01-09-2021 06:37 PM
TIA.
01-09-2021 06:54 PM
Canola IS vegetable oil and is interchangeable with other vegetable oils.
01-09-2021 07:08 PM
@Flatbush I suggest you google is canola oil the same as vegtable oil. I didn't know the answer to your question so I googled and was surprised what I learned.
For example "Although canola oil and vegetable oil are both plant-based oils—canola oil comes from the rapeseed plant and vegetable oil is typically soybean-based or made from a blend of vegetable oils—they differ in their fat composition."
Lot's more info and has changed how I will use each one differently.
01-09-2021 07:15 PM
Go to the livelovefruit website and read up on canola oil. I had NO idea this stuff was so bad. A mild oil is Avocado oil, and it has a high heat point.
01-09-2021 07:20 PM
i use canola oil , peanut oil, olive oil, and grapeseed oil. all of them can go rancid. i stopped buying the huge containers of them and now buy the "normal sized" ones.
01-09-2021 07:25 PM
All types of vegetable oil goes bad after about a year. So no difference there.
Not sure why your recipe calls for it. Due to temperature?
01-09-2021 08:20 PM
I stopped using canola and vegetable oil after reading how they are processed. They are not healthy.
I use Olive and Avocado oil now and buy in a dark glass bottle.
When I made a chocolate cake and it called for vegetable oil, I used olive oil and it came out good.
01-10-2021 02:09 PM - edited 01-10-2021 02:09 PM
Thanks for posting the differences b/t canola and vegetable oils because they are not the same.
As well, different recipes call for different oils because of their taste/flavor, holds true for olive oils for those of us who use this instead. When making baked goods they usually call for vegetable oil because of the mild or almost no-taste flavor.