Methyl or ethyl esters were produced from lard and restaurant grease by lipase- or base-catalyzed reactions. Before esterifying, some renewable substrates (lard and restaurant grease) should be manipulated through acetone fractionation or on a chromatography column packed with an adsorbent to obtain maximal reaction rate, Because lipase activity was hindered by excess amounts (more than 1 mol) of methanol, each 1 M methanol was added sequentially after 24 h of reaction. Through a three-step reaction, 74% conversion to tallow-methyl ester was obtained. However, a porous substance, such as silica gel, improved the conversion when more than 1 M methanol was used as reaction substrate. When a 1:3 (fractionated lard/methanol, mole ratio) substrate was used, the conversion rates (i.e., extent of conversion) were 2.7 (24 h) and 2.8% (48 h). However, with 10% silica gel in the reaction mixture, the conversion rates increased to 25 and 58%, respectively. Regenerated restaurant grease (FFA removed through column chromatography) was further converted to esters by alkali-catalyzed methanolysis. After 24 h of reaction, 96% conversion was obtained, while only 25% conversion was observed from crude grease. Alkyl esters produced in this study could be used for fuels, potentially as biodiesel.