Just an update, we made some super badass grease-cutting soap with our rancid lard. I vaguely sort-of followed a DIY 30-minute laundry soap recipe and this is what I did:
6lb lard
1.5lb coconut oil (we had crappy costco oil to burn, plus it's supposed to have good cleansing qualities I guess)
18 oz lye
8 cups borax
4.5 gallons water
(+20-30 drops of lavender EO cause I was paranoid it would stink. The soap actually smells fresh and clean, possibly reminiscent of juniper!)
I heated the oil up until it was well melted, meanwhile mixed the lye into 3~ gallons of water in a 5 gallon bucket. Since it's so diluted the water doesn't really heat up. The original recipe didn't say to monitor temps, so I didn't. I added the oil in after the lye was dissolved and stirred for a good while. Then I stirred in the borax and topped the bucket off with another 1~ gallon of water. At this point the bucket was pretty much full. I stirred for awhile more then covered and set aside, stirring several times a day. The first 2 days it wanted to form a soap-cake on top of liquid, but i just broke it up and kept stirring. Day 3-4 saw it fully incorporate into a thick "full-fat-kefir" consistency. But 7-10 days it was a thick whipped cream consistency. We used the soap immediately on day 1, it wasn't hot enough to burn skin so it didn't need to rest for that purpose. After I used about a gallon of soap I topped the bucket off with another gallon of water and re-mixed it into a yogurt consistency again. Didn't affect its awesomeness at all!
This stuff destroys grease. You can take you nastiest, greasiest, grimiest dishes, work the soap in, and simply rinse with ice cold water and the grease disappears. We don't have
hot water right now and this soap has been a lifesaver in the kitchen! We're also using it on our laundry with happy results (we use 1/4 cup in our miniature washing machine). I also like to wash my hands with it when they're extra covered in farm/wilderness. Wouldja believe; the soap cuts tree resin pretty well! Not all the way, but it takes a good bit off. Normally we have to work a raw cooking oil into the sticky resin and repeatedly soap it, wash it, oil it, soap it, wash it, etc etc until the resin got under control. Now we can come back from logging and soap up with my lard detergent soap and most of the resin melts away. Woohoo!