Old Fashioned Lard Soap Recipe

in #homesteading6 years ago (edited)

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Before there were fancy soaps with exotic ingredients like coconut oil and shea butter there was good old fashioned lard and tallow soaps. Lard is a cheap and easy to source ingredient for most people. It can be purchased from the store or on-line. You can also render your own at home.

Lard soap is a beautiful white bar with a delicate texture and a clean, light scent. It’s low sudsing qualities and gorgeous lather make it the perfect shaving cream and base for many homemade cleaners and detergents. Depending on where you source your lard, you can also have confidence that there are zero added chemicals.

Our lard comes from our own pasture raised, organic fed pigs. We vowed to waste nothing from these animals and so far we have been true to our word. I recently rendered the lard for this recipe, from a large bag of fat we had stored in the freezer.

Lard Soap Recipe ~ Makes 2.5LB of Soap

This recipe is very basic with only three ingredients. You can add essential oils to this recipe simply by stirring them in just before you pour the soap into your mould.

Ingredients

  • 2LB lard
  • 12 oz water
  • 4 oz lye

optional: 5-10 drops of essential oils

Supplies Needed

  • mason jar or large Pyrex measuring jug
  • large wooden spoons
  • immersion blender (optional)
  • goggles
  • rubber gloves
  • soap moulds (can be as basic as cardboard boxes)

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Instructions

  • Wearing gloves and goggles, pour cold water into a mason jar. Place jar in sink. Carefully measure your lye. Add the lye to the water slowly, stirring gently until dissolved. Do not splash the lye onto your body, it can cause severe burns. Don’t breathe in the fumes, ensure the room is well ventilated. Do not touch the jar. The chemical reaction makes this liquid very hot. Let it sit and cool.

  • In a separate non aluminium saucepan (I use a large enamelled stock pot) heat your lard over low heat until it has melted completely.

  • When the lye mixture and the lard mixture are close to the same temperature (usually an hour for the lye but you can use a thermometer 120 degrees F) slowly pour the lye into the lard mixture, being careful to not splash. Lard soap recipe

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  • Stir, stir, stir, until the mixture thickens. Add your fragrance if using. If you are impatient like me, you can use an immersion blender to speed up the process. After 15 minutes the mixture will thicken and congeal. When you trace your blender or spoon through the mixture the pattern will stay (this is called trace). Keep in mind this can happen in a few minutes as well. Just keep stirring until you get trace.

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  • Pour your soap mixture into a greased or paper-lined soap mold. Gently tap mold to remove any air bubbles. I have cardboard boxes and trays that I line with wax paper. Nothing fancy required.

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  • Cover your soap with a blanket or towel and let stand for 24 hours.

  • Turn soap out of mould. Wait another day, then cut into bars as desired.

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  • Dry bars for a few weeks (the longer the better), turning occasionally to ensure they are drying uniformly. You want the soap to harden sufficiently for grating if using for other recipes.

  • Clean up. Wash your soap making equipment with hot soapy water and also rinse with a little vinegar to neutralize any traces of lye. Any wooden spoons that you use should be used only for soap making


[@walkerland ]
Building a greener, more beautiful world one seed at a time.
Homesteading | Gardening | Frugal Living | Preserving Food| From Scratch Cooking|

You can also find me at: walkerland.ca

Photo copyright: @walkerland

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I will be learning to do this in May. The mom of a friend will be teaching me. I have rendered the lard, already for it.

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looks beautiful! Soap making is so much fun. I wish I could do it as a side business.

THAT'S Awesome!
Have you done a post about it?

No, it's in the queue...Working on the buttermaking one today.

Wonderful blog!! I have made cold pressed worth the coconut and olive oil, not even thinking about lard!!! Will have to make some in the fall!!! Thank you. I am also trying to stay local and zero waste!!

I love the flying pig! I am from Cincinnati, and we were living there when the city had quite a kerfuffle over flying pigs. It seems a LOT of money was spent to commission an artist to create something to top the poles in the brand new Riverwalk park. Much secretiveness and fuss for a few months, and the flying pigs were unveiled. The city had not been that divided since Maplethorpe did a gallery show of art or gay porn depending on which side you were on. (I sat on the sidelines both times, deeply amused by how uptight people get. The Maplethorpe thing... Half the Christians in town rushed down to see it, to make sure they were offended...)
Here is a link to the lovely flying pigs of my home
https://cincihistory.wordpress.com/2013/02/22/porkopolis/

oh my goodness! That's some story. Thanks for that, I learned something new today and boy did I laugh at the though of all those people running down to "make sure they were offended". I think that Cincinnati statue is awesome :)

I saw our little flying pig years ago and had to buy it for my husband. It's a heavy little lump of cast iron. We have this debate over the word"obey" being in our wedding vows. It was not! :) We like to joke with each other about it.

What an interesting article @walkerland. I just stumbled across it in the "new" feed. I'm really surprised that you can use lard. I only associate it with cooking when I was a child. I didn't know you could still buy it! 😊

Sure thing. You should be able to ask your butcher or local farm for some lard to render yourself or sometimes they will also sell rendered lard. You can use cleaned up "filtered" bacon fat - I've never done that and think it would not have the same clean smell, but I know someone who does it all the time.

I'll write up a quick post on how to render lard. It's really easy!

Great recipe. We rendered lard from our pig and made several batches of soap with it. It lathers so much better than castle base soaps.
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after curing we heat seal ours keeps the scent from dissipating.

I have been trying to find some grain-fed meat in my area to make tallow like my grandma used to. In this area it's hard to find unless I can get in touch with an actual cattle/beef farmer. Where I used to live (up north more) they were ALL OVER... but here, not so much

looks lovely.

Great Post,

You ever have THAT thing that triggers a memory? This did it for me.

When my mom was a newly wed one of the near neighbors gave mom her recipe for lye soap. I don't remember the whole thing but I DO remember that you cured it in a Crock and it had to be covered with a sheepskin coat. The recipe was written in mixed German/English and it looks like my Grandfather translated the German parts for my mother. The recipe was written on a piece of grocery sack.

Grandma Derr passed before my memory, makes it at least 60 years ago. My mother (who died last June) kept that recipe like an artifact. I just looked, it's not in my collection of mom's cookbooks (Her original Betty Crocker) and recipes. I've already messaged my brother to make sure he has it....

I just can't tell you how much this memory has meant to me. Thank you for it, you'll never know.

@bigtom13 you just made my day. Memories and nostalgia are such a big deal to me. I am glad that this post triggered some good memories for you.

I am so fascinated by your recollections of this recipe. It sounds so interesting. I've never made soap that way but it would be so neat to try it. I'll do some reading, I have an archive of some vintage ebooks that might have some answers. Maybe your brother can make a copy of it for you so that it's forever backed up for your family. That really is a treasure! (as are your mom's cook books!)

So glad you share this with me. You truly made my day.

My grandma did a similar recipe using tallow. I can remember her boiling the beef fat- kind of had a smell to it, but the soap she'd make out of the tallow was so luxurious.

I've heard that tallow soap is beautiful. I've never had the chance to try it! I have always wanted to try making our own lye, it's on the bucket list. There are jokes in our family about my grans soap being "unpredictable" in strength (and sometimes skin burn).

OUCH!
I've read some on making lye... just kind of scary. But still, it would be nice to have that skill.

what's the worst that can happen (lol).

thanks for this great tutorial @walkerland :) I have been wanting to make lard soap for ages, but not really picked up the courage to try. Perhaps it's time to give it a go. :)

This was one of the first soaps that I made. I found the low list of ingredients make it less daunting. If you make it you'll have to do a post on your results! Its great to see all of these old fashioned recipes making a come back!

Gosh I'm dying to give this a try - haven't got all the ingredients yet but hopefully today sometime!!! At what point do you add the fragrance and to which mixture (the lye or the lard)?

If you want to add fragrance you would stir it in just before you have full trace.

I am so excited that you'll be making this!! :) I added fragrance to the post/tutorial. Thanks for catching that. I leave out scent when I make ours because I use the soap to make laundry detergent and wanted a fragrance free option.

Ohh I just made my first ever batch of laundry detergent today lol I was going to put in Ylang Ylang as a fragrance in it :D

if you end up loving the detergent please share your recipe - that would be a great post. I've tried a bunch of recipes but have not found one that I really love.

We have different laundry soap here so I'm just trying the only one I could find lol - I wanted to try the zote soap as a base but I can't get it

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