CopyKat Answers – What is Oleo Margarine?

a tub of oleo margarine


I actually get asked this question very frequently, what is Oleo? A lot of older recipes call for Oleo.

We all love recipes that we grew up with, but sometimes they have unfamiliar ingredients. You may love digging through old recipes too, but you have to wonder what some of these ingredients are.

Oleo is actually an old brand of margarine. Of course, if you are a regular crossword solver, you are probably familiar with the word.

It’s eminently suitable as an answer to the clue “margarine” in four letters because it contains three vowels.

About Oleomargarine

Oleomargarine is how this margarine product would originally have been named. Margarine was originally made with beef fat and was intended to be a cheaper and less perishable option than butter.

In due course, vegetable oils such as soybean and cottonseed oils came to replace animal fats.

When Oleomargarine first came out, it wasn’t even yellow; it was white. It came with a capsule of yellow coloring if you wanted your oleomargarine to look like butter.

Margarine and the Fight with the Dairy Industry

Margarine wasn’t allowed to color itself to look like butter because the dairy industry didn’t want people to confuse it with butter. They went into a big tizzy and managed to get legislation passed against the coloring of margarine.

In Wisconsin, the Dairy State, and six other states, margarine was actually made illegal. And, three states stipulated that margarine should be dyed a bright pink!

Such laws stayed in effect for many years and you can read an interesting article from the New York Times archive about them.

Who Created Margarine?

Margarine was actually created in 1869 during the time of the Franco-Prussian wars by a French chemist named Hippolyte Mège-Mouriès. His invention was in response to a competition run by the French government under Napoleon III.

They wanted a cheap and stable substitute for butter and were offering a big prize to anyone who could pull it off. Fast forward to World War II – margarine increased in popularity due to butter shortages.

Other Butter Substitutes

While butter is a dairy product, margarine today is typically made from hydrogenated vegetable oils, which have been proven to have adverse effects on health.

Read more about why butter is better for you. So, if you buy margarine, read the ingredients carefully. However, there are other butter substitutes available for those who have allergies to dairy or just wish to eat dairy-free.

What is a substitute for Oleo?

You can substitute butter for Oleo.

Can you substitute butter for Oleo?

Yes, you can.

What is the difference between oleo and butter?

Butter is made from dairy, and oleo is made from vegetable oils.

Continue Reading Those Old Recipes

So next time you read an old recipe, and you see an ingredient called Oleo, you don’t have to wonder what it is anymore. You’ll know that Oleo is just an old word for margarine and you can swap it out for butter.

Of course, your kids will miss out on the fun of adding in the yellow coloring!

Love that buttery taste? Try these recipes!

About Stephanie Manley

I recreate your favorite restaurant recipes, so you can prepare these dishes at home. I help you cook dinner, and serve up dishes you know your family will love. You can find most of the ingredients for all of the recipes in your local grocery store.

Stephanie is the author of CopyKat.com's Dining Out in the Home, and CopyKat.com's Dining Out in the Home 2.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Roger

    We grew up in Wisconsin where oleo was illegal back in the 50s. Grandpa and grandma would make a “run” to Illinois every few months and come back with several cases of oleo. At a family gathering this booty would be divided up among family members. Oleo was way cheaper and most of us could not tell the difference when cooking or baking from butter.

  2. Stephen Hogan

    My grandma sent me and my dad to the store with a shopping list that said “oleo.” When we came back empty handed she couldn’t believe we didn’t know that oleo was margarine. It hasn’t been called that since Kennedy, grandma!

  3. Gina

    I have a frosting recipe of my mom and grandma that is really fussy. You have to beat it for 15 minutes and butter doesn’t work as a substitute. Margarine used to work but they keep changing the formulas/ingredients so I can’t find anything that will make this frosting stay together. It gets watery and clumpy instead of creamy and fluffy.

    Does ANYONE sell an old formula of Oleo? Is there a copycat way to make it myself???

    • its1110

      Sounds like you should try tallow or suet, if you really care to go to that much looking. Crisco would be worth a try. Perhaps lard. (But lard is not of the quality it once was.)

      I have these ideas in mind because tallow and suet (and lard) make superior crusts (and fat-based puddings), and that may also be the secret for the frosting.

      We do not feed stock animals the same diet as at one time. I suspect we are no longer producing the same quality of animal fats as in the past. I think this is particularly the case with schmaltz, that is chicken fat.

  4. Lawrence

    Just stumbled across this article and OMG I remember when my mother always used white oleo. It would be my job to mix the colouring into the oleo so it would look like butter. I wonder now what was in the colouring?? I’m sure it was good for you 😉

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