Another thread usurped with hand wringing and chest beating over tallow, hehe - I love it. Let's hope that William is never banned because these conflicts always predictably bring a smile to my face (everyone ignores the trolling aspect anyway). I say William is an elder and we all know to have respect for our elders!
I will say that in spite of the heat-sensitive components of animal fats (particularly resulting in fat-soluble toxins and oxysterols), tallow does seem to have very optimal digestibility, which is probably why it has some medicinal value in spite of its mild-moderate toxicity.
I took a leaf out of tallow's book and I've started mincing my fat and then melting it down in a bain marie to separate the still raw liquid from all that connective stuff that's in the fat. I find that this separated (still raw) liquid is more digestible without all the connective rubbish in a cut of fat. So this truly low-temp raw tallow for me is something akin to having one's cake and eating it. I highly recommend this approach if you want the optimal digestibility of tallow, yet without some toxic payload. Of course, tallow is sans lipase, so the enzymatic synergy is excluded - the exogenous enzyme synergy that is however, actually still debatable/speculative.
Also, maybe drinking an espresso just after your meat meal (only one per day) or a little bit of diluted dandelion root tincture will eject more bile, meaning better uptake of fats/fat-solutes.
@Tyler: Now, to the point/conundrum, to which I alluded and djr_81 correctly interpreted (thanks djr_81)...Fat starvation on a wild game diet - akin to rabbit starvation? How is it possible to only just keep out of ketosis/ketonuria on a strictly lean (low total fat) wild game meats diet? Are you alluding to the possibility that we were actually opportunistic scavengers (instead of or as well as hunters) who spent much of our time looking for piles of bones left by carnivores, who couldn't be bothered (or didn't have the apparatus) to procure the brain/marrow? I know you have a better kinaesthetic for the anthropological literature, so once again, this is a probe for education. Maybe there were some wiggle factors between the early and late paleolithic...So are we talking dependency on game marrow/brains? There seems to be a paleo dichotomy here...Definitely one for the paleorati...
That said, I love exotic (although farmed) game like kangaroo and ostrich - much tastier than our local stuff.
Tallow = Suet - Scratchings + Thermodynamics + Oxygen (simple maths/chemistry!)
This brings me to my next point - has anyone (of a tallow inclination e.g. William) taken the truly evolved step to add some kind of anti-oxidants to the melted fat while rendering (e.g. rooibos tea, curry leaves, spices etc.)? Apparently, this greatly minimises ROS (reactive oxygen species) and probably heat-originated fat-soluble toxins. The Indians traditionally added curry leaves (a so-called wise tradition, but not mentioned by WAPF etc.) while rendering ghee and always boiled in earthenware rather than a pro-oxidant metal. Personally, if one is refining their fats with unnatural heat (that is, that nature does everything enzymatically at ~40 degrees C), maybe they should at least bring this kind of wise science when forming a staple out of a substance outside of nature. This kind of thing reminds me of William's observation that the EM coming from an Excalibur dehydrator could impact the quality of the jerky meat in comparison to Lex's homebrew spec. I mean, isn't this the true neopaleolithic way - to combine science with lost ancient instinct?
Another thing I seem to remember from WAPF readings is that oxysterols (oxidised cholesterol) are higher and more dangerous with prolonged exposure to O2, like in the case of dried egg yolks, dried milk and dried whey powder. There is the other debate that trace oxysterols are synergistic with our metabolism, although I'm not concurring with that.
@alphagruis: You seem somewhat reticent now - I'm interested in your retort, given your academic science credentials (I'm a mere pseudoscientist resynthesising others' findings/interpretations).
In my opinion, truly raw tallow (not tallow) rendered by mincing and low temperature melting and filtering (e.g. with a fine tea strainer) is the very best for the palate, digestion and simplicity. Stick to using hot tallow for making soaps and the occasional seared steak/stir-fry for guests (tallow is amazing in preference to ghee for frying mushrooms and onions in cheat scenarios).