There are numerous uses for cooking with olive oil on a daily basis, from simple cooking to seasoning your most varied dishes. It has many health benefits, can substitute for butter, and can even be used to cook your desserts. Added to your cakes and pastries, they will delicately flavor your sweet recipes. Smoke point of olive oil: 410 °F.
Cooking with chocolate and olive oil: benefits of baking
Chocolate is something we all love, and often we are told that it should be seen as a treat you have ‘once every now and then’ if you want to remain healthy. However, we are here to tell you that there is in fact no longer a need to restrict yourself around this sweet treat, quite the opposite!
Learn more about the best and worst types of cooking olive oils.
The differences between Olive oil and vegetable oil are mainly seeds and extraction. Let’s take a closer look at their differences, specifically health.
Olive oil is typically extracted through mechanical processes, such as pressing or centrifugation. This preserves the natural compounds and nutrients present in olives, resulting in extra virgin olive oil, which is considered the highest quality.
Vegetable oils often undergo processes like refining, bleaching, and deodorizing (RBD) to remove impurities and increase shelf life. This refining process may involve the use of solvents and high heat, which can degrade some of the oil's nutritional value.
If your recipe calls for vegetable or canola oil, you should substitute those oils with gourmet extra virgin olive oil. Any dessert recipe that calls for vegetable oil as an ingredient is a perfect chance to swap it for olive oil. In these recipes, the swap would be a one-to-one ratio. In other words, if the recipe calls for one cup of vegetable oil, you would simply use one cup of extra virgin olive oil. Imagine how the smooth, delicious flavor of gourmet olive oil will enhance the flavor of a chocolate or a carrot cake!
Learn more how you can use olive oil instead of vegetable oil here.