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  2. 8 Oil Substitutes to Use When Baking - AOL

    www.aol.com/8-oil-substitutes-baking-184300792.html

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  3. The 14 Best Substitutes for Vegetable Oil in Baking and ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/14-best-substitutes...

    Fried chicken, brownies from a box and stir-fried veggies—very different foods that, nevertheless, share a common ingredient: vegetable oil. Its omnipresence might suggest otherwise, but don’t ...

  4. Out of vegetable oil? Use these pantry staples instead - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/vegetable-oil-pantry-staples...

    Find the best vegetable oil substitutes to use for cooking, baking, salad dressings and more.

  5. Applesauce in Place of OIl and Other Baking Substitutions - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/food-applesauce-place-oil...

    The typical ratio to substitute is 1:1, which means if the recipe calls for 1 cup oil, feel free to substitute 1 cup applesauce. But the texture of the baked good will turn out different--slightly ...

  6. What Happens If You Accidentally Swap Baking Soda & Baking ...

    www.aol.com/happens-accidentally-swap-baking...

    Just like baking soda and vinegar simulate a volcanic eruption, baking soda interacts with acidic ingredients in doughs and batters to create bubbles of CO 2. But instead of spilling out of a ...

  7. Press cake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Press_cake

    Some foods whose processing creates press cakes are olives for olive oil , peanuts for peanut oil, coconut flesh for coconut cream and milk , grapes for wine , apples for cider (pomace), mustard cake, and soybeans for soy milk (used to make tofu) (this is called soy pulp) or oil. Other common press cakes come from flax seed (linseed ...

  8. Compound chocolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compound_chocolate

    Compound chocolate is a product made from a combination of cocoa, vegetable fat and sweeteners. It is used as a lower-cost alternative to pure chocolate, as it uses less-expensive hard vegetable fats such as coconut oil or palm kernel oil in place of the more expensive cocoa butter. [1]

  9. Genoise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genoise

    It is a whole-egg cake, unlike some other sponge cakes for which yolks and whites are beaten separately, such as Pão de Ló. The eggs, and sometimes extra yolks, are beaten with sugar and heated at the same time, using a bain-marie or flame, to a stage known to patissiers as the "ribbon stage".