6

I have already stored used peanut oil in the refrigerator for one week. I had strained it through coffee filters, and it had looked very clean and clear. Now it looks cloudy and milky. Is it OK to use? I had used it to cook fish and hush puppies.

1
  • 3
    Fats behave differently at different temperatures - it may be cloudy because it's cold, and clear up if left on the counter for a while. if it does clear up when returned to room temperature, then the difference in appearance is explained. I'll leave it for someone with more experience to say whether it's Ok to use, since I don't know the variables.
    – Megha
    Aug 12, 2016 at 16:40

5 Answers 5

9

May depend on the temp. of your fridge, but when I have stored a brand new (i.e. unused) bottle of peanut oil in my fridge, it has gotten cloudy and thick, especially when the level in the bottle goes a little below full. When I wanted to use it and took the bottle out of the fridge, it "thawed out" as soon as it got warm, and looked & acted just like when I bought it.

Canola oil does not behave this way for me. So this might just be a property of peanut oil when it gets cold. Does your left over oil thaw out & look clear when you let it get to room temp.?

On the other hand if you have used it to cook fish, I imagine it will still have at least a slight fishy taste even if it is strained out perfectly. Maybe best not to use it for fine delicately flavored dessert items anyway.

1
  • 3
    I was thinking the same thing -- olive oil definitely does the cloudy (and sometimes solid) thing as well. I've seen some containers mention this, but not all do.
    – Joe
    Aug 12, 2016 at 17:00
6

Recommendations on peanut oil vary radically, claiming anywhere from 1 month to 3 years shelf storage after opening, most all claiming refrigeration not needed. If pure peanut oil it is likely towards the low side though, so I would tend towards refrigeration as well. The cloudiness should just be fats starting to solidify which is not a ratification or chemical reaction. It should be fine to use, but I would bring it back to room temperature and allow to clear before heating, or initially heat it slowly. If you begin to heat partially solidified oils quickly they may have a tendency to pop and splatter more than usual.

1
  • Popping and splattering is due to water in the oil. Once the oil get near/over boiling, the water converts to steam and expands. Keeping the temperature low will minimize the splatter until all the water boils away.
    – JS.
    Aug 12, 2016 at 21:36
6

aswine is correct. The cloudiness is a function of the amount of saturated fats in the oil. The more saturated fat an oil contains, the higher the temperature it solidifies. As Joe commented, olive oil will become cloudy/solidify in the fridge as well.

This is the reason manufacturers 'hydrogenate' oils to produce margarines. The more hydrogen atoms they can attach to an oil the more 'saturated' it becomes and the more solid it is at room temperature. Lard, bacon grease, highly saturated, solid at room temperature. Some oils are less saturated so they stay liquid at room temperature and the fridge. Your peanut oil is in the middle range, so it just got cloudy in the fridge.

As far as microbes growing in the oil, they definitely can. Exposure to air (oxygen) and oil breakdown (exacerbated by heat) are bigger culprits. This breakdown has a few indicators, the primary one for me being a rancid smell. Keeping oils sealed from air and stored in the fridge/freezer will help slow down the breakdown.

Keep the oils tightly sealed, away from light and cool and refrigeration is generally not required. Oils I don't use often I buy in smaller quantities so I wind up using them up before they go rancid sitting on the counter.

Some oils, like walnut go rancid quickly and should be stored in the fridge. Experience will guide you here.

I personally don't worry too much about microbes in my oils. They usually start to smell bad before they are a health concern. I'm also not a doctor and don't cook for anyone with impaired immune systems, so you need to make your own calls here.

In the South, bacon grease is often left out at room temperature. This can be done due to its high salt content. Just make sure not to mix in other greases or oils.

Finally, (and this will likely start a fight) butter can be left out at room temperature (for a while) safely. This is great if you like spreading soft button on your toast. The length of time it can be left out is a function of the temperature of the room and the amount of salt in your butter. Some people use butter bells for this function.

Butter will not last as long on the counter as in the fridge. Also, your nose will tell you when you've left it out too long and it needs to be discarded. (We eat it too quickly at my house for that to happen though. :-)

4

Yes, it's safe.

Oil, even used oil, has a very small water activity, much too small to support the growth of microbes. Not only that, but you'll presumably heat up the oil to at least 300 °F for several minutes when you use it next, which will kill anything that would have grown.

In fact, storing the used oil in the refrigerator isn't necessary for safety reasons. I'd be more concerned about rancidity if you're planning to storing it for a while. Keeping it in an air-tight container in the dark is most important; glass is preferable. The cold temperature of the refrigerator will also help.

The reason the oil is cloudy is that you brought it to a temperature at which some of the fats in the oil solidified. That's the same thing that happens with bacon grease, only at a higher temperature. It's clear when warm, but at room temperature, it's opaque. Different fats have different melting/freezing temperatures, depending on the length of their fatty acids and whether they're saturated or unsaturated. Cloudiness is nothing to be concerned about.

-1

There are two types of peanut oils available on the marketplace and it is often unclear which you have unless you have an updated label or run a fatty acid analysis: normal oleic and high oleic. High oleic has most of the polyunsaturated fat switched to monounsaturated (oleic acid). In peanuts, this is because of a natural mutation. The result is that the HO peanut oil will solidify more readily in the fridge and will have a fatty acid profile similar to olive oil (which will also solidify in the fridge). Upon warming to room temperature the oil will become clear again. The solidified oil is perfectly fine, just temporarily cloudy.

2
  • This answer doesn’t seem to contain any information not already covered by the previous answers.
    – Sneftel
    Apr 12, 2022 at 5:39
  • As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Apr 13, 2022 at 3:32

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.