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Re: Oils: Alternatives to Coconut and Olive?

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Lana-

>My little

>bottle of olive oil cost $9 and some recipes can call for over half of

>it. Ouch. I was wondering if anyone knows of any more affordable

>oils I can use in recipes that call for over 1/4 cup? Should I just

>get some non-organic olive oil or would an alternate organic oil be

>better?

If you're using a lot of olive oil (a questionable proposition to begin

with) it's more important rather than less that you use the best possible

quality. How large is your $9 bottle, and how much do you go through in a

month? My favorite olive oil, Bariani, costs $19 for a liter, but it's

also available in bulk at $265 for a 5-gallon bucket, which works out to

$13.25 per quart or essentially $14 per liter. Here's their site, for in

case this interests you. (It's a REALLY good oil.)

http://www.barianioliveoil.com/

-

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My bottle is 12 oz. I'm glad you asked because somehow it tipped and

was leaking slowly. Thanks! I go through about one bottle a month at

my current use, but I am on a mission to replace some of the

proccessed foods that hubby insists on keeping: like mayonnaise. The

recipe for mayo calls for 3/4-1 cup and since I don't have whey it

would only last a few weeks.

Sally mentions Sunflower oil, but I've never seen that before.

Why is olive oil a questionable proposition? It is all over NT

recipes. Actually, I find myself using half coconut when it calls for

olive because I prefer the fluffier texture.

-Lana

On 10/25/05, Idol <Idol@...> wrote:

> Lana-

>

> >My little

> >bottle of olive oil cost $9 and some recipes can call for over half of

> >it. Ouch. I was wondering if anyone knows of any more affordable

> >oils I can use in recipes that call for over 1/4 cup? Should I just

> >get some non-organic olive oil or would an alternate organic oil be

> >better?

>

> If you're using a lot of olive oil (a questionable proposition to begin

> with) it's more important rather than less that you use the best possible

> quality. How large is your $9 bottle, and how much do you go through in a

> month? My favorite olive oil, Bariani, costs $19 for a liter, but it's

> also available in bulk at $265 for a 5-gallon bucket, which works out to

> $13.25 per quart or essentially $14 per liter. Here's their site, for in

> case this interests you. (It's a REALLY good oil.)

>

> http://www.barianioliveoil.com/

>

>

>

>

> -

>

>

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Just a question...you said you don't have whey. It only takes a little.

You can easily get some from any yogurt or milk you have.

Sunflower oil is available at I think most all health food stores and

even reg. grocery stores.

Re: Oils: Alternatives to Coconut and Olive?

My bottle is 12 oz. I'm glad you asked because somehow it tipped and

was leaking slowly. Thanks! I go through about one bottle a month at

my current use, but I am on a mission to replace some of the

proccessed foods that hubby insists on keeping: like mayonnaise. The

recipe for mayo calls for 3/4-1 cup and since I don't have whey it

would only last a few weeks.

Sally mentions Sunflower oil, but I've never seen that before.

Why is olive oil a questionable proposition? It is all over NT

recipes. Actually, I find myself using half coconut when it calls for

olive because I prefer the fluffier texture.

-Lana

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> Just a question...you said you don't have whey. It only takes a little.

> You can easily get some from any yogurt or milk you have.

,

I thought whey had to come from raw milk?

Thanks!

-Lana

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