The Scottish Mail on Sunday

The new skin care saviour in your make-up cabinet? Suet!

- By Cormac Connelly-Smith and Claire Coleman

IT HAS long been a store-cupboard essential, used to make dumplings, pie crusts and Christmas puddings. But suet – also known as tallow – may soon find a place in your beauty cabinet too.

Moisturise­rs made from rendered beef fat, mixed with olive oil and essential oils, have been used for millennia, with an example found preserved in a Roman ruin in London dating back 2,000 years.

But this ancient product has become increasing­ly popular on social-media accounts dedicated to ‘natural’ skincare.

Michelle Miha sells several fat-based products, including tallow balm moisturise­r and a lard-based night cream, through her company Remnant Beauty.

The 47-year-old turned to suet after synthetic skincare products failed to treat her dry skin.

She told The Mail on Sunday: ‘I was just shocked. I’m no stranger to medical-grade expensive skincare but this just blew everything I knew out of the water. I was amazed at how good it was and how quick the response in my skin was to when I used it.’

Ryan Porter, 29, has also launched a tallow-based skincare brand after using the substance to treat his eczema. The founder of Northumber­land-based Fat Cow said: ‘What I love about it is it’s got everything you need in a skin cream, and it’s got only two ingredient­s, both of which are natural. It’s filled with nutrients which your skin is able to soak up.’

Tallow balms are created from rendered beef fat, or suet, which is a waste product of the cattle-farming industry. After being refined, they are then whipped with oil to create a smooth, creamy texture. While unscented balms are popular, many are flavoured with essential oils to cover up the odour of the tallow, which has been described by some as being like a roast dinner.

Animal fats have been used in skincare before, the most commonly used being lanolin. But cosmetic formulator Dr Colette Haydon said: ‘Lanolin is fat that comes from the skin of the sheep which does have a very similar lipid – or fat – profile to human skin. But when we’re talking about animal body, that’s a completely different thing.’

That’s not to say it can’t have a positive impact on skin. All moisturise­rs are made up of humectant ingredient­s that draw water to the skin and occlusive ingredient­s that stop water escaping from the skin, and almost any form of fat can act as an occlusive. But it can also – like many fats – clog pores. ‘There was a fad for using butter in facials a few years ago and that led to lots of people getting acne,’ Dr Haydon added.

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