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Beef tallow is a versatile fat with a high smoke point, making it ideal for frying and roasting. But what happens if you put ...
Beef tallow, which once might have been more at home in a Dickens novel than a TikTok video, is having an official Moment.
Beef tallow is technically safe for your skin, says Dr Heather Rogers, dermatologist and clinical assistant professor at the ...
Beef tallow and other animal fats, including pig lard and butter, were traditionally used as the main cooking fats in the United States up until the early 20th century. A shift occurred in the ...
Mentions of the animal fat on menus have grown more than 40% over the past year, according to Technomic, a food service ...
In the largest study of its kind, researchers at the Florida Museum of Natural History have used data from a 120-year-old ...
Sometimes, Dr. Pimple Popper star Dr. Sandra Lee wishes a beauty trend on TikTok would go away. “The beef tallow trend!” Lee, 54, exclusively told Us Weekly before the premiere of Dr. Pimple Popper: ...
Several decades ago, beef tallow was a must-have in kitchen pantries across the United States. The cooking fat was famously used to fry McDonald's signature french fries until the ’90s, when the ...
After years in which “plant-based” was the mantra, meat once again dominates the national conversation about dinner.
Beef tallow was previously a popular animal fat for frying food, but its high saturated fat content meant it was replaced with seed oils such as canola, corn, and sunflower. Beef tallow is a ...
Beef tallow also contains stearic acid and oleic acid, which "have got skin softening, hydration [and] repair characteristics ...