Non-Stick Cooking Spray Substitute

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Non-stick cooking spray is convenient.  It’s also expensive and full of propellants; finding one made without genetically modified soybean or canola oil is almost impossible.

My solution?  Grease the pan with shortening.  I buy non-hydrogenated vegetable shortening (it’s a great big tub of palm kernel oil)  and use that anywhere I would normally use cooking spray.

shortening in a jar

I use a silicone pastry brush from the dollar store and just paint on a no-stick coating.  I hate washing the greasy brush, though, so I keep it in a jar with a little shortening.  Cheap and natural!

Works for me!  For more Works for Me Wednesday tips check out We Are THAT Family!

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7 Comment(s)

  1. thanks for this tip

    angie | Jan 27, 2010 | Reply

  2. I am totally going to try this!!! Thanks for a great tip.

    Lisa | Jan 27, 2010 | Reply

  3. I like the idea of leaving the pastry brush in with the shortening. That makes it more convenient.

    Meghan | Jan 27, 2010 | Reply

  4. I have a son with medical issues that precludes us from using oils and shortenings. I was totall confused on what to do about things that need the pan to be greased in some way. Then I was given a great piece of advice…parchment paper. It was used for so long, and is still used in many bakeries, I don’t know why I didn’t think of it on my own. Now we use parchment paper for anything that we would normally grease. Works awesome.

    Just thought I would throw another idea out there in the same line of thinking. Hope it helps someone.

    Kari | Jan 28, 2010 | Reply

  5. You are so smart! This will go in my list of “I just gotta try that”.

    Birdie | Jan 28, 2010 | Reply

  6. I had a hard time finding a jar that I could cover, because the handle of pastry brush was too long. Mason jars or other jars saved from foods were all too short. I finally found one at Ikea.

    Milehimama | Jan 28, 2010 | Reply

  7. I love the idea of keeping the brush in the shortening! My mom used to use one of those brushes every time she greased a pan, mainly because she is not the one who washes dishes; my dad hated trying to get that brush clean.

    I grease pans by just pouring a small amount of liquid oil in the pan and rubbing it around with my fingers. Moisturizes my cuticles, too! You do have to do this RIGHT before pouring in the batter, though, or the oil will slide down the sides and they won’t be greased well enough. If I need to grease pans in advance, I use butter.

    'Becca | Feb 1, 2010 | Reply

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