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    Home»Gaming»You’re About to Ruin Thanksgiving Dinner With the Wrong Cooking Oil
    Gaming

    You’re About to Ruin Thanksgiving Dinner With the Wrong Cooking Oil

    techupdateadminBy techupdateadminNovember 5, 2025No Comments8 Mins Read
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    man holding bottles of oil in supermarket aisle
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    If your home-cooked meals are consistently a letdown, you can’t just blame the ingredients. If you want to make sure you’re whipping up a delicious dinner, you need to take a hard look at your cooking oil. If you’re one of those people who just grabs the same bottle of olive oil for everything, you’re making a rookie mistake.

    Home Tips

    Here’s the deal: not all oils are created equal. That expensive olive oil you love is great for a salad, but it’s not built for high-heat searing, and it’s absolutely sabotaging your stir-fry.

    Before you give up and order takeout again, you should know that the fix is simple. Using the right oil for the right job is the easiest way to stop ruining your dinner and finally get the results you’ve been looking for.

    The key to choosing the correct one is knowing which oils handle heat best and which are better left raw. High-heat methods like frying or searing call for neutral oils with a higher smoke point, such as canola, avocado or grapeseed. These options hold up under hotter temperatures and give food a clean, crisp finish. 

    Olive oil, on the other hand, shines in dressings, sautes or drizzles, where its rich flavor can stand out without the risk of burning. It can also help enhance proteins and vegetables. Then it’s just a matter of deciding between virgin, extra virgin or refined olive oil. 

    Some oils also lend moisture to baked goods, while others add nutrition or depth when left uncooked. To clarify things, culinary pros shared their best advice on when to use each oil so you can get the most flavor, texture and value from every bottle.


    Don’t miss any of our unbiased tech content and lab-based reviews. Add CNET as a preferred Google source.


    Most common oils and uses

    An assortment of cooking oils in bottles on a counter.

    Smoke point and flavor are the two big considerations to make when choosing an oil.

    Maximilian Stock/Getty Images

    Guido Parrati, owner of Parla Come Mangi in Rapallo, Italy, is no stranger to educating others on cooking. In addition to serving an impressively robust assortment of Italian delicacies in his iconic deli, Parrati also hosts seminars, tastings and showcases of local ingredients. 

    Beyond flavor profile, Parrati said that the single most important aspect of an oil, at least when used for cooking, is its smoke point. A high smoke point indicates that the product can withstand higher temperatures before it begins to — you guessed it — smoke and break down. 

    This is important to keep in mind for proteins such as red meat that may require more heat and longer cooking times to break through tough exteriors and more fibrous insides. After all, if oil is the lubricating vessel to a perfect sear and/or crunch, you don’t want it to completely dissipate before the job’s done (or well done, if that’s your preference). 

    Here is a list of the most common oils used for cooking, provided in detail by Parrati (sans olive oil, which gets its own section after the jump).

    Canola or vegetable 

    A cast-iron pan being seasoned with canola oil.

    High smoke point oils like canola are good for seasoning cast-iron cookware.

    Tyler Lizenby/CNET

    Best for: Cooking, baking and frying

    “Vegetable oil has a neutral, delicate flavor and a high smoke point, making it excellent for frying, sautéing and high-temperature cooking.” These oils also are ideal for seasoning your cast-iron cookware.

    Sesame oil 

    Sesame oil being poured into a small dish.

    Sesame oil is ideal for finishing.

    Sungmin/Getty Images

    Best for: Finishing

    “Known for its strong, nutty flavor — especially when toasted — it’s great for finishing dishes to add depth and aroma, commonly used in Asian cuisine.”

    Coconut oil 

    jar of coconut oil

    Coconut oil has a bold flavor and medium smoke point.

    Alina Bradford/CNET

    Best for: Cooking and baking

    “With its distinctive, sweet and tropical flavor, it has a medium smoke point, making it suitable for cooking and finishing, especially in desserts or Asian-inspired dishes.”

    Avocado oil 

    a bottle of avocado lays next to an avocado cut in half on the left and slices of avocado on the right.

    Avocado oil boasts a high smoke point.

    Bristol Farms

    Best for: Cooking, baking, and frying

    “Delicate and buttery in taste, it has one of the highest smoke points, making it ideal for very high-heat cooking or frying. It’s also excellent raw as a finishing oil.

    Sunflower or safflower oil

    bottle of sunflower oil next to sunflowers and loaf of bread

    A neutral flavor makes safflower oil good for frying. 

    Oilver Farm

    Best for: Cooking and frying

    “It has a neutral flavor and a high smoke point, making it suitable for high-temperature cooking and frying.”

    Olive oil: A guide

    graza olive oil

    Like wine, olive oil flavor is subject to its terroir, climate and style of production.

    Graza

    Arguably the most popular and familiar of the bunch, olive oil can be treated a lot like wine with its diversity of fruit, terroir, climate and pairings. 

    New Zealand’s Allpress Olive Groves offers tastings on its Waiheke Island property for guests to identify and appreciate the flavor nuances of each bottle. This also includes olive oil blends, much like wine, that can enhance or temper flavors to create an outcome unlike anything on the market. 

    “Just like expertly blended wines or coffees, olive oil blends are crafted to offer a harmonious balance of flavors and aromas,” said Erin Butterworth, who oversees events and marketing for the brand. “Blending different olive varieties allows us to create oils that are rich in complexity, with tasting notes ranging from fruity and grassy to peppery and nutty.”

    “This versatility makes them ideal for a variety of culinary applications, such as drizzling over salads, finishing dishes or enhancing baked goods. The art of blending ensures that each bottle delivers a consistent and delightful flavor profile, inviting creativity in the kitchen and elevating everyday meals,” she adds. 

    Types of olive oil

    Extra virgin olive oil is the gold standard but, depending on your cooking needs, there are other, more affordable variations and blends worth considering.

    Olive oil compared

    Type What is it Flavor Smoke Point Best Use
    Extra Virgin Highest quality. Made from cold-pressed olives with no chemical processing. Bold, fruity 375°F Finishing, dipping, salads
    Virgin Made by cold pressing, but with slightly higher acidity and less intense flavor than EVOO Mild 390°F Light sautéing, simple cooking
    Pure/Classic A blend of refined olive oil and a small amount of virgin or extra virgin olive oil Neutral 465°F Frying, roasting
    Light/Extra Light Heavily refined oil with minimal flavor and color Very neutral 470°F Baking, high-heat cooking

    Olive oil flavor profile

    A botttle of olive oil displayed on a serving board with sliced bread and other items.

    There are three distinct flavor dimensions found in most olive oils. 

    Zoutina

    Fruity: “A delicate classic that everyone loves. Smooth and balanced, it gives an instant lift to any dish.”  These oils are best used on salads and fresh vegetables as a finisher or part of a dressing

    Nutty: “Creamy and nutty with a smooth finish. All the richness you crave — like butter, but better.” Choose nutty oils for baked goods, pastas, roasted vegetables and grilling meats.

    Peppery: “Intense and with a serious bite. It’s a bold oil that makes its presence known.” Try peppery oils for dipping bread or finishing cooked vegetables and meat.

    What to look for when buying olive oil

    up close shot of person holding bottle of olive oil in a supermarket

    Checking the date on a bottle of olive oil before buying is a good practice. 

    Oscar Wong/Getty Images

    While most mass-market olive oils will get the job done, they don’t always provide an exceptional tasting or cooking experience. Instead, Butterworth advises shoppers to keep four characteristics in mind as they meander through grocery or gourmet food store aisles. 

    • Freshness: “Think of olive oil as fruit juice — it’s best when fresh! Look for a harvest or ‘pressed on’ date stamped on the bottle. Aim for oil from the past 12–18 months and definitely within two years to get full flavor and health benefits.” 
    • Free fatty acids (FFA): “The FFA marker reveals how well the olives were handled post‑harvest and lower is better. By international standards, extra virgin olive oil must have an FFA below 0.8%. Some premium producers like us aim for below  0.3% to indicate exceptional quality.” 
    • Taste: “Everybody’s palate is different so the ideal oil for one person may not suit another. Sampling oils in‑store (via tastings or small bottles) helps you discover whether you prefer a bold, peppery varietal or a smoother, fruitier blend. It’s surprising how different they can taste.”
    • Packaging quality: “Quality oils should be sold in dark glass, tin or opaque containers to protect them from light exposure, which degrades flavor and antioxidants. Be wary of clear plastic bottles or large bulk containers unless you go through them very quickly at home.”

    Read more: Pantry Staples and Other Foods That Spoil Faster Than You’d Think

    Creative uses for olive oil 

    A ceviche-tostada

    Ceviche is one dish that puts olive oil front and center. 

    CNET

    Olive oil use isn’t exclusive to cooking, baking and finishing. Maichol Morandi, executive chef of Lake Como’s Grand Hotel Victoria, refers to his favorite Vanini brand from Lenno as the protagonist of his cuisine. He concocts entire dishes around its wide range of flavor profiles. 

    “In our kitchens, we use and experiment with custom olive oil blends for new seasonal menu creations, ideal for achieving specific balances between smoke point, flavor and structure,” he said. 

    A few of chef’s favorite and most recent preparations include: 

    Coriander-infused olive oil for sea bass ceviche: “This oil is created using a cold-extraction technique that preserves its purity and elegance,” he said. “Fresh coriander leaves are blanched for a few seconds in hot water, then cooled in ice water to set their color. Once squeezed, the leaves are blended with a mixture of sunflower oil (for its neutrality) and olive oil.”

    Dark chocolate desserts: “We add a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil infused with tonka bean to a dark chocolate dessert with figs and Maldon salt. It brings warm, balsamic aromas and surprises the palate with a sensual contrast.”

    Raviolo: “In a raviolo filled with scampi and lime, a bergamot oil — made by infusing the zest — enhances the citrus freshness without relying on aggressive acidity.”

    Watch this: iPhone Air Is a Wild Card – and Starts a Big Change for Apple

    06:39

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