Vegetable Oil vs. Canola oil in DIY Spreadable butter

Vegetable Oil vs. Canola oil in DIY Spreadable butter - White Ceramic Bowl With White and Brown Food

I've been scouring the net for DIY spreadable butter recipes but nearly all of them use Canola oil, but all I've got available here is Vegetable Oil and Coconut Oil. What's worse is that none of them really seem to say anything about substituting either oil for spreadable butter.

Is there anything wrong with using either in a spreadable butter recipe?

UPDATE: So I probably should've mentioned that I was in the Philippines. That apparently makes a difference, as even the vegetable oil is actually coconut oil :-/. Palm oil and coconut oil seem to be all we have here.

I attempted it with the palm oil I had and while the softness was what i wanted the final product had a funny smell and a weird taste. I'm getting ready to try again.



Best Answer

In terms of spreadability, the real issue is the level of saturation.

Coconut oil is quite saturated (especially for a vegetable based lipid), and so it is far more solid at room temperature than most oils. (Cocoa butter would be another exception; it is quite hard at room temperature).

Generic vegetable oil, at least under US labeling laws, may contain any number of vegetable oils including corn, soy, rapeseed (canola) and so on—or even a mixture of any or all of these. They are all quite similar in the saturation and viscosity at room temperature, and so any of them should perform similarly in your butter application.

So go ahead and use the vegetable oil.




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What do they put in butter to make it spreadable?

Spreadable butter is made from the same raw materials as is all butter - cream and salt. The secret to spreadable butter lies in physically removing those parts of the cream which make ordinary butter too hard to spread at fridge temperature.

Is spreadable butter with canola oil real butter?

Challenge Butter Spreadable Butter with Canola Oil is 100% pure, real Challenge Butter blended with canola oil so that it spreads silky smooth even when cold. Canola oil is low in saturated fat, and has no trans fatty acids.

Can I use vegetable oil spread as butter?

Olive & Vegetable Oil You might be out of butter but you likely have a bottle of oil on hand, so grab that bad boy and bake up some treats. Oils work best for muffins and quick breads, but you can use them for cookies as well. Try \xbe cup olive or vegetable oil for every cup of butter called for.

Why do they put canola oil in butter?

Why is canola oil used in Butter with Canola Oil? Canola oil was selected because it has a very neutral flavor, allowing the great taste of real Butter to dominate. Canola oil also contains low amounts of saturated fat, and is high in monounsaturated (good) fats.



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More answers regarding vegetable Oil vs. Canola oil in DIY Spreadable butter

Answer 2

I would use vegetable oil personally, as quite often what's labelled vegetable oil is made from canola. Sunflower oil would also work, and probably groundnut/peanut oil. Any neutral tasting oil would do really.

Answer 3

I actually do this with olive oil. Two sticks of room-temp butter + half a cup (or so) of olive oil, blend until combined, done. Easy!

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