bacon fat as fire starter?

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theora55

Member
Hearth Supporter
Mar 8, 2008
64
Southern Maine
My Mom always used bacon fat as a fire starter. Does it increase the risk of chimney fires? It definitely works; my Mom used to start fires that way. She loved a roaring fire & never worried about creosote. Hard to believe we never had a chimney fire.
 
Smells like a great idea to me.
 
I don't know how much you're planning to use, but I don't see how it would add to a creosote problems.

I use a couple of paper towels soaked in the stuff to start fires. That's probably less oil than is in a wax fire starter.
 
I burn any fat we have. I don't have any issues with creosote or chimney fires. If anything it makes the fire burn hotter and would probably help clean out any buildup in the flue. Just don't put too much in at once.
 
Another good fire starter is wood pellets. I get 'em for $3.00 per 40lb bag at spring clearance sales and a single bag will give you 75-100 good starts. I fill up a rubbermaid trash can with several bags and keep it handy. I put a couple rounds or splits side by side in the firebox, dump a small scoop of pellets in between, put one more piece of wood on top, then use a 'cane torch' for a few seconds. I leave the ash clean out door open for a couple minutes as the pellets gassify and draw in a good draft through the 'fire tunnel' and it's off to the races! After a few minutes I can shut her down and watch the secondaries ramp up for a good blaze.

I burn the pork fat by swinging my trusy 'ol splittin maul!


lol


TS
 
I thought this was gonna be a joke. I can't see how it could possibly be any worse than the paraffin firestarters so many people use. Creosote is formed specifically from wood, so bacon fat really wouldn't produce it.

On a side note, Bacon fat makes a nice candle. You gotta use a wooden wick, and make sure it's not near any combustibles because it sometimes has a "fireball" shooting effect.
 
Say, anybody know where I can be a gettin some of dem dar wooden wicked, fireball a shootin, hot breakfast a hankerin, candles?


LOL


I can hear Paul Harvey now....."Unlike yours truly, you might only be able to afford Captain Crunch for breaksfast. But it doesn't have to smell that way anymore!"


Small print reads.....


Please consult your local fire marshall and insurance agent before use.

* Spokesman Paul Harvey was only marginally injured in testing this product.




.......Good Day! ;^)


TS
 
Can`t see how it could be any different than "fatwood"?? ie-wood with a ton of sap or pitch in it.

Might increase your appetite though ;-)
 
I like the suggestion by Techstuf of using wood pellets. Does anyone else use these? Do they start easy and burn long & hot enough to spread a fire from pellets to your splits without the use of small and medium size kindling?
 
Don't let the stove go out and you only have to start 3-4 fires a year. :)
Besides bacon grease is way to good for cooking eggs in, making biscuits, cornbread etc.
 
I can start some pretty stubborn wood with a small scoop of pellets, rounds included. Just make sure you lay two pieces side by side with the scoop in between, top it with a third piece to create the fire tunnel and open the ash door. Pellets require moving air to really get going, and will draw air over themselves and produce the gasses necessary for a good burn. One more tip though, they are susceptible to humidity and work best when kept dry, like a sealed container.


TS
 
Ya all must start a lot of fires. I built one this past fall and it has ben going ever sence. I dont even let it go out for my monthly ash cleaning.
 
An old timer told me that the best fire starter by far was yak fat. Give it a try.
 
Anyone else suddenly have a craving for a BLT after reading this thread? :) ;)
 
I'm in, but don't tell the wife.


And if she finds out, it was 'turkey' bacon, got it?



TS
 
Yak is one of those exotic farm animals now in vogue around the country. Montana, South Dakota....it's Buffalo. Now we got Ostrich and emu in some parts.....


Northern Minnesota just happens to be going through it's 'Yak' phase right now.


TS
 
LOL


I think Minnesota's a great place.....
 
theora55 said:
My Mom always used bacon fat as a fire starter.

Being in Maine, you may end up with a few bears parked downwind from your place....and I just saw a story about a plastic surgeon using fat from his liposuction patients to make biofuel for his car...so why not???
 
Thanks, I was just eating.


Ewww....Lipsuction to Lipocombustion in 3 easy steps....


Ask me how!


TS
 
woodconvert said:
theora55 said:
My Mom always used bacon fat as a fire starter.
Being in Maine, you may end up with a few bears parked downwind from your place....and I just saw a story about a plastic surgeon using fat from his liposuction patients to make biofuel for his car...so why not???

Our Paradise does not permit bears --under state law-- to park anywhere in heating season.
Called "hibernation".
Now, if you're talking Mountain Lions.........................
 
downeast said:
woodconvert said:
theora55 said:
My Mom always used bacon fat as a fire starter.
Being in Maine, you may end up with a few bears parked downwind from your place....and I just saw a story about a plastic surgeon using fat from his liposuction patients to make biofuel for his car...so why not???

Our Paradise does not permit bears --under state law-- to park anywhere in heating season.
Called "hibernation".
Now, if you're talking Mountain Lions.........................

Ah...yes...forgot about the seepy bears in winter....as you were...nothing to see here :sick:

Have problems with big kitty's where you are at??. DO NOT START A FIRE WITH TUNA DRIPPIN'S....or at least till the state can get them to sleep during winter too.....
 
I detected a bit of scoffing at my mention of the old timer's revelation that yak fat was the best fire starter. I'm sure that was just a cover-up for your lament that yak fat is not as readily available as you hoped.

Now, for the coup d'etat -- when summer comes and those fires don't need starting anymore, just sip your yak with lust, and finally give ol' Courvoisier the boot it deserves. Being a cool dude will only be the start of how your friends will look at you. Jay Z, I luv ya.
 
woodconvert said:
downeast said:
woodconvert said:
theora55 said:
My Mom always used bacon fat as a fire starter.
Being in Maine, you may end up with a few bears parked downwind from your place....and I just saw a story about a plastic surgeon using fat from his liposuction patients to make biofuel for his car...so why not???
Our Paradise does not permit bears --under state law-- to park anywhere in heating season.
Called "hibernation".
Now, if you're talking Mountain Lions.........................
Ah...yes...forgot about the seepy bears in winter....as you were...nothing to see here :sick:

Have problems with big kitty's where you are at??. DO NOT START A FIRE WITH TUNA DRIPPIN'S....or at least till the state can get them to sleep during winter too.....

The Big Kitty's are furtive and solitary. I only see tracks, or scat when out cutting or hiking or running year-round. There have been only occasional sightings, unconfirmed. They are around, yet the state Dept. of Wildlife will not admit their presence. Besides, Cougars/Mountain Lions only go after pre-menopausal, smaller women under 110 lbs , which, as you know, we have few of in Northern Downeast Maine.

Oh, forgot: be sure the bacon fat is Al Quada certified.
 
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