T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2995.1 | puritan or hollywood or crisco, or.. | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Apr 12 1991 19:11 | 4 |
| salad oil = any light cooking oil like conola oil (Puritan brand), or corn oil,
or safflower oil. the phrase "salad oil" is generally used when olive oil is
NOT recommended.
|
2995.2 | | HORSEY::MACKONIS | Howling at the Moon.... | Mon Apr 15 1991 10:22 | 10 |
| Ah, a topic for disagreement on a Monday morning!!
I use olive oil when it calls for salad oil. Since when you go to a restaurant
and ask for oil and vinegar for your salad -- they better darn well bring me a
good quality olive oil and NOT Crisco!! I call Puritan, Crisco, etc. a cooking
oil.
Come on noters -- let's have a vote!!
dana
|
2995.3 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Mon Apr 15 1991 10:37 | 8 |
|
OK:
Olive oil tastes revolting.
Walnut oil, or perhaps peanut oil are acceptable...
/. Ian .\
|
2995.4 | Vote here...... | BOOVX2::MANDILE | I'd rather be horsebackriding | Mon Apr 15 1991 11:16 | 5 |
| Olive oil - Yuck!
Wesson or Crisco or Puritan.....
Lynne
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2995.5 | My vote | KYOA::SHAIN | By the time I get to Phoenix . . . | Mon Apr 15 1991 11:37 | 2 |
| Add one more vote for "cooking oil" wesson type! However, I have been
known to use olive oil for salad dressings.
|
2995.6 | Now I know about salad oil!! | AIMHI::BEASLEY | | Mon Apr 15 1991 16:59 | 3 |
| Thanks everyone and enjoy the controversy I seem to have started..
Julie
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2995.7 | GOOD olive, the best | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Tue Apr 16 1991 16:46 | 12 |
| Olive oil anytime... but of course, it MUST be good quality olive oil.
Not many people are used to it... it will happen like with garlic, when
I visited the US over twenty years ago nobody ever used GARLIC with the
exception of italians, now it is fashionable to use garlic and it is
used at times, too much... olive oil is expensive and not too well
known, but wait till some of the chefs on tv advertise it... then it
will be fine! mind you, GOOD olive oil is fine, everage (or mediocre)
oil... is terrible!
(I know what I am talking about because my father is, and has been, a
producer of olive oil for over 50 years and at home we had nothing but
the very best...)
|
2995.8 | brand names please | DROPIT::BENHAM | | Wed Apr 17 1991 08:50 | 1 |
| What are some of the brand names of good olive oil?
|
2995.9 | Filippo Berio is good | FLUKES::SUTTON | He roams the seas in freedom... | Wed Apr 17 1991 09:13 | 5 |
| I've always had good results with Filippo Berio; I use this as my
all-purpose general cooking oil. For salads I might occasionally buy a
small bottle of extra-virgin stuff.
/Harry
|
2995.10 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Wed Apr 17 1991 09:34 | 3 |
| Of brands local to MetroWest, one of the good ones is Colavita cold
pressed. It's available in many ordinary supermarkets at reasonable
(for cold pressed) prices.
|
2995.11 | Oils... | WEORG::AITEL | if it has worms, it's done | Wed Apr 17 1991 11:25 | 14 |
| Salad oil = any mild somewhat sweet tasting oil.
Olive oil can be this way. I agree with the suggestion of
Filipe Berio (sp?); I like both the light and the darker varieties
they have. I've also tried, mistakenly, the World Classic brand,
which tastes *green* - no other word for it... it is definitely not
so good.
Peanut oil is another I use a lot, especially since you can use
it for wok cooking as it does not burn easily at high temps.
Corn oil is fine too... and readily available at reasonable prices.
--L
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2995.12 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Synapse Collapse | Wed Apr 17 1991 11:27 | 12 |
| The Nashua Telegraph had an article on olive oil a few months ago. It went
through everything you ever would want to know about olive oils. I should
have saved it. :-)
Imported olive oils' labels don't have to conform to any FDA regs wrt what they
call the oil, only the ones in their own country. As a result of this, I
tend to stay away from spanish oilve oils (per the article) because I can't
remember what they call the good stuff. Anyway, I remember that anything with
virgin in the name (from italy or greece) and fine is ok too. And cold pressed
is definitely preferred.
The Doctah
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2995.13 | World Classic: Two thumbs down | RUSTIE::NALE | Expert Only: I'll do it anyway | Wed Apr 17 1991 11:50 | 6 |
|
I also made the mistake of trying the World Classic olive oil. Yuck! Next time
I don't scrimp, I'll splurge on the Colavita or Filippo Berio which I really
like.
Sue
|
2995.14 | Kalamata only for me! | RANGER::CANNOY | True initiation never ends. | Wed Apr 17 1991 12:02 | 9 |
| At this point I use only a good Greek Kalamata olive oil. It has sucha
rich fruity taste and is a beautiful light green. Wonderful just poured
over a slice of feta cheese and fresh oregano, but I also use it for
eveything else except popcorn and stirfrying. It's rather expensive
raging from $10 a pint to $22 a gallon. YOu will likely one find the
good stuff in a Greek grocery of gourmet food shop. I don't know what
brand I am usin since it's printed in Greek.
Tamzen
|
2995.15 | "Light" olive oil when I don't want the distinct flavor | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Wed Apr 17 1991 13:22 | 10 |
| I buy the "light" olive oil for regular cooking. The expensive, and
strong-flavored, extra-virgin stuff I save for when I am making Greek
food that I want to have taste like olive oil. The light oil doesn't
have the pronounced olive oil flavor. I use peanut oil in the wok,
although I shouldn't eat too much of it because it kicks up my
allergies, and use canola oil for "cooking oil" (I'm allergic to corn
also, and sunflower oil, which I like otherwise, tastes like burned
sunflowers seeds if it gets too hot).
/Charlotte
|
2995.16 | Flippo Berio Olive Oil | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Wed Apr 17 1991 13:46 | 7 |
| I like the Filippo Berio, also. If you frequent Spags [like I do!] you
will occasionally see it on "the wall" at the back of the store, for
very reasonable price (less than $10 last time I bought it - these are
the large cans which sell for about $15.99 at the market).
Rgds,
marcia
|
2995.17 | how about avocado oil? | CSSE32::GRAEME | Only elephants should wear ivory | Wed Apr 17 1991 14:55 | 4 |
| Avocado oil (Williams Sonoma) is very good for wok cooking, although I
must admit I haven't found many other uses for it. Not to distract
from the current olive oil discussion, but does anyone out there use
avocado oil? :^)
|
2995.18 | Another vote for good olive oil. | FLOWER::DUNNING | | Wed Apr 17 1991 15:32 | 17 |
| Cast another vote for "Olive Oil" Virgin Cold Pressed.....I keep
several varieties on hand.
Olive Oil is not very good for high temperature cooking but a salad
dressing made with GOOD Olive Oil and any variety of good vinegars...
malt, tarragon, balsamic and/or sherry and a package of Seven Seas
dry salad dressing makes an outstanding accompaniment to any salad.
For high temperature cooking Canola Oil (Puritan) is preferred due to
the fact that it is low in cholesterol and helps to raise the HDL level
in your blood.
From a health standpoint Canola Oil is better to cook with than Peanut
Oil.
P.S. for those of you who visit the Tampa Florida area...there is an
Olive Oil named Allesi......Virgin Cold pressed.....$7.99 per
liter......it's such a bargain I ship a case of it back every
vacation.
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2995.19 | Health questions on oils | LEAF::STEINHART | Pixillated | Wed Apr 17 1991 16:26 | 19 |
| Maybe I'm peculiar, but:
For general cooking, when I don't want olive oil flavor, I use soy. In
the past I've used corn oil for baking, nice golden color. I've
migrated from peanut oil to soy. Soy is very light AND inexpensive.
BTW, does cottonseed have DDT in it? If its a byproduct of the usual
cotton crop, use of pesticides may not be regulated. Or if they
extract the oil, is the crop considered to be food, and subject to the
FDA rules?
I use PAM spray on baking dishes. It works very well and is mostly
lecithin.
I'd consider using the new light olive oil (Little flavor) for general
cooking, since it's monosaturated, which is considered very healthy.
Is soy polyunsatured, mono, or?
Laura
|
2995.20 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Wed Apr 17 1991 18:45 | 16 |
| RE: .18
> For high temperature cooking Canola Oil (Puritan) is preferred due to
> the fact that it is low in cholesterol and helps to raise the HDL level
> in your blood.
>
> From a health standpoint Canola Oil is better to cook with than Peanut
> Oil.
All vegetable oils are cholesterol-free. Aside from the so-called "tropical
oils" (mainly palm and coconut), they are also free of saturated fats, unless,
of course, these have been artifically reintroduced by partial hydrogenation.
How, then, is canola oil superior in this respect to peanut oil? I think you've
been reading too much food industry advertising hype.
--PSW
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2995.21 | No hype | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Thu Apr 18 1991 08:37 | 21 |
| >How, then, is canola oil superior in this respect to peanut oil? I think
>you've been reading too much food industry advertising hype.
In the last few years there has been some talk about the ratios of mono-
to poly- unsaturated fats. This has been from a few different sources, not
just the food company sponsored studies.
The findings went along the lines that in the past the thought was that mono-'s
were thought to be generally bad, but now they have been found to be good
because they raise the HDL (? I think that's the one that's supposed to be
high). This goes hand in hand with the medical community's new position on
HDL vs LDL levels, etc.
The bottom line was that oils that were thought to be not good for you, like
olive oil now have a better standing due to a good mono- to poly- ratio. Canola
oil is supposed to be one of the best in this respect, but it has a lower smoke
point than peanut oil (if I remember correctly), so it is not as good for stir
frying. By the way, for stir frying, Safflower Oil beats peanut in the specs.
It's got a bit higher smoke point, and a better mono- to poly- ratio, and very
little flavor. The price is a bit higher, though, and so far I can only find
one brand generally available (and in only one size).
|
2995.22 | Question ? | SALEM::WEBSTER_R | | Thu Apr 18 1991 15:11 | 5 |
| Now that I am well versed in the types of oil available and the pros
and cons of said oil, how do I store them? And what is the shelf life
of these products?
Thanks for the interesting discussion.
|
2995.23 | depends on use/size of containers, etc. | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Apr 18 1991 21:36 | 20 |
| > Now that I am well versed in the types of oil available and the pros
> and cons of said oil, how do I store them? And what is the shelf life
> of these products?
well, the best way for long-term storage is refrigerated....however, then
the oil may go solid on you and require thawing before use. I don't use
much oil in my cooking so I simply buy small quantities and keep the containers
well sealed between use and store them in a dark place - my pantry. Never,
never leave oil in the sunlight - it changes it....and never leave oil out
for any length of time without sealing it from the air. Professional cooks
use enough in a day to keep it in those nice pouring cans, but the oil can
go bad on you if you only use it once or twice a week and you store it in
one of those cans...especially if you live in an area with warm summers.
I store my good olive oil in the fridge, by the way....I simply defrost it
for an hour before using it to make salads. I use light olive oil for
sauteing things and that keeps in the pantry. I also use canola oil for
brushing my veggies before broiling them, etc. and I store that in the
pantry. I buy the real small bottles though - I spend more, but get fresh
oil.
|
2995.24 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Fri Apr 19 1991 17:37 | 16 |
| RE: .21
I wouldn't go so far as to say "no hype". Rather, I'd say it's "this year's
hype". Let's face it--the medical and "nutritional science" community have
not yet sorted out the maze of relationships between diet and congestive
heart disease. In the lipids debate, it does seem firmly established that
cholesterol and saturated fats are not particularly good for you. Beyond
that, there isn't much agreement on anything. One can play the food faddism
game of changing one's diet to match each new paper that gets published in
the New England Journal of Medicine, but I'd rather not.
My point is that medicine is far from the point where blanket statements such
as "canola oil is better for you than peanut oil" can be made with any
confidence.
--PSW
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2995.25 | Oil related question | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Mon Apr 22 1991 08:32 | 4 |
| While we are on semi tangential material, I guess I'm doing ok on my diet,
'cause I've actually had oil go rancid on me. Anyone know of a good way of
disposing of bad vegetable oil? I don't want to flush it or bury it, and I
don't think it'll do my compost pile any good...
|
2995.26 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Mon Apr 22 1991 10:06 | 11 |
| Two possibilities come to mind ...
- burn it (in an oil lamp)
- make soap out of it (not very appealing soap, though)
In principle, you might be able to recycle it by giving it to a
restaurant with a fat-recycler, but in practise, I doubt many
restaurants would be interested.
Also, it might burn in some diesel engines. You could try offering it
to Fort Devens.
|
2995.27 | | TLE::EIKENBERRY | Don't confuse activity with productivity | Mon Apr 22 1991 10:42 | 4 |
| Is it not a good idea to pour oil down the sink? I've never heard any
caveats on doing this.
--Sharon
|
2995.28 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Mon Apr 22 1991 12:13 | 26 |
| My god, what they don't teach people in high school! You've obviously
never had a septic system back up into your house, or you would've
gotten the whole nine yards about what not to pour down the drain.
If you have a private septic system, fats, grease, and oil will slowly
but surely ruin it by clogging the holes out of which waste fluids
exit after being digested by bacteria.
Even if you have public sewer hookup, it's not a good idea to load it
too heavily with fats and oils, because these things are harder to
process into water-soluble compounds. That places a heavier load on
whatever facility is processing the raw sewage, requiring more energy,
use of nasty chemicals, etc etc etc blah blah blah bad for the
environment and we're all going to hell in a handbasket anyway ...
I assume right off that people don't dump their unused DDT down the
drain, but fats and oils aren't great, either. So the question is:
what exactly are we supposed to do with them? Well, I freeze them in
old soup cans, jars, etc., and send them off to the town dump/transfer
station. You know, honestly, I don't think that's any better a
solution. I can only hope that whatever they're doing with our garbage
is not too destructive. But I know better than to believe it. I dunno.
We're eventually gonna figure out that we're poisoning ourselves and
the planet, and maybe it won't be too late to do something about it.
But, for the time being, at least my toilets flush, and that's my
immediate concern.
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2995.29 | don't oils decompose too? | CAM::BONDE | | Mon Apr 22 1991 13:28 | 12 |
| RE: disposing of oil
I would think it perfectly all right to dispose of rancid vegetable
oils on the compost heap. Well, maybe not *on*, but certainly next to.
Vegetable oils should decompose just like any other organic matter, no?
After all, we're talking about vegetable oil, not machine oil, or some
other petroleum-based product. I don't think you'll need to wait for
your town to make its annual "household toxic waste collection" before
you dispose of it. :^) :^)
|
2995.30 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Mon Apr 22 1991 15:35 | 10 |
| Actually, I don't think animal and vegetable oils decompose any faster
than petroleum-derived oils (which, after all, do come from animals,
sort of), but I guess an important point is that they aren't toxic. So
you can dump them near your compost pile and not worry about poisoning
the planet. Right? I guess I don't really know. Burning them in lamps
or heaters or M1A1 tanks is probably just as bad or worse. Before
humankind started eating bacon, just what did happen to all that pork
fat? There must be some friendly bacteria out there that eat it all.
One thing I know, though: it's not good to pour it down the drain
unless you want ... well I'd just as soon not get into the details.
|
2995.31 | How to tell? | NOVA::FISHER | It's Spring | Mon Apr 22 1991 15:57 | 7 |
| How does one know when a vegetable oil is rancid?
Of course, you shouldn't put any of these oils into a diesel engine
for the same reason that you would never put home heating fuel into
a diesel. (It's a violation of the tax laws. :-))
ed
|
2995.32 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Mon Apr 22 1991 17:18 | 12 |
| > How does one know when a vegetable oil is rancid?
It smells moldy and tastes sour. Believe me, you'd know.
Usually, when it first starts to go, you can still use it for a while
without ruining the food, but when it gets really bad, it ruins
everything it touches. Frankly, I've had oils for as long as a year or
two and not had them go so rancid that I couldn't use them. The most
sensitive seem to be good olive oils, and nut oils such as walnut and
hazelnut. We go through olive oil fast enough, but we've had to ditch
at least one bottle of walnut oil (not fun, as this stuff is
expensive).
|
2995.33 | Good oil needs no refrigeration | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Mon Apr 22 1991 17:56 | 13 |
| Good olive oil keep up to a maximum of 3 YEARS, with NO refrigeration!
that is what kills it, the change in temperature... my father produced
thousands of barrels per year and they were kept in warehouses with no
refrigeration till they were distributed to customers. We always kept
a large container in the basement and laddled it into bottles when
needed... it was never tightly closed (as it needed to "breathe") and I
remember, only once, that it became rancid on us... but it was 2 1/2
years old!
I dispose of old oil... in the fireplace! I use old oil to soak
newspapers in it and use it as starter for lighting the fire... it
works like a charm! it costs O and at the same time, dispose of
something unwanted without creating any mess...
|
2995.34 | Advice from an expert... | ASDG::HARRIS | Brian Harris | Mon Apr 22 1991 19:26 | 17 |
|
I asked my sister about this, since she is the Director of the
Department of Waste Reduction and Recycling (in Maine), and she
had this to say:
1. Best option is to take it to a place that renders oils and
fats (I guess they sort of recycle them).
2. Second best: Put it in your compost heap - but be aware that
animal fats can attract vermin.
3. Third choice: Put it in your trash and send it to the land
fill - since it does biodegrade (albeit rather slowly) this is
OK. But, of course it won't biodegrade in a plastic bottle!
She didn't think much of the idea of burning the oil, since it
probably won't burn very cleanly.
|
2995.35 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Mon Apr 22 1991 22:34 | 16 |
| RE: .30
> Actually, I don't think animal and vegetable oils decompose any faster
> than petroleum-derived oils (which, after all, do come from animals,
> sort of), but I guess an important point is that they aren't toxic.
They most definitely do decompose faster than petroleum-derived oils.
Petroleum-derived oils are long straight or branch-chained hydrocarbons.
Animal and vegetable fats and oils are glycerol triesters of monocarboxylic
acids of unbranched hydrocarbons. With a few rare exceptions, living
creatures cannot directly metabolize petroleum-derived oils, while they can
and do readily digest animal and vegetable fats and oils. Oil goes rancid
in the first place because it is converted into various aldehydes,
carboxylic acids, and alochols by bacteria.
--PSW
|
2995.36 | Thanks | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Tue Apr 23 1991 07:47 | 10 |
| Thanks for the ideas!
The oil I have is slightly cloudy and is just starting to taste off. I used
to consume oil in sufficient quantities that I would always look for the big
sizes. Over the last year and a half, I think I've used about a pint, so the
large surplus I've had stored under the sink has had a chance to age.
I think I will pour into a hole near the compost pile. Maybe I'll even
experiment with it on the local mosquito population... I own the local swamp
ya know...
|
2995.37 | Store in refrigerator | WORDY::STEINHART | Pixillated | Tue Apr 23 1991 10:09 | 15 |
| RE: storing vegetable oils in the refrigerator.
No problem! If the bottle's label isn't metallic, you can nuke the
bottle for a few seconds and the oil will melt enough to pour. Or you
can place it on its side in the sink and let hot tap water run over it.
It works very quickly.
Funny story about that: Long, long ago, when I was single, I didn't
keep soda or juice in the fridge, just drank tap water. The only
bottles in the fridge had cooking oil. Some poor unsuspecting
suitor opens the fridge for a nice cold drink. He sees the bottles of
nice yellow fluid, thinks they are a lemon drink, and is about to pour
a glass. . . Talk about getting grossed out!
Laura
|