:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Lard was removed from kitchens by marketing, not by health. It belongs back. :INFO What Lard Is and Why It Matters Lard is rendered pork fat — specifically leaf lard (from around the kidneys) for the highest quality neutral-flavored cooking fat. Leaf lard has a higher percentage of monounsaturated fat than butter, a higher smoke point than most vegetable oils (375°F for unrefined, 460°F for refined), and produces pie crusts with a flakiness that no plant-based fat replicates. The fear of animal fats in cooking is a product of mid-20th century marketing; the chemistry does not support it. :COUNTER.half 1 Pound Fat | :COUNTER.half 375 F Smoke Point :PATH Source Leaf Fat Ask a butcher for leaf fat or leaf lard — the fat from around the kidneys. | :INFO Source Leaf Fat Leaf fat is the fat from around the pig's kidneys — the highest quality, most neutral-flavored lard fat. Back fat and fatback also render into lard but have slightly stronger pork flavor — better for savory cooking, less neutral for pastry. Source from a local butcher, heritage pork farm, or farmers market. Ask for it specifically — grocery stores rarely stock it. :PATH Grind or Cut the Fat Grind or cut fat into small pieces to maximize surface area for rendering. | :INFO Grind or Cut the Fat Cut the fat into 1/2-inch cubes or run through a meat grinder. Smaller pieces render faster and more completely. Remove any blood vessels, red tissue, or skin — these impurities discolor the finished lard and reduce shelf life. :PATH Render on the Stove or in the Oven Low heat, 250 to 300 F, stirring occasionally until solids float. | :INFO Render on the Stove or in the Oven Place the fat in a heavy pot with 1/4 cup of water (prevents scorching before fat melts). Heat at 250 to 300°F — oven method is most consistent. Stir every 20 minutes. After 1 to 2 hours the solid tissue (cracklings) will turn golden and float. The liquid fat will be clear yellow. :PATH Strain and Store Pour through cheesecloth into glass jars and refrigerate or freeze. | :INFO Strain and Store Pour the liquid lard through a cheesecloth-lined strainer into clean glass jars while hot. Seal and cool at room temperature, then refrigerate. Lard keeps 3 to 6 months refrigerated and up to a year in the freezer. It turns white and opaque when solid — this is correct. Save the cracklings from the strained solids — seasoned and eaten warm they are excellent. :CHECKLIST What You Need [ ] 2 to 3 pounds pork leaf fat from a butcher [ ] Heavy pot or Dutch oven [ ] Cheesecloth for straining [ ] Clean glass jars for storage [ ] Optional: meat grinder to cut fat faster :NOTE Leaf Lard for Pastry, Back Fat for Frying Leaf lard is neutral enough for pie crusts, biscuits, and tamales — use where you do not want pork flavor. Back fat rendered lard has more pork character and is better for roasting potatoes, frying latkes, and cooking savory items where a hint of pork flavor enhances the dish. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The flakiest pie crust you have ever eaten was made with lard. You just may not have known it. :LINK https://www.seriouseats.com/render-lard-home-recipe Serious Eats — How to Render Lard at Home