Wood Pressed Groundnut Oil vs Refined Oil: Which Is Better for Cooking?

Walk into any Indian kitchen and you’ll find groundnut oil somewhere — on the stove, in the pickle jar, or sitting in a steel tin passed down from someone’s mother. But today, there are two very different versions of this oil on the market: wood pressed (cold pressed) groundnut oil and refined groundnut oil.

They look similar. They’re both called groundnut oil. But they are not the same thing.

This post breaks down the real differences — in nutrition, taste, smoke point, processing, and health impact — so you can make an informed choice for your family’s cooking.

What Is Wood Pressed Groundnut Oil?

Wood pressed groundnut oil, also called kachi ghani oil or cold pressed groundnut oil, is made by crushing groundnut seeds in a traditional wooden churner (the ghani or kolhu) at low speeds and low temperatures.

No heat is applied. No chemicals are used. The oil flows out naturally and is then filtered through gravity — which is exactly how oil was made in Indian homes for centuries.

The result is an oil that retains its natural colour, aroma, nutrients, and flavour — exactly as nature intended.

What Is Refined Groundnut Oil?

Refined groundnut oil goes through an industrial process involving:

  • High heat extraction (expeller pressing or solvent extraction using hexane)
  • Degumming to remove phospholipids
  • Neutralisation with sodium hydroxide (caustic soda)
  • Bleaching with activated clay to remove colour
  • Deodorisation at temperatures above 200°C to remove the natural smell

The goal is to produce a clear, odourless, shelf-stable oil that looks consistent on a supermarket shelf. But this multi-step process strips away much of what made the original groundnut nutritious.

The Key Differences: Side by Side

FeatureWood Pressed Groundnut OilRefined Groundnut Oil
Extraction methodTraditional ghani / cold pressChemical solvent + high heat
Chemicals usedNoneHexane solvent, caustic soda
Natural nutrientsPreserved (Vit E, antioxidants)Largely destroyed
ColourGolden / amberPale yellow / clear
AromaRich, nutty, authenticOdourless (removed)
TasteStrong, flavourfulBland / neutral
Smoke point~160–170°C~230°C (heat-processed)
Shelf life6–12 months18–24 months (preservatives)
Adulteration riskTraceable, minimalHigher in unbranded variants
PriceHigher (small-batch, artisan)Lower (mass-produced)

Why Nutrients Matter More Than You Think

Here is what refined oil processing actually destroys:

Vitamin E (tocopherols): Groundnuts are naturally rich in Vitamin E, a powerful antioxidant that protects cells from damage. High-temperature deodorization during refining significantly degrades this. Wood pressed oil retains it.

Natural antioxidants: Polyphenols present in raw groundnuts are heat-sensitive. They protect against inflammation and oxidative stress. Refined oil loses most of these during bleaching and deodorization.

Phytosterols: These plant compounds help reduce LDL (bad) cholesterol naturally. Refining reduces phytosterol content considerably.

Resveratrol: Found in groundnut skin and seed, this compound has been linked to heart health. It does not survive industrial refining.

When you cook with wood-pressed groundnut oil, you are not just adding fat to your food—you are adding a nutrient profile. When you cook with refined oil, you are adding processed fat, often with residues from the refining process.

What About the Smoke Point Concern?

This is the most common argument in favor of refined oil: “Refined oil has a higher smoke point, so it’s safer for frying.”

Let’s address this directly.

Wood pressed groundnut oil has a smoke point of approximately 160–170°C. Refined groundnut oil reaches around 230°C. For deep frying at very high temperatures, this difference does matter.

However, most Indian home cooking — tadka, sautéing, shallow frying, and even moderate deep frying — happens between 150°C and 180°C. Wood-pressed groundnut oil handles this range comfortably.

More importantly, when refined oils are heated to their high smoke points repeatedly, the process of oxidation creates harmful compounds, including aldehydes and trans fats, that have been linked to inflammation and cardiovascular issues. A lower smoke point oil used within its safe range is a healthier choice than a high smoke point oil pushed to its limits.

The practical answer: For everyday cooking—curries, stir fries, tadkas, rice dishes, and pickles—wood-pressed groundnut oil is excellent. For occasional high-heat deep frying, you can either use it at moderate temperatures or simply keep a separate small quantity of a high-smoke-point fat for those instances.

Taste: This One Is No Contest

If you have grown up in a Telugu or South Indian household, you know the smell of fresh groundnut oil heating in an iron kadai. That aroma triggers something — it smells like your grandmother’s kitchen.

Refined oil has no smell. It has been deodorized by design. You lose the distinctive nuttiness that makes dishes like pesarattu, peanut chutney, dals, and pickles taste authentic.

Wood-pressed groundnut oil carries the full flavor profile of the groundnut. It enhances food rather than just carrying heat.

The Chemical Residue Question

Cold-pressed / wood-pressed oils use zero solvents. The oil is extracted purely by mechanical pressure.

Refined oils manufactured using hexane extraction may carry trace hexane residues. Hexane is a petroleum-derived solvent. While regulatory limits exist, the fact that a solvent was part of the production process at all is a concern for health-conscious consumers—especially those buying for children and elderly family members.

Is Wood-Pressed Oil Worth the Higher Price?

Let’s reframe this question. The real cost comparison is not ₹X per litre. It is ₹X per meal cooked versus the long-term cost of poor nutrition.

Wood-pressed groundnut oil is typically priced 40–60% higher than refined oil. But consider:

  • A 1-litre bottle lasts an average family 3–4 weeks for regular cooking
  • The cost difference per meal is often ₹3–5
  • You are paying for zero chemicals, retained nutrients, authentic taste, and a product made by a small MSME-approved producer—not a mass-scale factory

For families that have made the switch, the reasons they stay with wood-pressed oil are consistent: better taste, trust in the ingredients, and the peace of mind that comes from knowing exactly how their cooking oil was made.

Why Srikruti Naturals Wood-Pressed Groundnut Oil?

At Srikruti Naturals, our groundnut oil is:

  • Extracted using traditional wood pressing methods — no heat, no chemicals, no shortcuts
  • MSME Government of India approved — a verified, accountable business, not an unregulated seller
  • Filtered through gravity only—no bleaching, no deodorisation, no additives
  • Stored in food-grade steel containers and delivered in food-grade packaging
  • Made to order—we do not hold large stocks of pre-processed oil waiting on a shelf

Every bottle carries the aroma, colour, and nutrient profile of freshly pressed groundnuts. That is our commitment and our USP.

The Verdict

If you are cooking for health and taste—and most Indian families are—wood-pressed groundnut oil is the better choice.

It is more nutritious, free of chemical residues, richer in flavor, and made using a process that has sustained Indian families for generations. The slightly higher price is a small and worthwhile investment in what goes into your family’s food every single day.

Refined oil wins on price, shelf life, and very-high-heat frying. For everything else—and for families that care about what is actually in their food—wood-pressed groundnut oil is the clear answer.

Ready to Make the Switch?

Order fresh wood-pressed groundnut oil directly from Srikruti Naturals. MSME approved. Zero chemicals. Delivered to your door in Hyderabad.

📞 Call or WhatsApp: 9912770600
🛒 Order online: srikrutinaturals.com/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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