What are the differences between frying with vegetable oil, corn oil, canola oil, peanut oil, and liquid shortening?Does it affect:Lifespan of product?Health?Taste?I've used liquid shortening, vegetable oil, and peanut oil so far and they all take the same amount of time to fry and the food comes out relatively the same. I can notice difference in quality which is reflected in the price, but that's about it. What should I know?
1/12/2011 12:00:04 AM
taste, and flashpoint and 'smokepoint' http://www.cookingforengineers.com/article/50/Smoke-Points-of-Various-Fats
1/12/2011 12:05:16 AM
You should use corn oil. It's cheap.Unless that shortening is made from partially hydrogenated oils, then go with that instead.
1/12/2011 6:38:52 AM
I started substituting vegetable for canola but it's still pretty unhealthy.
1/12/2011 7:59:16 AM
My work uses rice bran oil for all its deep frying. Their fried food tastes good so based on that I recommend it.
1/12/2011 9:35:53 AM
Lets throw in soybean oil too while we're at it.
1/12/2011 9:37:32 AM
no thread about frying is complete without the mention of Crisco. Do they even sell that anymore?
1/12/2011 9:55:37 AM
why would they not sell it?
1/12/2011 10:18:43 AM
i don't know, i don't use it so i haven't noticed if it is still on store shelves or not.
1/12/2011 10:25:31 AM
I rarely fry shit, but when I do I use either olive or Smart Balance. To me it tastes good to me.
1/12/2011 11:41:26 AM
i use olive for pan frying, canola for the deep-fryer, and vegetable for the whirley-pop. i think the fries, tots, and hashrounds taste better using canola.
1/12/2011 11:47:59 AM
I use peanut oil in my fryer.
1/12/2011 11:48:26 AM
i've always heard that peanut oil was the way to go for frying. the only thing we fry is porkchops, & we use peanut oil, & they're really good. haven't tried anything else though.i saw an episode of some show about this hosted by one of the queer eye for the straight guy dudes. i think they settled on peanut being the best tasting & longest lasting in terms of reuse, but that vegetable oil has the fewest calories.
1/12/2011 11:56:04 AM
Isn't peanut oil a type of vegetable oil?
1/12/2011 12:17:17 PM
1/12/2011 12:32:52 PM
The last tome I truly fried something, I ended up in the hospital
1/12/2011 12:54:05 PM
^^
1/12/2011 12:55:39 PM
1/12/2011 1:03:31 PM
A peanut is not a vegetable.
1/12/2011 1:32:07 PM
^^^ Well how about that. I wonder where I heard it couldn't be used for frying.
1/12/2011 2:17:29 PM
^^^
1/12/2011 2:31:49 PM
Jesus guys, vegetable oil is a catch-all term for any oil derived from plants.However, I do wonder, what does the OP for example, mean, when he says vegetable oil? He lists canola, and corn separately, and vegetable separately.I don't know about the US, but where I am, oil which are labeled "vegetable oil" in the supermarkets are palm oil.
1/12/2011 2:38:58 PM
Almost everywhere I look the smoke point for EVOO is listed as 375+
1/12/2011 2:44:52 PM
320 herehttp://www.cookingforengineers.com/article/50/Smoke-Points-of-Various-Fats325 herehttp://www.spectrumorganics.com/images/uploads/49623ec41cb5b.pdfYou put it in a pan and turn on the hotplate and it starts smoking in a couple of minutes if you turn it up high, so I wonder how it would survive deep frying.EDIT:375 herehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoke_point320 herehttp://www.goodeatsfanpage.com/CollectedInfo/OilSmokePoints.htm[Edited on January 12, 2011 at 2:53 PM. Reason : ]
1/12/2011 2:51:07 PM
Yeah, I've never heard of anyone deep frying with it, but a quick search just kept turning up higher #s.
1/12/2011 2:55:15 PM
have you never been to the grocery store before?? if you go to the oil section, there are bottles clearly labeled VEGETABLE OIL. i don't know wtf oils are blended, but it's not canola & it's not peanut because it's not labeled as canola or peanut (or corn or anything else). it's labeled vegetable. there are separate bottles labeled peanut and canola and corn, etc. if you don't believe me, go look.i know you're trying to make the point that peanut oil can be classified as vegetable oil, but you are missing my point that there is a separate product labeled vegetable oil. ]
1/12/2011 3:17:50 PM
1/12/2011 4:18:13 PM
seems like deep frying with olive oil would be $$TEXAS compared to vegetable or canola oil
1/12/2011 6:09:26 PM
^^^ I did say this:
1/12/2011 7:33:08 PM
1/12/2011 8:30:37 PM
I use safflower in my cast iron, because I like to turn up the heat on them and that oil is helps minimize smoking.
1/12/2011 8:37:57 PM
I was really more addressing David0603. Obviously he's never been grocery shoppingAlso, I said the TV SHOW HOST said that vegetable oil was better...
1/12/2011 8:42:44 PM
You can obviously use any oil for frying, but I don't know why anyone would use good olive or grapeseed oil for deep frying. I keep olive oil by the fridge and use it for about everything else though (still use butter for grits, baking, sauces, some other things where oil would be weird).
1/12/2011 10:11:26 PM
1/13/2011 12:36:40 AM
Extra Virgin Olive Oil is not suitable for use in high-temperature cooking. Refined olive oil is.
1/13/2011 9:28:06 AM
peanut oil is the best for frying/searing because it won't smoke your kitchen up. use canola oil for baking and olive oil for seasoning (like pasta and salad). corn/vegetable oil is the bottom of the barrel imo
1/13/2011 9:32:43 AM
i used peanut oil for deep frying turkeyolive oil or butter for normal day to day cookingrarely use generic vegetable oil for anything at all
1/13/2011 9:47:31 AM