Is anyone here making their own beef tallow balm? If so, I'd love to know—are you using the dry rendering method or wet rendering? I’m particularly curious to know which approach you find more effective and if you have insights into which method best preserves the nutrients in the tallow.

#BeefTallowBalm #NaturalSkincare

#TallowBalm #DIYSkincare

#DryRendering #WetRendering

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My wife wet renders. She said she thinks it creates better purity/better for skincare. I’m still working to get her on NOSTR.

Im leaning more towards wet. And yes, tell her we need her here! 🏆

Wet gets rid of the beef smell better. If you are making it for skincare, wet is better unless you want to walk a round smelling like your dog’s favorite chew toy. Tallow for cooking is usually dry rendered for the same reason above.

I am using it as lotion

I've only used it in a concoction for my extremely badly sunburned skin. I'm not sure about wet or dry, I just mixed tallow with a few things and it worked surprisingly well.

I don't mind the smell, though the stuff I use really does not have much smell after application.

I’m trying to make the tallow from the fat.

Ah! I am tracking now.

We buy the tallow and then my wife mixes it with a little olive oil and when it’s almost solid at room temperature she uses an electric mixer to whip it up. If she makes lip balm she adds beeswax too.

I need to whip mine and a lip balm sounds nice! Thank God for good wives 🏆

Indeed.

Replying to the #NaturalSkincare tag (and not the Beef tallow tag), the best and most natural skincare (and haircare) is what your own body produces. It's a mix of oils, waxes and esthers and is produced by your own body with all the benefits of biofeedback. It goes by the (slightly unfortunate) name of *sebum*.

So best skincare is to not strip away the sebum that your body is producing to naturally protect and nourish it. Not stripping it away means not using soaps and detergents on your skin (and hair). Basically what's called 'water only'. In addition, try to keep the water cooler, because hot water also strips away the sebum more. (Cold) water only will give you naturally glowing, elastic and not dried out skin, i e youthful skin.

Yeah this is something I trouble with because my showers are basically with boiling water 🥵

I'm not a cold showers zealot but I did do a year of exclusively cold showers as an experiment. Two things I noticed :

1. I have generally (very) good skin but did have, like a lot of people, drier skin on my elbows. These patches of drier skin went away and turned pink and smooth again.

2. Natural highlights came back into my hair, to a startling degree. I had very blond hair as a child, ageing into a more ash blond. The cold water brought back shining colour into my hair. That convinced me to go 'no poo' (no shampoo), after seeing how good sebum retention is for your hair.

Even just going cooler is better than hot hot showers (I haven't kept to strict cold showers). And hot baths are fine too. It's the hot water continually running over your skin & through yr hair in a shower which is what's damaging.

Oh wow that’s nice

I'm not a cold showers zealot but I did do a year of exclusively cold showers as an experiment. Two things I noticed :

1. I have generally (very) good skin but did have, like a lot of people, drier skin on my elbows. These patches of drier skin went away and turned pink and smooth again.

2. Natural highlights came back into my hair, to a startling degree. I had very blond hair as a child, ageing into a more ash blond. The cold water brought back shining colour into my hair. That convinced me to go 'no poo' (no shampoo), after seeing how good sebum retention is for your hair.

Even just going cooler is better than hot hot showers (I haven't kept to strict cold showers). And hot baths are fine too. It's the hot water continually running over your skin & through yr hair in a shower which is what's damaging.