I heard one time that tallow is great for leather work. However, I've also heard that it can harm leather due to a certain salt content. Is any of this true?
I know they say animal fat is pretty much a perfect source of nutrients. So it only seems to make sense that it would have plenty of salt and other minerals in it. I was just curious. Thanks for the replyNot sure about the leather piece but I was told by a reliable source that there can be enough salt in deer tallow to rust up a gun barrel. He also stated that the longer you "cook" it the more salt is boiled out. I still have been using in my ML and have found
Yes. Unfortunately a lot of it has phosphates and a lot of unnecessary stuff added to it. That's a good point though. Processed meats, such as bacon, have a lot of stuff added to it. At least the commercial stuff does.Isn't salt added to bacon as part of the process of making bacon? In other words, it is not naturally salty?
Sure, that's why tallow is marketed today on shelves across america as a premium salt free leather care.I heard one time that tallow is great for leather work. However, I've also heard that it can harm leather due to a certain salt content. Is any of this true?
I'm not sure. Maybe so.What if you filter the bacon grease (warm) through a cloth. Would some salts remain?
Walk
I imagine that all the salts would remain.What if you filter the bacon grease (warm) through a cloth. Would some salts remain?
Walk
Agree. I don't know about the solution with back grease but if you pour salt water through a typical filter it won't remove any salt.I imagine that all the salts would remain.
Yes. The salts impregnated the meat and fat.What if you filter the bacon grease (warm) through a cloth. Would some salts remain?
Walk
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