Neatsfoot is NOT Neatsfoot!
I found this and thought it might be interesting to some of you, it was on
KINGSMERE CRAFTS
So the question has to be asked, surely we can make something ourselves where we know EXACTLY what is in our strop treatment? I know the US FDA allows the use of vinegar distilled from petrochemicals in food and there is no requirement that this is declared on the product.
Beware your pickles!
"Neat" is an archaic name for hoofed animals (i.e. cows, pigs, sheep). Neatsfoot oil is oil rendered from the feet of cattle or hoofed animals. In the slaughterhouse, the feet would be cut off the animal, split, put into a large vat and boiled. The oils that rose to the top would be skimmed off and sold as "Neatsfoot Oil." Today, thanks to the US military, there is no actual Neatsfoot oil in Neatsfoot Oil!
Back in the 1930s the US Army wrote a Military Specification that defined the properties of Neatsfoot Oil. Merchants bidding for government contracts quickly discovered other, less expensive, oils would meet their specification. Today, Neatsfoot Oil is any oil, regardless of where it comes from, that meets this US Government Military Specification. Neatsfoot Oil now is mostly derived from pigs. Lard is pressed and the resulting liquid, which can be supplemented with mineral oil and/or reclaimed motor oil, is sold as "Neatsfoot Oil."