Every heard of ghee (pronounced gee)? How 'bout butter oil? Clarified butter?
I hadn't until about six months ago when I was looking for healthy cooking oils as alternatives to the old standbys that, I'm discovering, aren't as fantastic as we're told they are. (More about that at the bottom of the post if you're interested.)
I like coconut oil for baking, granola, curry, and other sweeter cooking but the coconut flavor can come through so if it's a savory dish I like more of a butter taste.
Anyway, ghee is original to South Asia and is used for rices and lentils mostly but it is delicious on steamed vegetables. From what I've read when you heat the butter the milk solids are removed so it has been known to be a good option for people with a low dairy tolerance. It's great for frying and sauteing with a high smoke point of 482 F and has been shown to lower bad cholesterol as naturally saturated fat foods will do. (Yes, saturated fat may actually be GOOD for you and low fat just might be bad but that's another discussion for another day).
So... where can you get ghee?
I have seen it in stores sold in jars but it's so simple to make and I know exactly what the butter source is so I quickly and easily make my own.
Here's how...
Place one cup of the butter (salted or unsalted, I've done both and they're both fine) in a saucepan.
No, not all butter is created equal. Grassfed and the darkest yellow you can find are best.
I personally prefer Kerrygold blocks wrapped in foil, not the spreadable tubs and have found that the best price around is at Trader Joes.
Heat the butter on medium high heat until it begins to boil.
There will be two foaming stages. Some people skim the foam off the top but I have seen no need to do this plus I'm cheap and hate to see any butter wasted to the skimming process.
The butter will foam once, as shown above , and then clear up...
until it foams the second time. According to
Alton Brown the second foam indicates that the ghee is done. It will be a deep golden yellow and the milk solids will fall to the bottom of the pan..
or, as in my case, the boiling will cause some of the milk solids to rise to the top.
Strain how ghee into a heatproof jar and let cool.
(milk solids left in the pan)
The first time I did this I was shocked that the ghee was no longer liquid after it cooled. Instead it was somewhat of a gritty, grainy texture but it melts right back to liquid once heated.
So why not olive oil or canola?
First, I am not a nutritionist and have conducted no personal studies but our
families eating mantra is "as God intended it" which basically just
means with as little processing, pesticides, and tampering with as
possible. If it required intense processes and intimidating machines...
we avoid it. That's about as simple as I can get.
Olive oil is great IF you don't overheat it. Research has shown that olive oil can be damaged at temperatures as low as 320 F. Some go as far as to describe its post heated makeup as "toxic". We use it on salads and just about anything else we don't heat.
Canola Oil is
a product that all together gives me the willies. It's sold as a health
product but nothing about it makes me feel good. According to Sally
Fallon, co-founder of the Weston A. Price Foundation writes in her
cookbook Nourishing Traditions...
"the newest oil on the market, canola oil was developed from rape seed
... which is considered unsuited to human consumption because it
contains a long-chain fatty acid called erucic acid, which under some
circumstances is associated with fibrotic heart lesions. Canola oil was
bred to contain little if any erucic acid and has drawn the attention of
nutritionists because of its high oleicacid content. but there are some
indications that canola oil presents dangers of its own. it has a high
sulphur content and goes rancid easily ... during the deodorizing
process, the omega 3 fatty acids of processed canola oil are transformed
into trans fatty acids..."
Vegetable Oil is almost always corn oil or soy oil and both of those ingredients are high on the GMO list. For that reason, alone, I avoid it.
The
reality is that you can find research to support just about any theory
you have but these are two instances that I haven't been able to refute
to my satisfaction and for our family it's "better safe than sorry".