly gone after six months.

We’ve also heard from people using it on age spots and sunspots. Blue tansy helps redistribute concentrated melanin pigment over time — not by bleaching, but by gently encouraging the skin to even itself out. It doesn’t happen overnight, but the results are real.

How to use it

Apply a small amount at night as your last step. A very light layer in the morning works well under makeup — it absorbs cleanly and doesn’t leave an oily finish. Because these are concentrated ingredients, less is more. A 2 oz jar lasts most people 2–3 months.

The scent is earthy and distinctive — blue tansy has a herbal warmth, and the frankincense adds depth. It’s stronger than our other products. We like it, but it’s worth knowing before you buy.

We recommend starting with nighttime use only for the first week or two, especially if your skin is sensitive. Some people notice a slight adjustment period as the tallow and blue tansy get to work. Morning use works well too — it absorbs cleanly and doesn’t leave shine under makeup. Just keep the layer light.

Blue Tansy – Tallow Face Cream 2 oz · Blue glass jar

Original price was: $20.00.Current price is: $15.00.

Real results for acne, scarring, and age spots — made by hand in Kentucky. Packaged in a 2 oz · blue glass jar

Read more about Blue Tansy Face Cream, and how it’s helping people.

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Beef Tallow Lotion: Health Benefits, How It Works, and Why We Make Our Own

Whipped rendered beef tallow

Beef tallow lotion was not something I went looking for. I found it because I couldn’t afford the brand I wanted — $40 for a small jar was simply not in the budget for our family of eight. So I started researching. What I found was that the process wasn’t complicated, the ingredients were affordable, and the results were genuinely better than what I’d been buying.

That was the beginning of Mount Wild Things. I called a local butcher, ordered beef suet, learned to render it, and started making lotion & soaps for our family. It worked so well that friends started asking for it, and eventually we opened a small shop. This post is the long version of why I think beef tallow lotion is worth your attention — and why we still make ours from scratch, from suet we source ourselves.

Rending beef suet into beef tallow

What beef tallow lotion actually is

Tallow is rendered animal fat — in this case, beef. But not just any fat. We use beef suet, which is the dense fat that surrounds and protects the animal’s internal organs. Suet is different from the fat trimmed off the outside of the animal. The body pushes toxins and metabolic waste toward the outer fat layers, away from the organs. Suet is the fat the body has worked hardest to keep clean — and it renders into a purer, harder, more stable fat than exterior beef fat.

Once rendered, suet becomes tallow — a clean, ivory-colored fat that’s been used in cooking and skincare for centuries. Whipped with a small amount of organic castor oil, it becomes a rich lotion that absorbs into the skin without leaving a greasy film.

Why beef tallow lotion works so well on skin

The reason beef tallow lotion performs the way it does comes down to chemistry. Tallow’s fatty acid profile is remarkably similar to the sebum our skin produces naturally. Because it’s so close in composition to our own skin oils, it absorbs well and doesn’t sit on the surface the way plant-based or synthetic moisturizers often do. Your skin recognizes it.

Beef suet is also a natural source of fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K — all of which play meaningful roles in skin health. Vitamin A supports cell turnover. Vitamin D is involved in skin barrier repair. Vitamin E is a well-established antioxidant that helps protect skin from oxidative stress. Vitamin K supports healing and may help with dark spots and bruising. You don’t need to take a supplement — your skin can absorb these directly from the lotion.

Tallow also creates a light protective layer on the skin that helps lock in moisture without clogging pores. It’s anti-inflammatory, which is part of why it tends to work well for people with sensitive skin, eczema, or redness.

What the castor oil does

Organic castor oil is the other key ingredient in our lotion, and it earns its place. Castor oil is rich in ricinoleic acid, an unusual fatty acid that has strong anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial properties. It’s a humectant, which means it draws moisture toward the skin rather than just sitting on top of it.

The more important role in this formula is what it does for absorption. Castor oil helps pull the tallow — and the vitamins it carries — deeper into the skin. Without it, the tallow stays closer to the surface. With it, you get deeper hydration and better delivery of the nutrients your skin is there to receive.

Why we use suet instead of grass-fed tallow

We source our suet locally from a farm we know. We have already talked about Why We Use Beef Suet (Not Grass-Fed Tallow) — it’s the same reason we care about where our coffee grounds and other ingredients come from.

How we make it

Rendering suet is a low-and-slow process. The raw suet goes into a pot at low heat for several hours until the fat liquefies and the impurities settle out. We strain it, let it cool, and are left with clean, white tallow. From there, we whip it with organic castor oil until it reaches a light, creamy texture that absorbs easily.

Each batch is small. We make it in our kitchen, the same way I made it the first time — because we know what went into it and we can stand behind every jar.

What beef tallow lotion is good for

In our experience — and from what our customers tell us — beef tallow lotion works well for dry and rough skin, eczema and sensitive skin that reacts to conventional lotions, fine lines and skin texture, cracked heels and elbows, and as an everyday face and body moisturizer. It is not pore-clogging in the way people sometimes fear animal fats to be — tallow’s compatibility with skin sebum means it tends to regulate rather than overwhelm.

It’s also what started this whole thing for me. I started making it for our family because I couldn’t afford the alternative. I kept making it because it worked better than anything I’d bought.