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How to render lard

Lard. I have to admit that for most of my life that I’ve been terrified of the stuff. Be it schoolyard taunts that used the word, or the absence of it at both the grocery store and in my childhood home—I believed that it was bad news and something to be avoided.

A few years ago, I embarked on a quest to teach myself how to make flour tortillas. The first recipe I found listed lard as a key ingredient. I was scared at first, but I sought out a pound of it as my love for flour tortillas triumphed over my fear of pig fat. And while that initial foray into flour tortillas proved futile, I did discover that lard isn’t so bad, in fact, often it’s my preferred fat of choice.

People think that cooking with lard will make everything taste of pork, but this is not true; its flavor is neutral. What it does, however, is create incredible texture and structure. With lard, you’ll fry chicken that is both moist and crisp. With lard, you’ll make a tender pie crust that flakes. With lard, you’ll make airy French fries that crunch. With lard, you’ll cook refried beans that caress your mouth like velvet. With lard, you’ll steam tamales that are soft and fluffy. And with lard, you’ll bake ginger cookies that snap.

How to render lard | Homesick Texan

But the best thing about lard is that it’s not bad for you. It has less saturated fat (the bad fat) than butter, while it also has more than twice as much monosaturated fat (the good fat) than butter. And it has none of those pesky trans fats—that is, if it hasn’t been hydrogenated to prolong its shelf life.

And that, my friends, is the problem. Most lard you find at the grocery store has been hydrogenated to make it shelf stable indefinitely, which robs it of its good qualities. Some butchers will sell freshly rendered lard that has not been hydrogenated (clue: if it’s not refrigerated than it’s not the good kind of lard), but it’s also quite simple to render it yourself.

How to render lard | Homesick Texan

For years, I heard stories about how difficult and malodorous the lard-rendering process was. My opinion changed, however, after a visit to my grandparents’ farm last August. As we were looking through old family albums, I found a fantastic photo of my great-grandfather standing outside stirring a large cauldron with a long stick. The caption? “Dad rendering lard. Dec. 1940.” It seems that lard was the fat of choice for both my grandparents growing up, and when I looked through some old family recipes, I saw that indeed many of them called for that fat.

When I returned to New York I decided it was time to render my own lard. And after a visit to the Union Square Greenmarket to pick up some pig fat, I was well on my way to being in hog heaven.

If you’ve never rendered lard before, trust me, it’s very, very easy. And the best thing is that when you’re done you can look at your supply of white, luscious fat and have a blast dreaming of the culinary possibilities each jar contains.

How to render lard | Homesick Texan

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5 from 2 votes

How to render lard

Servings 2 pints
Author Lisa Fain

Ingredients

  • A pound of pig fat, either leaf lard or fat back
  • A big pot
  • A lard stick or wooden spoon
  • Water
  • 2 pint-sized Mason jars

Instructions

  • After buying your fat, preferably from a farmer or butcher that treats its hogs humanely, chop it up into little pieces. Before cooking, I advise that you open you kitchen window.
  • In a Dutch oven or heavy, large pot, add about a half of a cup of water to the pot, and then add the cubed fat. On the stove, heat the pot on medium low, stirring occasionally (every 10 minutes).
  • After the fat starts melting (about an hour), you’ll hear some very loud pops. Do not be alarmed—that is just the last gasp of air and moisture leaving what will soon become cracklings (little fried pieces of pork). Now is the time to start stirring more often.
  • Soon after, the cracklings will start floating on the surface. Keep stirring frequently, but be careful—you don’t want the fat popping out of the pot and burning you. When the cracklings sink to the bottom, the lard has been rendered.
  • Let it cool, and then pour it into containers through a colander or strainer lined with cheesecloth. The cracklings will be left behind in the cheesecloth and these make for a fine, fine snack, especially sprinkled over salad if that’s not too perverse for you.
  • The lard will be a yellowish liquid. This is what it’s supposed to look like.
  • Refrigerate it overnight and when it solidifies it will turn white. It will keep in the refrigerator for about 3 months, and the freezer for up to a year.

Notes

Leaf lard is the best grade of lard and is preferred for pastry, while fat back is the next-best grade of lard and is appropriate for frying. Each pound of fat will yield about a pint of lard.

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111 Comments

  1. I’m a homesick Texan, too. What a great blog name!

    Currently in a discussion with a group of friends about the superior qualities of lard, and one pointed out that store-bought’ll kill ya. LOL Probably. So, off to cultivate yet another heirloom kitchen skill (like milling flour, baking bread, cooking, etc). I appreciate the detailed (but not overwhelming) description of how to render, and your photography is yummy as well.

    I heartily recommend the book Nourishing Traditions by Sally Fallon.

    Thanks for the great post!

  2. I’ve always loved what lard does for my pie crust, but the stuff I got from the supermarket seemed… lacking.

    This is VERY exciting.

  3. Anonymous says:

    I was so happy to have access for this viable information. I was so disgusted having realized that all my married life, I was going in the wrong direction with margarine, veg.oils, and the vegetable lard copy cats. I tried to buy lard but when I got it home, I found that it too, was not good due to the hydrogenated added to it. Thanks so much
    Anita Williams

  4. Anonymous says:

    Love your lard! I weep for you, here in the UK lard is in the refrigerator (that’s the good stuff, hasn’t been hydrogenated to let it live on a shelf) at most supermarkets, and it is dirt cheap as it has a bad reputation here too. I use it 50:50 with butter for shortcrust pastry (pie crust) and now I am going to use it for roast potatoes as my mother used to (got to say goose fat is fantastic for potatoes) and frying. Mmmm, crispy!

    I am so glad people are finding out about fats and realising that saturated fats are not bad, and that polyunsaturated vegetable oils are bad in excess.

    Will be trying some of your Texan recipes!

    Kind Regards, Anne Smith, Warwickshire UK

  5. chemcookit says:

    Hi Lysa,
    Thanks for this post! My boyfriend and I recently tried to render both pig and beef fat. I have a post on it on my blog, with a link to yours, if you want to give a look at it. I really like your blog!