"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.
Yes, you can substitute vegetable oil for canola oil in the recipe.
Well, Canola oil is vegetable oil, but it will work just fine for the cake.
Yes, you can use canola oil instead of vegetable oil when making brownies.
Yes, you can generally use vegetable oil as a substitute for canola oil in most recipes.
http://www.webmd.com/food-recipes/canola-oil
yes you can
no, veggie oil is the best personal lube
Yes
No it will not taste the same.Yes. Canola oil is a type of vegetable oil.Depending on what you're making, canola oil can be substituted for vegetable oil. Canola oil is also healthier than vegetable oil and has no noticable taste differences.
Vegetable, peanut, or canola oils are the best (you can choose based on allergy / dietary restrictions, availablity, or affordability).
Yes. Canola oil is made from either Rapeseed or field mustard and is generally considered a vegetable oil anyway ;)
Yes, in some cake recipes, canola oil can be substituted for shortening.