Quote: (10-17-2016 09:06 AM)Oz. Wrote:
I just cooked my scrambled eggs in this for breakfast
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Also my label says nothing about refrigerating, when I opened the jar it seem pretty hard, but the texture is still soft even in its jelly like state.
Whether the label says that it recommends (or requires) refrigeration or not, I think that most
coconut oil is going to be very similar in whether it is likely to go rancid.
If you have a decent quality of
coconut oil and you are storing it in cool places and well sealed (and without refrigeration), you could likely store it 5 years or more without any real deterioration in the product. Of course, with refrigeration, you probably are going to get longer time, but do you really want to take up your fridge space?
Some brands of
coconut oil have a bit better flavors and smells than others, and likely this has to do with how they are processed.. and probably the more pure the process, the more likely the
coconut oil is going to preserve its flavors and smells.
I have read that
coconut oils will begin to smell bad or look funny when it is starting to go rancid, and I think that the thing with rancid
oils is that they become very inflammatory and non-nutritious once they become rancid - they kind of transmorphize (if that is a word?) from a state of nutritiousness to anti-nutritiousness.
I have two locations that I keep
coconut oil, so I tend to keep the one that I am using refrigerated (so I do not mind sacrificing a little bit of my fridge space for this purpose) and the one that I am not using (I hate to run out of things), I keep in a cool dry place (and well sealed - usually has not been opened yet).
Since
coconut turns liquid at about 78 degrees Fahrenheit, I sometimes will bring it out of the fridge for a while if I want it in its liquid state or if I am in a hurry, I will microwave it for 15 seconds or so, depending on the quantity of
coconut oil that i am then planning to use.