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The best oils for high-heat Indian cooking, ranked by smoke point

etimes.in | Last updated on - Nov 1, 2025, 09:05 IST
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The best oils for high-heat Indian cooking, ranked by smoke point

Indian cooking doesn’t believe in subtlety. We like a bit of theatre in the kitchen, the hiss of mustard seeds, the swirl of tadka, the bold shimmer of oil that makes aloo fry just right. Push the wrong one too far and it’ll smoke, break down, and lose both its flavour and its goodness. The key? The smoke point, the temperature when an oil starts to burn. The higher it is, the better it holds its own against our fiery stoves. Scroll down to see which oils can truly take the heat and which ones fizzle out too soon.

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Why it matters

Choosing the right oil isn’t just about taste, it’s about chemistry. When oil crosses its smoke point, it doesn’t just lose flavour; it starts releasing free radicals and compounds that can be harsh on the body. That smoky bitterness you smell? It’s oil breaking down. The right pick keeps nutrients intact, flavours balanced, and your kitchen free of that burnt haze. In a cuisine that thrives on heat, the oil you pour first decides how the rest of the meal turns out.

3/6

Refined avocado oil

It’s not exactly a desi staple, but refined avocado oil behaves beautifully under heat. With a smoke point close to 250°C, it stays steady when the kadhai’s in full chaos. There’s no heavy flavour, no aftertaste, just clean cooking that lets your spices lead. Think of it as the quiet professional, expensive, yes, but reliable when you need a neutral base that won’t burn before the onions brown.

4/6

Ghee

When in doubt, go back to ghee. Clarified butter has been doing this job long before anyone cared about smoke points. Once the milk solids are gone, ghee can handle heat close to 250°C without complaint. It adds depth, aroma, and that unmistakable golden edge to everything - dal tadka, masala dosas, even simple rotis brushed warm. It’s rich, yes, but also remarkably stable. Sometimes, the old ways really do know best.

5/6

Refined peanut oil

If your kitchen leans on deep-fried cravings - pakoras, puris, samosas, peanut oil’s your friend. It holds firm around 230°C and barely changes flavour as it cooks. There’s something comforting about it, familiar, dependable, always ready to take on a heavy batch of bhajiyas. Just be sure it’s refined; the unrefined, roasted kind smokes faster and brings its own strong nutty note.

6/6

Rice bran oil

​Rice bran oil doesn’t shout for attention. But with a smoke point around 230°C and a mild, buttery flavour, it fits right into Indian kitchens. It’s heart-friendly too, thanks to oryzanol, a natural compound that helps manage cholesterol. Ideal for stir-fries, pressure-cooking, or anything that needs steady heat and subtlety, it’s the kind of modern oil that blends tradition with science - no fuss, no smoke.

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