The Fresh Loaf

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Crisco help?????????

shi's picture
shi

Crisco help?????????

I find that a lot of recipes for cookies as well as other baking recepies make use of Crisco or shortning. In India usually we use desi ghee(I think that would be clarified butter) or dalda. But I want to be sure . Below is a defination of dalda as a fat it falls in the category of trans fats :-
Trans fats (trans-fatty acids) are formed when vegetable oils are hydrogenated, that makes them as solids or semisolids (in India, it is commonly known as Dalda). Trans fats are used in many snacks, viz. cookies, cakes, microwave popcorn, fried foods, in margarine (stick and tub varieties).
Am I on the right track can i use dalda in a recipe that calls for crisco or shortning. I need to know cause I want to bake a red velvet cake for my hubbies B'day.
An early response will be great help.
thanx shi

pizzameister's picture
pizzameister

Shi,

From my reading, it would appear that dalda is just hydrogenated vegetable oil, basically the same thing as Crisco. Neither of these are healthful, but they have advantages in cooking and baking, such as longer shelf life and higher melting point than butter (Ghee just being clarified butter). Personal preference for me is to use butter (or even unsaturated or low saturated oils) in place of artifically hydrogenated oils whenever possible. Both butter and Crisco / Dalda are saturated fats, however our bodies do not handle artificially saturated fats well and they are a significant factor in the high incidence of heart disease in the US.

So, I would say that Dalda should be interchangeable with Crisco, and for occasional use OK. It certainly would be the surest subsititution for a recipe calling for Crisco. That being said, clarified butter may work as well, adds flavor and is the healthier alternative. You may just have to make two cakes to see how they differ and let us know. :)

Pizzameister

sphealey's picture
sphealey

There are two versions of Crisco. The original version from the 1920s was fully hydrogenated. Not great for your body, as pizzameister describes, but not too much worse than butter.

Then some time in the 1960s a new, partially-hydrogenated version was developed. Partially-hydrogenated oils, also known as trans fats, have great advantages in commercial baking and food processing. They cook well, provide good "mouth feel" (technical term), and allow very long shelf life.

As we now know, trans fats also plug your arteries solid by the age of 40. There is a fair amount of research concerning the health effects of trans fat available on the web. Some of it is pushed by the same nuts who push any danger-danger-conspiracy theory, unfortunately. But much of it is solid (no pun intended), and at this point the conclusion is (in my opinion) not in doubt: trans fats are something you need to eliminate from your diet. Given the food supply in the United States, this isn't always possible, but you should get rid of as much as you can.

In response to the questions about trans fat, Crisco has brought the original 1920s version back on the market. If you absolutely need to use shortening, this is the one you should try first. Admittedly, the partially-hydrogenated version does taste better, and about once per month my wife uses it to make cookies. But if you can use the fully hydrogenated one that is the best.

Personlly, I find that a small amount of butter mixed with soybean oil or light olive oil cooks just as well and tastes great. I would rather eat a small portion of food cooked with a small amount of butter (and then have a raw carrot later) than a large portion of something cooked with an artificial fat.

sPh

Christina's picture
Christina

There is a brand called Smart Balance that makes a trans fat free shortening for use in baking. However, when I used it to make a pie dough, it really messed it up. For biscuits and cookies, though, there wasn't much of a difference between using the Smart Balance and using the regular sort. The only drawback is the price. When it goes on sale it's usually 2 for $7, and the container is smaller than regular kinds.