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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Opening the Coconut
The brown coconut you may find in the grocery store has been removed from its packing crate. The coconut palm grows nuts that are amazingly equipped for ocean voyaging - able to withstand days or weeks at sea, the crashing of waves, and ultimately being storm tossed onto a distant shore. You think opening one is going to be like peeling an apple?? The first method of coconut opening applies to mature nuts either well yellowed and perhaps already fallen from the tree, or those that are totally brown and fibrous. This method was bestowed to me by Dr. Robert Halley of the United States Geological Survey, St. Petersburg, Florida, to whom I am eternally grateful. Grasp the coconut husk firmly with both hands so the coconut stem axis is vertical. Strike the coconut firmly against a rock or other hard surface - almost throwing it down. Flip the coconut 180 degrees and repeat. After twenty or thirty blows, the nut will tear loose from the husk and the husk will part into three pieces which may be torn away from the nut by hand. It really works. The second method of coconut opening is this: take the coconut in one hand - holding it near the stem-end. Use a large fish knife or machette to €śwhittle€ť the opposite end of the husk to a point. After whittling some husk away, the surface of the nut will be exposed in some cuts. This helps one judge the depth to strike for subsequent cuts with the blade. Continue to whittle until about the bottom 1/3 of the husk is cut away and the outer surface of the nut is exposed all around. Hold the coconut in the palm of the hand with the whittled point up, and with one stroke, strike this point off flat. A perfect outcome is that the blade will cut through the nut shell, but not completely through the nut meat inside. Then use the point of the blade to cut out a plug of the nut meat. For a flourish, this plug of coconut may be skewered on the blade tip and eaten immediately. A water nut will be so full that there is no air space. An immediate refreshing drink is called for. Once a sip or a gulp or two is gone, a suitable quantity of rum may be poured into the coconut to dilute the water and the resulting mixture may be sipped at leisure. In places where coconuts are abundant, some homes have a wooden or metal stake in the ground with a sharp tip poking up, which they use to husk the nuts open. I infer this from the pile of discarded husks that almost invariably accompany such a stake. Cracking the Nut If you are just drinking a water nut, there is no point in cracking it - just lop off the top as Rafael would do, but whether you top the nut to drain it or gouge out one or more of the three eyes to drain it, it still must be cracked to get out the meat. This is easily and neatly done with a hammer by holding the nut in the palm of the left hand and tapping the nut firmly with the hammer. This is also the method of opening stone-crab claws. Once the nut cracks it will sound like a broken baseball bat when tapped - or more accurately, like a broken coconut. The crack may be €śchased€ť around the nut with successive taps until the nut breaks into halves. One method to reach the coconut meat from a drained nut, was to split the nut and whittled husk with one whack after the drinker was finished drinking, then any nut meat could be easily reached. My machete is apparently not quite as sharp. You can also trim shavings of the green husk into spoons for removing the coconut meat. Removing the Meat When the coconut is not fully ripened and the meat is not firm, it may be scooped from the shell with a spoon. A heavy duty spoon with a relatively sharp edge seems to work best. I have obtained such a spoon and sharpened the edge with a file. It works quite well. For the harder nut meat, a paring knife is useful for cutting the nut meat into 1€ł X 1/4€ł chunks and prying them out. There is a thin brown skin between the meat and the shell and this usually adheres to the coconut meat. It tastes just like coconut and does not affect the texture, so not to worry. The meat of a coconut contains flavorful oil and emulsifier. The milk of a coconut is watery and clear. Coconut milk in a store is milky and sweet. I guess this is because some of the €śjuice€ť has been extracted from the coconut meat. I have also achieved this in a primitive fashion by placing some meat into a food processor and chopping it very fine. Then, a small amount of coconut milk may be added to the chopped nut to €śwash€ť it. The milk that drains or is squeezed from this mixture is quite milky and sweet. Local coconut processors collect large quanities of coconut meat and crush it somehow and let the juice stand. The €śmilk€ť separates to some extent and the floating material is then cooked to remove water. A clear oil results. This oil, coco oil, is the essence of coconuts and is marvellous stuff. You can cook with it, use it on a salad like olive oil, or rub it on your skin like a lotion. A few drops is good in about anything. Coconut oil can be made from the nuts of a tree with Lethal Yellowing, but it takes about ten times as many nuts to get the same amount of oil. Coco oil - never for sale openly, only if you know to ask and know who to ask - has become quite scarce in Belize and the Bay Islands of Honduras, unfortunately. http;//www.floridakeysrecipes.info |
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hc wrote:
> The meat of a coconut contains flavorful oil and emulsifier. The milk > of a coconut is watery and clear. Coconut milk in a > store is milky and sweet. I guess this is because some of the > €śjuice€ť has been extracted from the coconut meat. This demonstrates that the person who wrote this monolith has no idea what coconut milk is. Brian -- If televison's a babysitter, the Internet is a drunk librarian who won't shut up. -- Dorothy Gambrell (http://catandgirl.com) |
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"hc" > wrote:
> Opening the Coconut > The brown coconut you may find in the grocery store has been removed from > its packing crate. The coconut palm grows nuts that are amazingly equipped > for ocean voyaging - able to withstand days or weeks at sea, the crashing > of > waves, and ultimately being storm tossed onto a distant shore. You think > opening one is going to be like peeling an apple?? I've seen a much easier way to get the husk off at my brother's place. He gave the coconuts to his three dogs to play with. They were Jack Russell terriers. The older male dog would go wild with the coconut, grabbing the husk with his teeth and shaking his head back and forth like he had a rabbit or something. Eventually he would strip all the husk off the coconut, so that it looked just like the ones in the supermarket. It was quite a sight to see. I always wondered why he didn't get splinters in his lips from doing this. The dog is elderly now and his coconut husking days are over. It's just as well, because the source of coconuts is gone, as they came from a tree at my parent's house which has been sold. -- wff_ng_7 (at) verizon (dot) net |
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