Here’s the quick but flavorful answer — olive oil is great, but it’s not a “one-oil-fits-all” solution in professional kitchens. Chefs pick their oils based on flavor, smoke point, and cooking method.
🔍 Why Chefs Don’t Use Olive Oil for Everything
- 🔥 Smoke Point Issues
- Extra virgin olive oil (EVOO) has a relatively low smoke point (~190–210 °C / 375–410 °F).
- High-heat cooking (deep-frying, searing) can cause it to burn, giving food a bitter, unpleasant taste.
- Refined olive oil has a higher smoke point but less flavor, so chefs save EVOO for finishing or low-heat cooking.
- 💰 Cost Factor
- Good quality EVOO is expensive. Using it for deep-frying is not cost-effective in restaurants.
- 🌿 Strong Flavor
- Olive oil’s distinct taste doesn’t suit every dish. For delicate recipes (e.g., Asian stir-fries, light desserts), its flavor can overpower other ingredients.
- 🍳 Culinary Tradition
- Chefs often match the oil to the cuisine—sesame oil for Asian dishes, ghee for Indian food, clarified butter for French sauces, etc.
🍳 What Chefs Use Instead (Depending on the Task)
| Cooking Style | Preferred Oils | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Deep Frying | Peanut oil, sunflower oil, refined canola oil | High smoke point, neutral flavor |
| Searing / High Heat | Grapeseed oil, avocado oil, clarified butter (ghee) | Heat stability |
| Baking | Neutral vegetable oil, melted butter, coconut oil | Doesn’t overpower baked goods |
| Stir-Frying | Peanut oil, sesame oil, rice bran oil | High heat + cultural flavor |
| Salads / Drizzling | EVOO, walnut oil, flaxseed oil | Flavor and aroma |
| Sauces & Dressings | EVOO, hazelnut oil, grapeseed oil | Smooth texture and taste |
| Indian / Middle Eastern | Ghee, mustard oil, coconut oil | Authentic taste and aroma |
💡 Pro Chef Tip: Many restaurants keep at least 3–4 different oils in rotation—one for high-heat work, one for neutral cooking, one for flavor finishing, and specialty oils for regional cuisines.

