Cooking with olive oil is a controversial subject with some people saying it is fine and others insisting it damages the oil. The truth falls somewhere in between, so if you prefer olive oil in your recipes, use the suggestions below as precautions to preserve nutrients.
Olives are one of the oldest foods known to man and are thought to have originated in Crete or Syria some 6000 years ago. The golden color of the rich oil pressed from tree-ripened olives has been consumed by healthy traditional cultures since as early as 3000 BC.
Olive oil especially the first Fall harvest known as Olio Nuovo is truly one of the crown jewels of fats and what I always buy.
Olive oil is primarily composed of oleic acid, which is monounsaturated fat. Monounsaturates are one of the three main categories of fats. The other two are saturated fats and polyunsaturated oils.
The three types of fats – do you know how to tell the difference?
Saturated fats like coconut oil and tallow, are extremely stable because they pack together tightly courtesy of very straight carbon bonds that are all occupied by hydrogen atoms. Â Saturated fats are solid or semisolid at room temperature and make ideal cooking fats because of the inherent stability provided by their chemical structure which means that they do not easily go rancid when heated during cooking or form the free radicals that contribute to heart disease and cancer.
Polyunsaturated fats do not pack together as tightly as saturated fats and hence are liquid at room temperature and remain so even if refrigerated.  The chemical structure of polyunsaturated oils is such that there are unpaired electrons for every carbon-carbon double bond which are highly reactive if heated or processed in any way. Even simple exposure to the air or light can cause rancidity in fairly short periods of time. Grapeseed oil is a fat that is extremely high in polyunsaturates.
Monounsaturated fats like olive, canola, and avocado oil are liquid at room temperature yet become semi-solid if refrigerated. Sesame oil has very similar levels of mono to polyunsaturated fat.
The single carbon-carbon double bonds which make up the chemical structure of monounsaturated fats do not pack together as tightly as saturated fats but are more tightly bound than those of polyunsaturated oils.
Monounsaturated fats do not go rancid as easily as polyunsaturated oils but are more delicate than saturated fats due to a slight molecular bend which is not as straight in shape as the carbon bonds in a fully saturated molecule.
Now that we understand the basic structure of the 3 types of fats, it is easy to identify the type of fat that primarily composes an oil as this can be ascertained by simply observing its form at either room temperature or when refrigerated.
If a natural fat is solid or semisolid at room temperature, then it is primarily saturated. If it is fully liquid at room temperature but goes solid in the refrigerator, it is primarily monounsaturated, and if it is liquid when either refrigerated or at room temperature, it is mostly polyunsaturated.
With proper identification of the kinds of fats now complete, let’s turn our attention to the proper cooking oils.
Cooking with what fats  – when?
It is clear that fats that are primarily saturated like tallow, coconut or palm oils are wonderful for cooking as the heat from cooking does not easily damage them or form free radicals.
On the other hand, polyunsaturated oils like sunflower, corn, grapeseed, soy or safflower should be strictly avoided for cooking as they are too easily damaged as those free electrons react too easily with heat or oxygen.
But what about monounsaturated fats, in particular, olive oil? This is where the issue gets a bit murky.
It is absolutely true that cooking with olive oil will not form trans fats. Even higher heat cooking with olive oil will not cause much free-radical creation although I would venture to say that there are certainly some free radicals formed when high heat cooking with monounsaturates due to the slightly less stable structure as compared with saturated fats.
I personally choose to avoid cooking with olive oil, especially extra virgin olive oil (EVOO). For one thing, good quality EVOO is quite expensive and should be properly packaged in dark-colored glass to protect the delicate nutrients. Studies have shown that light quickly degrades the quality of extra virgin olive oil.
Research shows that only two months’ exposure to light caused free radical increases in extra virgin olive oil to such a level that it could no longer be classified as extra virgin!
With light so easily damaging to extra virgin olive oil, it seems obvious that heat and cooking would damage it as well and studies bear this out. Heat as low as 350F (180C) can significantly damage the beneficial phenols in olive oil. Phenolic substances are highly anti-inflammatory in nature and likely an important reason why studies of the Mediterranean Diet which is high in olive oil have indicated a decrease in heart disease risk.
As a result, it seems prudent that even though cooking with olive oil does not produce any transfats or much free radical damage, it does reduce much of the beneficial aspect of consuming this healthy traditional oil in the first place.
Light saute cooking with olive oil at temperatures no higher than 200-250F seems to be safe and minimally damaging. However, oven baking or higher heat cooking on the stovetop with olive oil is not wise given that there are much hardier and less expensive fats to choose from like expeller-pressed coconut oil or palm oil!
By far, the best use of good quality, nutrient-loaded extra virgin olive oil is as a salad dressing. Combining one part vinegar or lemon juice with between 3-5 parts oil along with a drizzle of walnut oil and flavoring herbs of choice will provide a truly healthy topping for any salad or vegetable mix.
A Word of Caution for Olive Oil Lovers
While numerous studies have shown the beneficial effect of olive oil in the diet likely due to the anti-inflammatory nature of the phenols, it is advisable to go easy on this traditional fat if weight loss is your goal.
In 1994, the journal The Lancet published a study which noted that fat tissue is primarily composed of monounsaturated fat. Â Could this be a contributing reason for middle-age weight gain that is so common in Mediterranean countries (Eat Fat Lose Fat, p.70)?
The chemical structure of monounsaturated oils could be part of the problem. Â Monounsaturates like those found in olive oil are composed of longer chain fatty acids unlike the short and medium-chain fatty acids found in coconut oil, palm oil, butter, and other animal fats.
Short and medium-chain fatty acids are absorbed quickly and directly by the body for immediate energy whereas the longer chain fatty acids must be acted upon by bile salts to be digested. For this reason, longer chain fatty acids are more likely to contribute to weight gain.
Where to Find Quality Extra Virgin Olive Oil
It is important to realize that much of the conventional olive oil on the market isn’t even olive oil at all, according to Tim Mueller, an investigative journalist who has written a book on the subject called Extra Virginity: The Sublime and Scandalous World of Olive Oil.  If you suspect your olive oil is fake, put it in the refrigerator to see if it properly solidifies. Another test is to see if your extra virgin olive oil can keep a wick burning. Refined oils masquerading as extra virgin olive oil cannot typically hold a flame very well.
Unfortunately, neither of these tests can completely guarantee authenticity.
To be sure of the quality of your extra virgin olive oil, check this vetted source that comes directly from the olive oil farms themselves. These small farms are also working to preserve heirloom olive tree varieties being rapidly destroyed to make room for more corporate-friendly groves.
More Information
Extra Virgin Olive Oil Like You’ve Never Seen or Tasted Before
Traditional and Unusual Uses for Olive Oil
Liver and Gall Bladder Cleanse Using Olive Oil
Selecting a Healthy Cooking Oil and Reusing it Safely
The Truth About Pumpkin Seed Oil
Is Rice Bran Oil a Healthy Fat?
Caution When Using Chicken Fat for Cooking
How Vegetable Oils Make Us Fat
How Argan Oil Benefits Health
Red Palm Oil Benefits Rival Coconut Oil
Walnut Oil: Healthy Sub for Flax Oil
Picture Credit
Anya Lvova via Facebook
I only use Camelina oil
Jocelyn Yu via Facebook
What can we use for high heat cooking?
Sherlei Leaveblank via Facebook
i use coconut oil
laura
Is there a healthy light tasting olive oil? I always see them at the store, but I would prefer to buy from a reliable source, I mostly use it for mayo. Thanks
JeannineJ-9
Hi! I really appreciate this article in particular. I’ve been trying to sort through this complicated issue. However, I love roasting vegetables in the oven, usually at about 450 degrees. Most recipes call for olive oil. Should I be melting my poultry or beef fat instead, and then pouring that on my to-be-roasted vegetables?
Claire
Growing up Italian, we also used lots and lots of olive oil. Unfortunately, I can’t tolerate coconut oil anymore. I think it’s too anti-microbial for my gut, causing diarrhea, and it makes me gain weight. Maybe my Italian genes predisposes me to eating olive oil without weight gain? I do think the mid-life weight gain from those on a Mediterranean diet has more to do with carbs (aka pasta) than olive oil. The older I get, the less carbs and pasta I can eat, or I gain weight.
My Italian grandmother also cooked with lard and bacon fat, so I have now incorporated those back into my own traditional diet! I can eat spoonfuls of bacon fat and not gain weight, whereas I definitely will gain weight doing that with coconut oil.
Pedro Carlos Alves
I’m a Portuguese Food Technologist and I agree with Claire. Olive oil has NOTHING to do with weight gain. It’s all doe to lots of carbs, overeating and the world’s most delicious desserts. 😉
Contrary to the US, here, in the Mediterranean, Extra Virgin Olive Oil is far more cheaper than tropical oils: coconut, palm or dendem. We live completely surrounded by it. And we use it to cook as lard is hardly used now. I understand the doubts raised about the stability.
As far as I’m aware, we can use olive oil 1 time with high temperatures without a problem.
But we can’t use it for several times or continuous deep frying like what we can see in fast food chains.
Being cooked over 350 F for 1 time and nothing will happen to the fat chains.
A few heat sensible phytochemicals will be affected or destroyed.
The same will happen with any other heat resistant oil.
Phytochemicals will inevitably be destroyed.
Carissa Shirley via Facebook
50% of my diet?! We only use coconut oil & butter here.