making coconut oil

in Plant Power (Vegan)10 months ago (edited)

when we arrive at our indian house there are plenty of coconuts awaiting us. from the oldest dry ones we make cocnut oil. this process requires many steps, none are particularly difficult but it is quite time consuming.


lots of whole dry coconuts need to be peeled


i use a simple but effective low-tech tool. with it i can peel about 150 cocnuts in an hour. i press the coconut onto the sharp pointed top and lift the lever to split the husk. turn the coconut and repeat a couple of times


and the outer husk can be pulled away


that gives us a pile of husks which can be used as firewood or sold for the coir. unfortunately during the covid nonsense the local coir factory closed down and never reopened


now the hard shell must be removed.


for that i use a typical indian chopper and get the whole inner coconut
loose in 1 or 2 quick blows.


so now we have lots of shells. these are good for grilling they burn very hot due to the oil in the shell but they are slow to ignite and last just long enough to cook a meal.


now we have baskets full of coconuts that need to be chopped and graded.


the best quality ones we keep as halves and use almost daily when making curries and more


the others get chopped into smaller pieces for drying


this one is ideal for food grade coconut oil


some have become brown and will be used to either to make massage oil or the brownest ones used for lamp oil. those that have sprouted and turned black are put in the compost.


when this bucket is filled it's ready to be sun dried


we lay out some plastic on the roof terrace and put the best ones to dry. these we cover with a coarse netting to keep the crows away.


the massage/lamp oil ones are placed open on the terrace. they are not so valuable so if the crows or a monkey or two take some we don't worry much


they dry for at least 3 days in direct sun
food grade copra and


lamp oil grade copra ready to go to the oil mill 2 kms away in town


the owner and the workers are in full swing but luckily there are not so many people delivering their copra today. we have to wait until our turn, about 20 minutes


the lady before us is finishing.


the pressed oil being funneled into her containers.


like most marketing this is a social event with time to chat and look around. once the motor is started the oil mill runs continuously.


the electricity board has it's 'charm'


there is a flour mill beside the oil mill and they both run on the same motor but with separate belts on each side


now they are ready to take our copra. it's hot working the mill so one of the workers is usually shirtless


but all are barefoot


the best copra goes in first


and soon our oil starts pouring down as the miling machine spins. it is filtered first with a coarse strainer. then through a fine one.


small particles clog the flow and need to be removed. that is a sign that we are almost finished.


clumps of pressed remains after the oil is separated can sold to the mill or kept. they can be used to feed cows or chickens or composted and used for fertilizing the coconut trees.


out of 10 kilos copra we get a little more than 6 kilos oil. 3 bottles: food grade. massage and lamp oil. we put them in the sun to settle and clarify. there is still moisture in the oil which evapoarates in the sun . if not the oil will spoil in a few months.


when settled we pour into glass containers for storage and add a little cane jaggery to soak up any remaining moisture this keeps the oil nice and sweet. the bottom dregs needs to settle more in a tall thin bottle.


in one season we can expect about 60 kilos of oil so we need to start over and peel some more coconuts.

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Your content is very nice 👍

This post is really good @eolianpariah2

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There are many ways to make coconut oil, and here's a quick way to make it.
Did you know that in my area the process of making coconut oil is quite long and done traditionally. We usually take the coconut dregs for ferments it, and it becomes an ingredient for cooking.

i would be interested to know your traditional way of making the oil. perhaps you could make a post about it

You are right maybe I can show you the traditional way. It's just that I can no longer find the tool near my house. Maybe if I could find it I would bring it here.

You have a lots of old coconut. The quality is really good for making coconut oil.

Unfortunately here, I can't find the macchine for pressing coconut meat into oil. Our people is not aware to use coconut oil especially for cooking these days.

In my grandmom recipe, we make coconut milk first, then cook them for long time to separate oil, and pulp.

we are only in that house during the northern winter so for the rest of theyear coconuts are riening but not getting used or sold. that is why we have so many old dry ones.

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thanks for the curation
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It is nice to use coconut oil for food as well as for lamps. interesting to people know about how coconut oil is made.

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thanks so much @sirenahippie
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