Do you mean in water? Oil is not soluble in water, but you can use emulsification to mix oil and other liquids (including water) in order to produce a smooth result, such as in mayonnaise. To emulsify you need to suspend a liquid in another liquid. There are protocols to be observed and as anyone who has made mayonnaise or hollandaise sauces will have noticed, they can separate if not handled correctly, thus the oil splits from the other ingredients. This problem is easily fixed by basic techniques, but does illustrate the fact that oil isn't soluble. The same can be seen in sauces - such as Italian tomato sauces or curries, which use a lot of oil. The proportion of oil per serve means, in combination with the other ingredients, that they are very healthy foods, but the oil must be regularly stirred back into the sauce since it absorbs all the flavours.
is cooking oil soluble
because it is just insoluble
Oil is insoluble in water. If you try to mix them, the oil will just float on top of the water.
no oil is not insoluble in water but in flour it is soluble. it has both properties
For example stainless steel is practically insoluble in water.
insoluble.
oil
None, OIL is INsoluble in water
Yes, cooking oil is made out of oil.
An insoluble mixture is defined as a mixture of substances where one substance will not dissolve into the other. Oil and water is an example of an insoluble mixture.
they are acids
Soluble describes something that can be dissolved in water. Insoluble describes something that can not be dissolved in water. Salt is soluble, it will dissolve in water. Oil is insoluble, oil will float on the surface of water.
No, water is even not mixable with (or insoluble in) oil