Same thing with stir fry, is there anyway to get out of using oil? I read somewhere that you can gently heat onions to release a natural oil - I tried this and it doesn't work.
Would cooking in water work for a lot of things - For example could you stir fry with water?
You can indeed
sort of make a stir-fry with water. Cooking with water rather than oil is an entire technique. Other than trying it myself, I've seen 'frying' with water featured on an episode of the Hairy Bikers, and in an issue of the National Enquirer which claimed Mario Lopez lost his shit at a resteraunt when the cook refused to switch all his oil-fried dishes for water-fried dishes, because he didn't know how to cook that way. These sources blatantly make me NOT an expert LOL.
In my own experience, if you fry veg with water it won't necessarily taste as rich, and you need to keep adding warm water as you go along or everything just gets really dry. You also need to put all the veg in at the right time, each item having the right texture from being perfectly cooked adds a quality that distracts from the lack of crisp oil-texture. You can also use stock, or tomato juice/chopped tinned tomatoes - you cook stews, soups, sauces and various one-pots in water, often not adding oil. It all becomes a bit of a grey area. Not to mention the classic cooking in wine.
I associate gently heating onions with them caramalising, but that requires oil anyway. That said, the resulting onions are slimy (in a good way) and I reckon you could get away with using less oil in a stir-fry or similar if you used just enough to caramelise the onions, and then cooked the other veg in the onions. But by the end, the onions may be overdone/dry...
It should be recognized that sesame oil should be used more as a seasoning than a fry oil, on account of its low smoke-point and high ratio of omega-6s to omega-3s.
ebola
I've read a few places that sesame oil is basically as healthy as olive oil, people just don't use it as much because of it's strong taste. I personally ADORE the taste and it's one of my go-to oils - marmite and sesame oil sandwhich, nom nom.
What about hemp cooking oil?
This seems to be growing in popularity in the UK, and I have a bottle of some hemp oil brand 'Good Oil' that is supposedly great for everything you may need an oil for. According to their website (and therefor probably written with some bias):
"What's GOOD about GOOD OIL - British Cold pressed hemp oil?
Higher content of Omega 3, 6, & 9 (the good polyunsaturated fats) than any other culinary oil
Naturally rich in Omega 3
1 table spoon (10ml) of Hemp seed oil contains 94% of the daily recommended intake of Omega 3
Half the saturated fat of olive oil
Can be used for dressing, dipping and cooking
Contains ZERO trans fats
10 ml of Good Oil contains as much GLA as 6 Evening Primrose Oil capsules
Hemp Seed oil can contribute to treat ADHD, cardiovascular disease and rheumatoid arthritis
Contributes to the health of hair & skin, and helps cholesterol, immune system and joints" -
http://www.goodwebsite.co.uk/good-products/good-hemp-food/good-oil-hemp-oil (full nutritional info at link).
I can't believe how popular coconut oil seems to be! I have to be honest, it's always been WAY out of my price range.
I use olive oil, sesame oil, and organic butter. And that one bottle of Good Oil. Sesame and butter are my favorites, taste-wise.
EDIT:
Using less oil seems the best route. Non-stick pans are a must for this, in my book. Come to think of it, they're a must for cooking with water, too. Good tips in this PDF:
www.uel.ac.uk/wwwmedia/microsites/hrservices/documents/hs/Cookingwithlessfat.pdf
- "Try cooking using an oil-water spray. Fill a small plastic spray bottle with seven-eighths water and one-eighth oil of your choice. Use your oil-water spray when cooking under the grill, in a griddle pan, in a frying pan or in roasting pans before adding foods.
- Be aware that some vegetables will soak up more oil than other vegetables. Partially replace some of the oil that you would have used with small amounts of water when cooking these types of vegetables.
- Snacks such as samosas can be lightly brushed with oil and then baked or grilled rather than being deep-fried."