Author Topic: Bought an oil press It gives meaning to the value the ancients placed on oil  (Read 1062 times)

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Offline bilmac

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I bought an oil press from Lehman's. Now I understand a little better why pouring oil over someones head till it dripped off his beard was a big thing. I pressed about a gallon of safflower bird seed and got maybe a 1/2 pint of oil. Add that effort to the work of growing harvasting and threshing the seed makes oil  pretty valuable stuff.
 
I believe being able to make my own oil could be important in my future if going to the store becomes out of the question though. I've only got 3 acres that I can grow anything on so raising any kind of livestock for fat would be pretty inefficient, a few chickens at the most.

Offline BUGEYE

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can you grow olive trees where you live??
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Offline spooked

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I bought an oil press from Lehman's. Now I understand a little better why pouring oil over someones head till it dripped off his beard was a big thing. I pressed about a gallon of safflower bird seed and got maybe a 1/2 pint of oil. Add that effort to the work of growing harvasting and threshing the seed makes oil  pretty valuable stuff.
 
I believe being able to make my own oil could be important in my future if going to the store becomes out of the question though. I've only got 3 acres that I can grow anything on so raising any kind of livestock for fat would be pretty inefficient, a few chickens at the most.
Maybe potbelly pigs, butchered three that I finished on all the corn they could eat and they had this humongus fat layer when I slaughtered them. render'd
Over 12 gal lard from 3 potbellie bars, never seen anything like it before in my life...
Lost between sunrise and sunset yesterday-one golden hour...never to be found or reclaimed:-(

Offline BUGEYE

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I bought an oil press from Lehman's. Now I understand a little better why pouring oil over someones head till it dripped off his beard was a big thing. I pressed about a gallon of safflower bird seed and got maybe a 1/2 pint of oil. Add that effort to the work of growing harvasting and threshing the seed makes oil  pretty valuable stuff.
 
I believe being able to make my own oil could be important in my future if going to the store becomes out of the question though. I've only got 3 acres that I can grow anything on so raising any kind of livestock for fat would be pretty inefficient, a few chickens at the most.
Maybe potbelly pigs, butchered three that I finished on all the corn they could eat and they had this humongus fat layer when I slaughtered them. render'd
Over 12 gal l;ard from 3 potbellie bars, never seen anything like it before in my life...
yeah, we rendered a lot of lard when we killed hogs.  nowadays, most hogs are the bacon type, long and lean.  you're the first I've heard that butchered pot-bellies.  I thought people just had'em as pets.
Give me liberty, or give me death
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Offline blind ear

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After you pressed the seeds did you try to extract any more oil from the pulp? May be able to recover more oil if you boiled or pressure cooked the seed and then let the stuff settle and the oil float to the top. IF that works you might be able to extract oil from soybeans, I have never tried it. Most oil extraction in commercial facilities uses a solvent to extract the oil but those places have a recovery system to get the solvent back, not a cold pressed process.
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Pot bellied pigs were bred to produce small pigs that a family could consume before the meat and products would spoil. I have never eaten any but have heard that they are quite tasty. I would try one but not one that I had raised as a pet and named of course. ear
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Offline PowPow

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Seems like boiling to get a little extra oil take more energy that what you get out.
Does not seem very sustainable

I have heard that olive trees don't bear fruit for the first 100 years; you plant item for future generations to enjoy.
don't know if that is true; heard it from a preacher, not a botanist..
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Offline BUGEYE

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the official olive tree web site said 3 to 12 years, depending......
I just know that I love olives and their oil.
Give me liberty, or give me death
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Give me liberty, or give me death
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Offline bilmac

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No olive trees in Wyo. The cake after I pressed it seemed totally dry, like you couldn't get another drop of oil out of a bushel of the stuff. Supposed to make good animal protian suppliment, it's kind of like the cake some cattlemen feed. Looks like a dog t!!!! though.
 
 I hadn't thought about mini pigs that could be a good idea, I can't do any livestock [well I have some bees] because we don't live out to the place. If the country doesn't get destroyed by the politicians, we may never move.

Offline blind ear

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What kind of press did you buy?
A comercial press on utube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p8EW0-k30zk
This guy said he presses soybeans. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=25ibz2WnP5Y&feature=related
Oath Keepers: start local
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“It is no coincidence that the century of total war coincided with the century of central banking.” – Ron Paul, End the Fed
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An economic crash like the one of the 1920s is the only thing that will get the US off of the road to Socialism that we are on and give our children a chance at a future with freedom and possibility of economic success.
-
everyone hears but very few see. (I can't see either, I'm not on the corporate board making rules that sound exactly the opposite of what they mean, plus loopholes) ear
"I have seen the enemy and I think it's us." POGO
St Judes Childrens Research Hospital

Offline bilmac

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No no my press is just a little hand cranked job. Lehman's has their catalog on line. Their press costs a couple hundred bucks. It is made largly of standard pipe fittings, but the screw auger would probably cost $150 to have a machinist make.
 
 It works pretty good, but you have to have a a little oil lamp heating it. This caused some of my first oil to get sooty. I learned better, but the little lamp and all the oil around makes me worry safety a bit. I will change things around a little next time I press.

Offline spooked

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No olive trees in Wyo. The cake after I pressed it seemed totally dry, like you couldn't get another drop of oil out of a bushel of the stuff. Supposed to make good animal protian suppliment, it's kind of like the cake some cattlemen feed. Looks like a dog t!!!! though.
 
 I hadn't thought about mini pigs that could be a good idea, I can't do any livestock [well I have some bees] because we don't live out to the place. If the country doesn't get destroyed by the politicians, we may never move.

Two vienna weinie  cans of corn a day, supplemented by a little grass or weeds is about all it takes to feed one...On days they get the kitchen garbage , the corn is omitted @ that feeding...gotta find me some more pb's...bin eating peoples grown pets they tire of...:-)
Lost between sunrise and sunset yesterday-one golden hour...never to be found or reclaimed:-(