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  2. Palmitic acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palmitic_acid

    Melting point: 62.9 °C (145.2 °F; 336.0 K) [7] Boiling point: ... It is a major component of palm oil from the fruit of Elaeis guineensis , making up to 44% of ...

  3. Template:Smoke point of cooking oils - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Smoke_point_of...

    Olive oil: Virgin: 210 °C: 410 °F Olive oil: Extra virgin, low acidity, high quality: 207 °C: 405 °F [3] [13] Olive oil: Extra virgin: 190 °C: 374 °F [13] Palm oil: Fractionated: 235 °C [14] 455 °F Peanut oil: Refined: 232 °C [3] 450 °F Peanut oil: 227–229 °C [3] [15] 441–445 °F Peanut oil: Unrefined: 160 °C [3] 320 °F Pecan ...

  4. Palm oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palm_oil

    Palm oil block showing the lighter color that results from boiling. Palm oil is an edible vegetable oil derived from the mesocarp (reddish pulp) of the fruit of oil palms. [1] The oil is used in food manufacturing, in beauty products, and as biofuel. Palm oil accounted for about 36% of global oils produced from oil crops in 2014. [2]

  5. Buttergate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buttergate

    Canadian recipe writer Julie Van Rosendaal subsequently suggested that dairy farmers may have increased their use of palm oil in dairy cattle's diet, increasing the hardness of the milk fat they produced. [1] Palm oil contains palmitic acid, has a melting point of 63 °C (145 °F), and increases the hardness of butter. [1]

  6. Palm stearin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palm_stearin

    Palm stearin is the solid fraction of palm oil that is produced by partial crystallization at controlled temperature. [1] It is a stearin in the sense of stearins and oleins being the solid and liquid fractions respectively of fats and oils; not in the sense of glyceryl tristearate .

  7. A palm oil company, a group of US financiers, and the ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/palm-oil-company-group-us...

    A company backed by US investors sold "deforestation-free" palm oil to the makers of Cheetos, Colgate and Pepsi. ... has argued that the Amazon could reach a tipping point and become too hot, dry ...

  8. Vegetable oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegetable_oil

    Palm oil formed the basis of soap products, such as Lever Brothers' (now Unilever) "Sunlight", and B. J. Johnson Company's (now Colgate-Palmolive) "Palmolive," [8] and by around 1870, palm oil constituted the primary export of some West African countries. [9] In 1780, Carl Wilhelm Scheele demonstrated that fats were derived from glycerol.

  9. Smoke point - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoke_point

    The more FFA an oil contains, the quicker it will break down and start smoking. [2] [3] The lower the value of FFA, the higher the smoke point. [4] However, the FFA content typically represents less than 1% of the total oil and consequently renders smoke point a poor indicator of the capacity of a fat or oil to withstand heat. [4] [5] [6]