Grit

Render a Light in the Darkness

Turning ordinary animal fats into candles for emergency lighting is one of the easiest self-reliance skills to master. These plain, old-fashioned candles begin by rendering fat into tallow, and then forming that tallow into candles using minimal equipment. The final product requires little to no out-of-pocket expense. And while it’s true that paraffin and beeswax candles have been around for many years, animal fats remain the most reliable candle base in times of need, due to the relative ease of access to leftover fats.

Finding Raw Material

Free to the hunter or livestock owner, and often free for everyone from the local butcher, any animal fat — deer, cow, goat, elk, even bear — may be used for candles. The most noticeable difference is the hardness of the cooled fat. For instance, lard made from pork fat is much softer and faster burning than tallow from beef or venison, and as such is limited to use in container candles. Tallow, however, makes excellent pillars

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Grit

Grit5 min read
Thrifty Gate Repair
Keeping metal and wooden gates in good repair is an important part of homesteading. A sagging or broken gate can be a chore to open and shut. It might also tempt an animal to jump, lean over, or crawl through, potentially injuring itself in the proce
Grit7 min read
Rookie Prepping Mistakes
For years, I’ve used the analogy of prepping as a three-legged stool: One leg is supplies, the second leg is skills and knowledge, and the third leg is community. If you remember your high school geometry (three points define a plane), you know a thr
Grit2 min read
Our View
Few things ring truer to me recently than the Creole quote “One rain does not make a crop.” It reminds me, particularly lately, that many of the changes we wish to see don’t happen instantly, but through time and good work. Often, we get so busy tryi

Related