mutton tallow
Noun: - A type of tallow obtained from the body of a mature sheep: Mutton tallow is a hard, rendered fat derived specifically from the carcass of an adult sheep. It is distinct from fats obtained from other animals or from younger sheep (lamb).
Mutton tallow is a substance, so it is used as a non-count noun. It typically functions as the subject or object in a sentence. - It is primarily used in historical, industrial, or artisanal contexts, such as in the making of old-fashioned soaps, candles, or certain traditional food preparations.
- As a subject:
- Mutton tallow was a common ingredient in 19th-century candle making.
- As an object:
- The recipe calls for rendering mutton tallow slowly over low heat.
- Traditional soap makers valued mutton tallow for its hardness.
- Technical/Historical Context: The term is often found in texts discussing historical crafts, chemistry of fats, or traditional materials.
- The analysis confirmed the adhesive was bound with mutton tallow.
- Tallow (noun): A broader term for rendered fat from cattle or sheep.
- Suet (noun): The raw, hard fat from around the kidneys and loins of animals like sheep and cattle; it is the raw material from which tallow is rendered.
- Lard (noun): Rendered fat from pigs, used for contrast.
- Sheep tallow: A near-synonym, though "mutton tallow" specifies the sheep is mature.
- Animal fat: A much broader, more general term.
The term is very specific. It refers only to the fat from a mature sheep (mutton), not from a lamb. Its primary associations are with rendering, hardness, and historical use rather than modern culinary applications.
- tallow from the body of a mature sheep