I get it. When someone first hears "I put beef tallow on my face", their reaction is usually somewhere between confused and horrified. I was the same before I started making it.
So here are the real questions — the ones people type into Reddit at midnight — answered honestly.
Won't it make me smell like a roast dinner?
This is always the first one 😄 Properly rendered tallow has almost no smell at all. The "beefy" smell people associate with fat comes from impurities — when tallow is rendered correctly and slowly, those are removed. Our unscented Minimalist Butter has maybe the faintest neutral smell, and our scented versions smell like whatever botanicals we've added (chamomile, lavender, raspberry). Nobody has ever told us they smelled like a Sunday roast.
Won't it clog my pores?
This is the big one — and the most misunderstood. The reason tallow actually doesn't clog pores for most people is that its fatty acid profile is almost identical to human sebum (the oil your skin naturally produces). Your skin recognises it. It absorbs it rather than sitting on top of it. That said — everyone's skin is different, and if you have very oily or acne-prone skin, we'd suggest starting with a small area and seeing how your skin responds. We're never going to tell you tallow works for everyone, because nothing does.
Is it just a TikTok trend that'll disappear next year?
Tallow has been used on skin for thousands of years — by people who had no other option and whose skin was probably in better shape than ours. The "trend" part is just people rediscovering something that worked before the skincare industry convinced us we needed 12-step routines with ingredients we can't pronounce. Whether it's trending or not, the chemistry hasn't changed.
I'm Muslim — is tallow halal?
Great question, and one we take seriously. Our tallow comes from grass-fed cattle that are halal slaughtered. We are working toward formal halal certification, but in the meantime we're happy to share full sourcing information with anyone who asks. Just email us directly.
I try to avoid animal products. Should I feel bad about tallow?
We won't try to talk you into something that conflicts with your values — that's your call. What we will say is that tallow is a byproduct of the meat industry, not a driver of it. Using it is arguably one of the more respectful things you can do with an animal — nothing goes to waste. But we completely understand if it's a no for you, and we respect that.
Dermatologists say it's bad. Who do I believe?
Most dermatologists who speak negatively about tallow are commenting on the general idea of putting animal fat on skin — not on properly rendered, grass-fed, small-batch tallow specifically. They're also trained in and often paid by an industry built on synthetic ingredients. That doesn't mean they're wrong — it means the conversation is more nuanced than a quick "it clogs pores" dismissal. We'd always say: try it on a small patch, watch how your skin responds, and make up your own mind.
What's the difference between grass-fed and regular tallow?
The diet of the animal directly affects the fat composition. Grass-fed tallow is higher in omega-3 fatty acids, CLA (conjugated linoleic acid), and fat-soluble vitamins like A, D, E and K. Factory-farmed animals eat a grain-heavy diet that changes the fat profile significantly. This is why we only use grass-fed — it's not just marketing, it genuinely changes what ends up on your skin.
Is it safe for babies and children?
Our Family Daisy balm was specifically formulated with children and sensitive skin in mind — chamomile and raspberry extract, nothing harsh. Many parents use it on their babies. That said, we always recommend doing a small patch test first, especially with newborns, and consulting your paediatrician if you have any concerns.
Will it go rancid? How long does it last?
Tallow is naturally stable — more so than most plant oils, which oxidise quickly. Kept in a cool, dry place and used with clean hands (no double-dipping with wet fingers), our products last 12 months. If you notice any change in smell, that's your sign it's past its best.
Why is it so expensive compared to a tub of Vaseline?
Because Vaseline is a petroleum byproduct that costs almost nothing to produce at industrial scale. Our tallow is grass-fed, sourced ethically, rendered slowly in small batches, and combined with high-quality botanical ingredients. We make everything by hand in Belgium. The price reflects what actually goes into it — not a marketing markup.
Have a question that isn't here? Email us or leave a comment — we genuinely love talking about this stuff 🐄🌿
Laura, Founder of Nana Latta Skincare
nanalatta-skincare.com