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4. PRODUCTION PROCESS AND TECHNOLOGY SELECTION
4.1. Background
Edible oil that is extracted from oil seed sources exposed to numerous processes to yield up oils of
various amounts according their nature of oil content. In general, irrespective of the seed, industrial
level production of cooking oil involves cleaning the seeds, grinding them, pressing, and extracting
the oil from them. In extracting, a volatile hydrocarbon such as hexane is used as a solvent. After
extracting, the oil is refined, mixed with an alkaline substance, and washed in a centrifuge. Further
washing and refining follows, and then the oil is filtered and/or distilled. It is then ready for
packaging.
Some vegetable oils, such as olive, peanut, and some coconut and sunflower oils, are cold-pressed.
This method, which entails minimal processing, produces light, flavorful oil suitable for some
cooking needs. Most oil sources, however, are not suitable for cold pressing, because it would leave
many undesirable trace elements in the oil, causing it to be odiferous, bitter tasting, or dark. These
oils undergo many steps beyond mere extraction to produce bland, clear, and consistent oil.
Extraction of edible oil from pumpkin seed shares more or less similar processes to the extraction of
other seeds. Traditional methods of pumpkin seed oil extraction are the following: harvesting,
cleaning and drying, fine crushing, salt and water addition, roasting, pressing, filtering and bottling.
The study illustrates the refinery of edible oils from oil seed sources such as, pumpkinseed, cotton
seed, ground nut, linseed and others. The production process and technical subject is stated as
follows. Generally, the production process of edible oil refinery comprises:
Receiving and storage
Oil refining
Mechanical pressing or solvent extraction
Oil seed preparation
Filling and packing