Yes, I still eat raw suet. My point still stands re tallow. Something that is used to clean the body (and used to make candlewax)cannot be as effective as a food. They are 2 entirely different processes. Either 1 substance can be more effective as a food and therefore less effective as a cleaning substance or vice-versa. I note, for example, that many of Aajonus' more unusual suggestions re using raw food as cleansing agents are rather less effective than standard soaps I use.
OK, I'm trying to understand this. Have you tried using raw suet to clean the body? If raw suet can be used to clean the body, would that then indicate that it's not effective as a food? Does the fact that suet can be rendered into soap make suet less healthy than other foods? If so, what is the mechanism that makes tallow and suet less healthy because they can be made into soap?
I tried using both a nice clean piece of raw suet and suet that had been melted at low heat as a soap and I actually found that the raw suet makes a better soap, because the melted suet was too soft and crumbly. So does that mean that raw suet is less healthy because it makes a better soap?
Did you know that tallow is often rendered and filtered a second time in order to make a good soap out of it and that the resulting more refined tallow is generally saponified to convert it into a true soap by treatment with alkali? So both raw suet and tallow must be further processed with at least one other ingredient before they become what's generally regarded as a true (sudsy) soap.
It's a fact that even boiling creates heat-created toxins
OK, At what temp. do these toxins get created when heating fats or other liquids? The article at your link lists the values for olive oil and butter. Do you have the AGE levels produced by heating raw suet or marrow?
Since you do seem to make clear that the tallow is heated below 40 degrees Celsius, and that you mainly use it for weight-gaining purposes , that's fine. I recall some other RAFer stating that he ate cooked potatoes in order to gain weight and another RVAFer who ate cooked potatoes for sport-related reasons, so I'm aware there are also other concerns than just health.
I'll have to measure the temp to be sure. It certainly isn't anywhere near a roiling boil.
What puzzles me is the need to warm suet to 40 degrees Celsius. What for? I mean, Lex has admitted that you need much higher temperatures to get tallow/pemmican etc. to last for long enough periods. or is this just a transitional thing for taste reasons?
As I mentioned, in my case I use melted suet and jerky for multiple reasons. Adjusting gradually to the taste and digestion of raw fats is one reason, yes. Also, weight maintenance and gain, social reasons, convenience, portability (including reducing the weight of the meat by drying it), etc. Long-term preservation is not necessary for me (after all, I'm not living in the wilderness) and I've never thought nor claimed that tallow is equal or superior, healthwise, to suet, so those issues have little to do with it for me. I know that Lex is not fond of this approach, but I find that it's working for me at present.
What puzzles me is why all the fuss over heating a portion of one's food below 40 degrees celsius? This small compromise doesn't seem like such a crime to me. Is there a fear that people will abandon the standard RPD in favor of one based on pemmican and other more thoroughly heated foods? I have no interest in doing that myself and most of the melted suet, tallow and pemmican eaters I've seen here have continued to eat a mostly RPD, so there doesn't seem to be much of a threat.