|
Definition of Lard oil
1. Noun. Oil consisting chiefly of olein that is expressed from lard and used especially as a lubricant, cutting oil or illuminant.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Lard Oil
Literary usage of Lard oil
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Analyst (1887)
"If some of the lard oil has not been pressed out, the high iodine equivalent of
lard oil— from 75 to 80—so raises the one equivalent of the thin oily lard, ..."
2. The Industrial Resources, Etc., of the Southern and Western States by James Dunwoody Brownson De Bow (1852)
"We follow now to the manufacture of lard oil, which is accomplished by ...
There are probably thirty lard oil factories here, ou a scale of more or less ..."
3. Report of the Secretary of Agriculture by United States Dept. of Agriculture (1867)
"Eleven million pounds of lard were run into lard oil last year, two-sevenths of
... lard oil, beside being sold for what it is, entera largely into the ..."
4. Foods and Their Adulteration: Origin, Manufacture, and Composition of Food by Harvey Washington Wiley (1917)
"In the manufacture of lard oil a residue is left of a much higher melting point
... Lard and lard oil from animals fed on cottonseed meal will give a faint ..."
5. Chemical Technology and Analysis of Oils, Fats, and Waxes by Julius Lewkowitsch (1904)
"444) lard stearine and lard oil are obtained. Lard stearine is used in the United
States in the manufacture of margarine ("oleomargarine"). ..."
6. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for by American Philosophical Society (1885)
"While experimenting with the test I thought it might be of service in detecting
cotton seed oil in lard oil ; accordingly the sample of chemically pure lard ..."
7. Merchants' Magazine and Commercial Review by William B. Dana (1849)
"We learn from the Cincinnati papers, that there are upwards of thirty large
establishments in that city employed in the manufacture of lard oil, ..."