Good Cooking Tips

organic-vegan-biodynamic wines


Storing Fats and Oils

organic fair trade tea

The human body requires the intake of six types of substances for survival: Fats, carbohydrates, proteins, water, vitamins, and minerals. Certain fatty acids are essential to our health and fats and oils are important components of our food and their preparation. Fat is responsible for much of the texture, appearance, and taste of our baked goods. Since fat is both required for human health and an important part of our diets, we should include fat in our emergency preparedness plans--some combination of butter, margarine, vegetable oil, olive oil, and shortening. (Oils are liquid at room temperature; fats are solid.) Though we need to store these foods to maintain our lifestyles and our health, they represent a particular food storage challenge. As oils and fats age, they oxidize. Oxidation is the process that turns fats rancid. Rancid foods not only taste bad, they are unhealthy. As fats and oils breakdown, they become toxic. These oxidized oils promote arterial damage, cancer, inflammation, degenerative diseases, and premature aging. So it is important that we store fats properly, use all fatty foods well before they become rancid, and discard those foods that have been stored too long.

So what is the proper way to store fats and oils? Three conditions accelerate the oxidation of fats: the exposure to heat, to oxygen, and to light. Fats should be stored in cool or cold conditions--never in a warm pantry--in the dark, and sealed so that they are not exposed to air. We store our vegetable oil, olive oil, and shortening in a dark, fifty-degree room. Once opened, we store our vegetable and olive oils in the refrigerator.

How long can we safely store fats and oils? That, of course, depends on the storage conditions. At seventy degrees, shortening can be kept for eight months. Butter does not last long at all in the refrigerator--only two weeks--but can be stored for up to nine months in the freezer (not the freezing compartment of a refrigerator which is usually not as cold). Margarine can also be frozen though some margarine tends to be flaky once thawed. While I do not have a government source for the shelf life of vegetable oils, I would not store oils for over eight to ten months. My recommendation is to store butter in the freezer for up to nine months and store oils and shortening for eight months at seventy degrees--slightly longer at cooler temperatures. Maybe more so than any other food group, fatty foods must be carefully and conscientiously rotated to maintain adequate and healthy stocks. Use what you store and store what you use.

Not just oils and fats have to be carefully stored. Any food with a significant fat content such as nuts, cookies, or whole wheat flour is subject to rancidity. Nuts should be stored in a cool, dark environment and always checked for rancidity before they are used. Ideally, nuts should be stored in metal or metalized containers--plastic bags are permeable to air and slowly allow oxygen to seep into the package and accelerate oxidation. We keep our nuts in the freezer--even unopened bags. Freshly ground whole wheat should be kept in the refrigerator and used within two weeks. (The commercial milling process removes most of the fat from wheat. Most white flour is nearly fat free. Any whole wheat flour with a fat content higher than two percent should not be stored.) Any food that has any rancid odor should be discarded.

So what fats should we store? Flaxseed oil and safflower oil oxidize very rapidly and are not good candidates for storage. Most commonly purchased vegetable oils are extracted with heat, pressure, and chemical additives, which may accelerate oxidation. Cold pressed oils are better though more expensive. I know of no government source for the shelf life of cold pressed oils. Check any oil carefully for rancidity before using.

The modern diet is high in the consumption of Omega-6 essential fatty acids and low in Omega-3 fatty acids. Flesh from grain and corn fed animals and most vegetable oils are high in Omega-6. The National Institutes of Health urges nearly all people to reduce the consumption of the Omega-6 fatty acids and increase the consumption of Omega-3 believing that this is critical to achieving optimal brain and cardiovascular functions. Of the commonly used oils, canola oil and soybean oil contain Omega-3 fatty acids. Avocados and nutmeats, especially walnuts, are high in Omega-3.

Andrew Weil in his excellent book, Eating Well for Optimum Health, promotes olive oil as a healthy substitute for vegetable oils. It has the highest percentage (77%) of monounsaturated fats of any of the oils but is low in Omega-3. There are many different varieties of olive oil available, each with a little different flavor. Choose what you like but watch it carefully for rancidity. Stored in the refrigerator or a cool basement, olive oil may turn cloudy--but the quality is unaffected.

Nutritionists advise us to reduce our intake of hydrogenated fats-margarine and shortening. Margarine is not a healthy substitute for butter. Hydrogenated means that hydrogen atoms have been added to stabilize the oil and turn it from a liquid at room temperature to a solid. A saturated fat is a fat that has been saturated with hydrogen atoms, is stable and less prone to oxidation but the molecular composition of saturated fats is believed to raise serum cholesterol levels.

Store oils and fats--they are essential to a well-prepared household and some fat is necessary to maintain health. However, choose the right fats and oils, store them properly, rotate religiously, and discard any that happen to get old.

Get the prinatble version of Storing Fats and Oils

For more articles like this visit The Baker's Library.

January 15, 2003, The Prepared Pantry


MORE RESOURCES:

BBC News

Scientists design space food menu for Mars missions
BBC News
They're looking for volunteers to spend 120 days living on space food and to come up with some exciting new recipes and cooking tips. They'll experience what life is like for real astronauts by living inside a fake space capsule and wearing space suits ...
Space Food Experiment: NASA Seeks Volunteers to Inhabit Hawaiian Mars-Like ...International Business Times
NASA Seeks Volunteers to Simulate Mars Mission, Eat Space FoodTechnabob (blog)
NASA to test Mars menuThe Voice of Russia
TIME
all 53 news articles »


BoldSky

Cooking Tips To Make Pancakes Fluffy!
BoldSky
To make the pancakes fluffy, try these cooking tips. 1. If you add eggs, beat the eggs properly to make the pancakes fluffy. Eggs adds volume to the pancakes. 2. Vegetarians can add yogurt or milk to the pancake batter. This cooking tip is simple to ...



Girls' group learns to be better friends
Minneapolis Star Tribune
But sprinkled between cooking tips, Torbenson is teaching a much more serious lesson: kindness. The language arts teacher -- a candidate for Minnesota Teacher of the Year -- is the adviser for the new group, Owning Up, which meets Thursdays.



BoldSky

Is Your Dish Too Salty? Try These Cooking Tips
BoldSky
Therefore, here are few cooking tips to reduce salt from the dish. 1. Always add little less and taste to see how much more is required. This prevents the chances of making the dish too salty. 2. If you have added more salt and want to reduce it, ...



Cooking TIPS and Shared RECIPES
10 Thousand Couples
Start by trying some of the recipes and kitchen tips we've collected from some of 10thousandCouples' members who just have a natural call to create deliciousness in the kitchen, “just because.” Then explore the recipes of some of the renowned chefs ...



Your Life: The new fitness craze
durhamregion.com
You'll find nutrition and fitness ideas, cooking tips, wine selections, finance tips and ways to make the school day a snap. Make Your Life your first stop every morning. We have gathered several experts from across Durham Region to help make your life ...

and more »


BoldSky

How To Make Yogurt At Home?
BoldSky
Here are cooking tips to make yogurt at home. 1. Heat skimmed milk in a saucepan. Bring it to boil. 2. In a plastic container, put ½ tbsp plain yogurt and then pour the milk in it. Cover with a net lid and leave it for 4-6 hours on room temperature. 3.



The Guardian (blog)

Apps Rush: Final Fantasy Tactics, Chelsea FC, Bebo Mobile, Bon Appétit ...
The Guardian (blog)
It's kicking off with its March Tastemakers issue, with text recipes complemented by videos and slideshows, as well as other cooking tips and tutorials. iPad / Nook More than 1m people had downloaded the TouchyBooks app, offering e-books for kids.

and more »


How do they do that? In town for Montréal en lumière, Outaouais chefs gladly ...
Montreal Gazette
Page C1 © Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette E-mail this Article Print this Article Share this Article.



BoldSky

Fantastic 5 Ways To Use Eggs
BoldSky
Today, we will suggest 10 best ways or cooking tips using eggs. Take a look. Eggs make the best topping to dishes, they are best blenders and binders. Those who love eggs keep experimenting by trying on a variety of recipes. Vegans know about the power ...


Google News

Go Home | site map