Oil being extracted, Photos by the writer
Walking through the narrow and crowded lanes of Empress Market, Karachi, my eyes spot a variety of bottles of different shapes and sizes; these contained oils ranging in colours from red to orange to dark green. Close by, a man named Javed is extracting oil manually on a two-tiered wooden hand press. On the lower lever of the structure are stored bottles and a container to collect the freshly extracted oil, while at the upper level a big bowl holds the nuts the oil is being extracting from.
It takes half an hour of hard labour to extract oil from a kilogram of almonds, and a great deal of strength too.
“I come here by 8:30am,” says Javed, “and stay till 10pm. I get an average of four to five customers daily and have been in this business since 15 years. There are usually more customers in winter but now it is very hot so business is comparatively low.”
While the market is flooded with various local and multinational brands of oils promising obvious results within a short span of time, many people still opt to ignore these promises and prefer to have the oil extracted in their presence.
Ahmed, a young college student, is waiting while Javed is extracting oil for him. “I don’t know much about oil but my mother sends me here to get almond oil. When it’s extracted in front of us, we are sure of the quality and know that it is free from all impurities, artificial colour, chemicals and perfumes,” he says.
####Oils that nourish your hair, body and skin extracted right in front of your eyes, what you see is what you get
I step into a shop where oil is being machine-extracted.
“People often come to me for freshly extracted almond, sesame, walnut, coconut and black caraway seed (Kalonji) oil and on an average approximately 40 litres of oil is extracted daily,” says Shaheen Iqbal, the shopkeeper, who not only knows his oils well but also their properties, uses, benefits and blending partners.
Almond oil is available in two varieties — bitter and sweet. It is extracted from the kandhari badam that is easily available in the neighbouring shops. While sweet almond oil is priced at Rs2,600 a litre, the bitter variety is priced at Rs1,600 a litre. This oil is not only applied on the skin or massaged into the scalp but being a rich source of calcium, women approaching menopause sometimes consume a teaspoon orally while many others use it for arthritis, lowering cholesterol and osteoporosis.