Oils that are normally liquid at room temperature are turned into room temperature solids through hydrogenation. Hydrogen gas is bubbled through vegetable oil in the presence of a catalyst, forcing additional hydrogen bonds onto the hydrocarbon.
the emulsions are added to the vegetable oil and mixed for a long period of time and eventually it thickens into a spread
because it does
compound
Animal fats tend to go rancid with time. Vegetable oils will too eventually, but have a longer shelf life.
Yes. Vegetable oils are vegetable fat. If you want it in a solid form, you can buy vegetable shortening.
This category covers establishments primarily engaged in manufacturing vegetable oils, cake, and meal, with the exception of corn, cottonseed, and soybean, or in processing such vegetable oils into forms other than edible cooking oils
squirtle......................
Hydrogenated oils
"Cooking oil" is actually a broad term for purified fat derived from plants which is normally liquid at room temperature. "Vegetable oil," when used to label a cooking oil product may refer to a specific oil like rapeseed oil or to a blend of different oils. Not all vegetable oils are edible - some are useful only as fuel oils. Not all cooking oils are vegetable oils - for example there are several nut oils and oils from gourds and melons that can be used in cooking. The non-vegetable cooking oils are seldom used in baking, so for the purposes of baking, the terms cooking oil and vegetable oil are pretty much interchangeable. Any recipe that calls for one can use the other interchangeably with the caveat that some oils are lower fat than others and some of them are more tolerant to heat than others. Olive oil can be substituted for cooking oil, but it changes the flavor a little bit.
Of course, any foods store has vegetable oils.
Vegetable oils are 100% fats, and contain no protein or carbohydrates.
True
All oils can freeze.