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How to Process Rapeseed (Canola) for Oil: Cleaning, Flaking & Cooking

Quick AnswerRapeseed (canola) is processed for oil in three pretreatment steps: fine-mesh cleaning, flaking or crushing the small seeds, and cooking the flakes to roughly 80–90°C before screw pressing. No dehulling is needed — the seed is too small. Rapeseed typically contains 38–45% oil, so careful conditioning pays off directly in press yield.
How to Process Rapeseed (Canola) for Oil: Cleaning, Flaking & Cooking

Rapeseed Basics

Rapeseed and its low-erucic cousin canola are small round seeds, typically 38–45% oil by weight (industry range). The seed coat is thin and pressed along with the kernel — there is no dehulling step — which makes rapeseed one of the simpler oilseeds to prepare, but the small seed size puts extra weight on cleaning and flaking quality.

Rapeseed Pretreatment LineRapeseed pretreatment cleans the small seed, flakes it to rupture oil cells, then cooks (conditions) it to the right moisture and temperature so the pre-press releases the most oil. Rapeseed Pretreatment LineCleaningremove dust& stonesFlakingcrush tothin flakesCookingcondition heat& moisturePre-pressready forscrew pressRapeseed →To press / extraction
A rapeseed pretreatment line: clean, flake, cook, pre-press.

Step 1 — Fine Cleaning

Clean with a seed cleaning machine fitted with fine mesh, backed by air separation and ideally magnetic removal of tramp metal. Weed seeds and tiny stones travel with rapeseed easily, and at this seed size they pass coarse screens — fine-mesh screening on a vibrating screen is what catches them.

Step 2 — Flaking / Crushing

Pass cleaned seed through flaking rolls (or a crusher on smaller lines). The goal is rupturing the oil cells inside each tiny seed; whole rapeseed presents almost no surface for heat or pressure to work on. Thin, intact flakes are the ideal — they cook evenly and press cleanly.

Video: a screw oil press in our workshop.

Video: a screw oil press in our workshop.

Step 3 — Cooking to 80–90°C

Cook the flakes to roughly 80–90°C in a stack cooker or seed roaster, with moisture conditioning. Cooking completes cell rupture, drops oil viscosity, and helps deactivate the myrosinase enzyme that otherwise degrades oil and meal quality in rapeseed (a step specific to brassica seeds).

From the cooker, material goes hot into the screw press. Full line layout and machine sizing logic is in the complete pretreatment line guide — for rapeseed, substitute the dehulling stage with flaking.

Related Questions

Does rapeseed need dehulling before pressing?

No. The seed is too small to dehull economically and the thin coat presses along with the kernel. Pretreatment effort goes into fine cleaning, flaking and cooking instead.

What temperature is rapeseed cooked at before pressing?

Roughly 80–90°C with moisture conditioning is the common window for hot pressing. It ruptures oil cells, thins the oil, and helps deactivate the enzyme that can taint rapeseed oil and meal.

What is the oil content of rapeseed?

Typically 38–45% by weight (industry range) for modern rapeseed and canola varieties. Press yield depends heavily on flaking and cooking quality, not just seed oil content.

Can you cold press rapeseed?

Yes — cold-pressed rapeseed oil is a recognized premium product, but yield is noticeably lower and the press works harder. Most commercial mills hot-press; cold pressing suits niche, higher-price markets.

What is the difference between rapeseed and canola?

Canola is a rapeseed variety bred for low erucic acid and low glucosinolates, making the oil food-grade by modern standards. From a pretreatment standpoint they are processed the same way.

More on Seed Preparation

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