If I understand it correctly, tallow is made from beef or mutton. The same principle can be applied to pork fat -- and presumably any other herbivore? -- to create lard. Which is is also delicous for fries.
Yes, the difference is that tallow is solid at room temperature, so great for preservation. I was planning on making pemmican with it, but slicing, drying, and pulverizing hundreds of tiny strips of meat seemed like a lot of work.
The melting points of tallow and lard are extremely similar (30-31 degrees), and are well above the common definitions of “room temperature” (20-22 degrees).
Yes this is biased towards English/American definitions of room temperature, but either they are both at room temperature or not.
I don't mind if it's not traditional – I'm not going to use bison after all ;) Though there were a variety of meats used. But ideally I'd have something I could take camping without refrigeration.
Yeah I bet, but with Americans you never know, I've seen people pour melted processed butter across popcorn, so when it comes to what Americans eat, I've learned to always ask rather than assume.
Well, I don't eat popcorn at all, the "skin/shell" gets stuck in my teeth so not worth it :) My wife though loves popcorn, but I don't think she'd ever pour melted butter over them, too health-conscious for that I suppose.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pemmican