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  2. Types of plant oils - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_plant_oils

    The second type of oil press is the ram press, where a piston is driven into a cylinder, crushing the seeds and forcing out the oil. Ram presses are generally more efficient than screw presses. There has been recent interest in improving the design of mechanical oil presses, particularly for use in developing countries. A press developed at MIT ...

  3. List of vegetable oils - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_vegetable_oils

    The pulp oil is used as a skin conditioner. The seed oil is sold for use as a cooking oil and for making soap due to its high lauric acid content. [224] Ucuhuba seed oil, extracted from the seeds of Virola surinamensis, is unusually high in myristic acid. [221]

  4. Echium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echium

    Echium / ˈ ɛ k i əm / [2] is a genus of flowering plants in the family Boraginaceae that contains about 70 species and several subspecies. Species of Echium are native to North Africa, mainland Europe to Central Asia, and the Macaronesian islands where the genus reaches its maximum diversity.

  5. Pongamia oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pongamia_oil

    Pongamia oil is derived from the seeds of the Millettia pinnata tree, which is native to tropical and temperate Asia. Millettia pinnata, also known as Pongamia pinnata or Pongamia glabra, is common throughout Asia and thus has many different names in different languages, many of which have come to be used in English to describe the seed oil derived from M. pinnata; Pongamia is often used as ...

  6. Garden cress oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_cress_oil

    Garden cress oil is obtained from garden cress (Lepidium sativum L) seeds, by cold pressing (hydraulic pressing), solvent extraction (soxhlet) and supercritical CO 2. The total oil content of garden cress seeds is 21.54% (by solvent extraction method) garden cress oil has a typical smell of mustard oil but less pungent than mustard oil. [1] [2]

  7. Guizotia abyssinica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guizotia_abyssinica

    The seed is used as bird food. As the seeds are so small, specialized bird feeders are manufactured for niger seed. In the United Kingdom the seeds attract finches and siskins. [14] Niger oil cake, which consists of the residues obtained after processing of the seeds to make oil, is rich in protein and is used to feed livestock, particularly in ...

  8. Seed oil misinformation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seed_oil_misinformation

    Critics of seed oils often point to the health hazards of the solvents used in the industrial process of generating vegetable oils. [12] Hexane, which can be neurotoxic, is extremely effective at oil extraction. [13] Thus, it is often quoted as a danger when consuming vegetable oils as it can be found in finished oils in trace amounts. [14]

  9. Tomato seed oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomato_seed_oil

    Tomato seeds. Tomato seed oil is a vegetable oil extracted from the seeds of tomatoes. The possibility of extracting oil from tomato seeds was studied in the United States in 1915. Seeds were obtained from a variety of locations and bred and pressed to produce oil. This was refined using an alkali and then clarified with fuller's earth.