FUNX650
New member
- Dec 1, 2010
- 21,057
- 1
Thanks!Well done Bob.
Since I have been a life long student of food science I look at ingredients for the purpose they play.Baking is done with formulas and savory cooking is an open canvas.So it begs the question on car wax and the ingredients they contain.I realize there are many mitigating factors such as cost and availability.Maybe some manufactures use less expensive ingredients in the form of solvents and fillers to keep costs down both in manufacturing and to the consumer.
I know extra virgin coconut oil is one of the latest culinary trends yet expensive and wonder if that will affect the wax production world.
Don't know the impact that an increase in the culinary use of "extra virgin" coconut oil---Wait a minute:
How is possible for the "meat" of the coconut to have been never yet squeezed...to have been never yet squeezed: even more?
Is this just another marketing buzz-words tactic?...But I digress.
Again:
Don't know the impact this may have on production of waxes...
But with coconut oil having such a low melting point, it's particular use in wax formulations is probably limited
to other functions (I'd almost bet one of them is as a "lubricant") of a wax formulation than, let's say: Protection.
Zymol, for one, and many surfboard/ski waxes list coconut
oil as an ingredient. So does some leather-care products.
IMO:
If the culinary increased usage of coconut oil would impact any industries...
I would pick the health and beauty industries as the likely candidates.
With that in mind; and, since I mentioned the lubricant properties of Coconut oil:
Is coconut oil compatible with latex?

Bob