Ebooks doTERRA eBook Essential Oils and Cooking | Page 9

Don’t drop essential oils directly into the dish Once you’ve decided how much of an essential oil to use in a recipe, it is important that you don’t add the oil directly to the dish, bowl, or pan, but drop the oil onto a spoon first. When pouring essential oils, it is easy for Remember: You can always more than one drop to sneak out of the bottle, so if you hold the bottle add more oil, but once directly over your dish, you might get more oil than you intended. By you’ve added a drop of pouring the oil into a spoon first, you can ensure that you get exactly one drop (or whatever amount you need), before adding it to the dish. If you find it difficult to get exact amounts when cooking with essential oils, essential oil to your food, you cannot take it back. it can be helpful to use an oil dropper to help give you precise droplets. It is also important to remember to put the lid on essential oil bottles when you are not using them during the cooking process. Cooking can get messy, and ensuring that the lid is on your essential oil bottles will prevent you from accidentally knocking over a bottle and losing precious oil. Flavor guide for cooking with essential oils When it comes to flavoring your food using essential oils, the options are limitless. Essential oils can help add potent flavor to nearly any drink, dessert, soup, meat, bread—the list goes on and on. If you are just getting started, the flavor guide below can help give you ideas of how to pair certain essential oils with your favorite foods and bevera ges. Citrus Common oils: Bergamot, Grapefruit, Lemon, Lime, Tangerine, Wild Orange Useful for: beverages, baked goods, yogurt, dip, salsa, and zest Flavor description: bright, sweet, tangy, refreshing Citrus oils can add a sweet, refreshing flavor to beverages like tea, water, or smoothies, and can brighten up any recipe for baked goods like scones, muffins, or cookies. Citrus oils can also be useful for adding flavor to yogurt, or your favorite dips and salsa recipes. Consider using citrus oils in recipes that call for lemon, lime, orange, or tangerine zest. If the recipe calls for the zest of the entire fruit, it will likely take a few drops of essential oil to match the amount of flavor needed. Remember, citrus essential oils are taken from the peel of the fruit—not the juice. For this reason, it is easy to substitute citrus oils for recipes that call for fruit zest, but not necessarily for recipes that call for fruit juice.