(3 x Fatty acids held together by glycerol)
Above: Triglyceride MoleculeMechanical Extraction (AKA Cold Pressed)
Mechanical extraction is the most natural way of obtaining oil from seeds. Oils are removed from the seeds by either crushing, expelling or pressing. This is a traditional method and has produced oils such as extra virgin olive oils for many years. The reason I have mentioned extra virgin olive oil rather than just olive oil is because even though the oil may not conform to extra virgin specifications, olive oil can now be produced by solvent extraction (this will definitely not be extra virgin).
More recently cold pressing has been used to produce:Rapeseed oil
Pumpkin seed oil
Hemp Oil
Avocado Oil
This doesn’t mean you shouldn’t cook with a cold pressed oil; it just means coating a steak with it or using it in a frying pan at smoke point won’t do you any favours. Cooking some
prawns over low to medium heat with extra virgin olive oil, chilli and garlic is a perfect example of how you can cook with a cold pressed oil.
Solvent Extraction
Above: ADM Plant Erith
The bulk of cooking oils sold today are manufactured by means of solvent extraction. It is the most cost-effective method for high volume and efficiency. This method produces a pure, flavourless oil suitable for high temperature cooking (deep frying at 190˚C, coating food, before grilling & pan frying near smoke point).
The bulk of cooking oils sold today are manufactured by means of solvent extraction. It is the most cost-effective method for high volume and efficiency. This method produces a pure, flavourless oil suitable for high temperature cooking (deep frying at 190˚C, coating food, before grilling & pan frying near smoke point).
The process is as follows: