With warmer weather on the horizon, we’re betting some spring cleaning energy won’t be far behind. If you’re feeling the itch to refresh some neglected spaces around the house, head to the pantry. Specifically, consider revisiting your relationship to the different types of cooking oils. Not sure where to start? That’s where Thrive Market comes in. Our guide makes it easy to decipher which bottle to reach for when—plus, we’re celebrating the launch of some very special new oils too!
Oil is fat, and as we’ve learned from chef Samin Nosrat, an essential kitchen ingredient. Her popular cookbook Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat: Mastering the Elements of Good Cooking, offers some tried-and-true advice for home cooks: “Season food with the proper amount of salt at the proper moment; choose the optimal medium of fat to convey the flavor of your ingredients; balance and animate those ingredients with acid; apply the right type and quantity of heat for the proper amount of time—do all this and you will turn out vibrant and beautiful food, with or without a recipe.” Even if it seems like an extra step, choosing the right kind of oil for your dish is one small (but impactful) way to enhance your daily cooking and as Nosrat points out, create vibrant food in the process.
Deciphering which oil to use comes down to the kind of cooking you’ll be doing. For example, an oil better suited for drizzling (like your best tin of olive oil) will behave very differently in a hot pan, which is a nice way of saying it could turn your dinner into something a bit less edible. To avoid a mishap, be sure to take into account an oil’s smoke point. That is, the temperature it can reach before the fats start breaking down, forming potentially toxic fumes, and scorching your ingredients. Here’s a quick breakdown for low, medium, and high heat cooking.
When investing in a lineup of cooking oils, be sure to extend their shelf life by keeping them in a cool, dry cabinet away from the stove. When oils are exposed to heat and light, they can turn rancid and lose some of their nutritional value too. Lighter seed and nut oils can be stored in the fridge.
Whether you’re a kitchen minimalist who sticks to the basics or you appreciate plenty of options, Thrive Market has a cooking oil (or two) for you. To keep it simple, our best cooking oils are organized from lowest to highest smoke point.
Our Certified Organic coconut oil is made from sustainably sourced coconuts in the Philippines and is a kitchen multitasker for everything from frying to baking. (Member Jessica from Georgia uses it for cooking and moisturizing her dry skin.) Over the years our lineup has grown from a single tub of organic virgin coconut oil—still a member favorite—to offering refined and regeneratively grown options, and even a buttery version. Regardless of your personal pick, coconut oil offers health benefits like cardiovascular support and potentially increasing good cholesterol.
Also known as EVOO, extra virgin olive oil is a popular and versatile ingredient that’s often what most people reach for when they see oil called for in a recipe. EVOO’s roots are in the Mediterranean, where olive trees have thrived for centuries, but is also grown in similar climates around the world, like California and Morocco.
Olive oil is considered to be one of the healthiest oils in the world—you can thank antioxidants and nourishing fatty acids known as medium-chain triglycerides for that. As one of our O.G. products, Thrive Market members have a soft spot for this bottle of 100% Certified Organic Koroneiki olives grown and bottled on a single estate in western Crete. Karen from Arizona shares that “you can smell the fresh scent of olives whenever you open the can.” We’ve gone on to develop a buttery bottle sourced with hand-picked Tunisian olives too.
This cooking staple is low in saturated fat and high in monounsaturated fat (one of the healthy fats). Many conventional canola oils are extracted using solvents and heat which may diminish nutrition and create trans fats, but not ours. Thrive Market Organic Canola Oil is expeller pressed from non-GMO rapeseed plants.
Ghee is clarified butter and a pantry staple that’s soy-, casein- and lactose-free, paleo, gluten-free, and ketogenic. Ours is made by slow-cooking butter from grass-fed cows until the milk proteins separate and delivers a range of nutritional benefits including vitamin A, vitamin E, and omega-3 fatty acids.
If you’re the kind of cook who goes through a bottle of olive oil in a flash, meet an economical substitute that’s just as versatile. Since grapeseed oil is made by repurposing the seeds of wine grapes, it’s a sustainable pick for your kitchen, and ours is pressed from non-GMO grape seeds without the use of solvents. Nutritionally, this oil’s claim to fame is delivering polyunsaturated fats (which contain omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids), as well as vitamin E.
Meet your pantry hero for searing and sautéing. This oil is high oleic (aka rich in monounsaturated acid) and pressed from organic sunflower seeds grown in the United States, Spain, and Ukraine. Paleo, ketogenic, and soy-free diets will definitely want a bottle on the shelf. Sunflower oil is also rich in omega-3s and believed to help lower “bad” cholesterol.
Ethically sourced from India and extracted from the husk of brown rice (the outermost layer), this oil is soy-free, gluten-free, organic, and plant-based. Rice bran oil is a byproduct of rice milling, so like grapeseed oil, makes for a sustainable way to build an oil collection.
To make our golden avocado oil, we use an ethical supply chain starring ripe Mexican fruit that’s mechanically cold expeller pressed, not chemically extracted. The result is a nutritious, high smoke point and glyphosate-free staple that’s always fresh and never mixed with other oils. And if you prefer the convenience of a can, you can spray away knowing it’s propellant-free and doesn’t contain any potentially harmful chemicals. On the nutrition front, avocado oil is known for its antioxidants, potassium, and vitamin E, and works with paleo, ketogenic, and kosher meal plans.
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