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Canola
For the figure in Celtic mythology see Canola (Celtic mythology)
In agriculture, Canola is a trademarked cultivar of the rapeseed plant from which rapeseed oil is obtained. It was initially bred in Canada by Keith Downey and Baldur Stefansson in the 1970s.
Canola Oil is a term coined from the words "Canadian" and "oil".
The ancestor of Canola is a plant called rapeseed. In ancient times, rapeseed oil was used in Asia and Europe in lamps, for cooking, and in foods. Today, its seed contain a highly desirable oil used in shortening, salad oil, cooking sprays, and many other foods, as well as in printing ink, hydraulic fluids, and suntan lotion. Solid parts of the pant may be used as fertilizers and in feed for livestock, poultry, and fish.
Rapeseed has been grown in Canada (mainly Saskatchewan) since 1936. It was on high demand during World War II as one of the most effective lubricants for metal engine parts. After the war, demand declined sharply and farmers began to look for other uses for the plant and its products. Edible rapeseed oil extracts were first put on the market in 1956-1957, but not all of the characteristics of these products were considered acceptable. Rapeseed oil had a distinctive taste and a disagreeable greenish colour due to the presence of chlorophyll. It also contained a high concentration of erucic acid, suspected of causing cancer if ingested in large amounts. Feed meal from the rapeseed plants was not particularly appealing to livestock, due to high levels of sharp-tasting compounds called glucosinolates.
Canadian plant breeders took up the challenge to improve the quality of rapeseed. In 1968, Dr. Baldur Stefansson of the University of Manitoba used selective breeding to develop a low erucic acid variety of the plant. In 1974, another variety was produced with both a low-erucic acid content and a low level of glucosinolates.
Today about 75% of the Canola crops planted in Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan are herbicide tolerant varieties. A variety developed in 1998 is considered to be the most disease and drought resistance variety of Canola to date. These recent varieties have been produced by gene splicing techniques. Compared with sunflower, corn, olive, peanut, and other oils, Canola has the most favourable overall combination of saturated and unsaturated fats for a healthy diet.
Canola - Canola oil extraction
Step 1.
- The first stage in processing canola is to roll or flake the seed. This ruptures cells and makes the oil easier to extract.
Step 2.
- Next the flaked or rolled seeds are cooked and subjected to a mild pressing process which removes some of the oil and compresses the seeds into large chunks called "cake fragments".
Step 3.
- The cake fragments undergo further processing to remove most of the remaining oil. The oil extracted during each step is combined. The oil is then subjected to processing according to the end product requirements. Different treatments are used to process salad oils, margarines, and shortenings.
In 2004, North Dakota produced 91% of the Canola in the United States.[1]
See complete article at rapeseed.
Categories: Cooking oils | Nuts and seeds
Other related archives1970s, Baldur Stefansson, Canola (Celtic mythology), Cooking oils, Keith Downey, North Dakota, Nuts and seeds, United States, agriculture, cultivar, rapeseed
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Canola", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |