Make Your Own Coconut Milk/Cream
posted on 12 Jun 2009 16:36 by thaidishes
Background information
Coconuts and coconut trees are used very efficientlyeverywhere they are grown. The wood is used forbuilding, the fronds are used for making roofs, theroot is eaten (Heart of Palm) and the nut is used formany purposes. The outer husk material is used forstuffing in beds, pillows, etc., the hard shell surroundingthe meat is used for making eating and cooking utensils,oil is extracted from the dried meat (Copra), and the juiceis used in cooking and as a refreshing drink. Offhand,I can't think of any other plant or tree with as many uses.
Let 's Making Fresh Coconut Milk/Cream.
Everyone assumes that when a recipe calls for coconut milk
that we all know how to make it from scratch.
Or take it out of a can. Well, just in case there are some people out
there who, have never made fresh coconut milk, here are the basics.
There are two types of fresh coconut milk. Thick or first pressed milk. And thin or second pressed milk.
To make “extra virgin coconut milk” or EVCO as I now call
it, you have to buy a mature coconut (generally those that are just
brown husk outside), and have the man at the market grate it. If your
home still has one of those neat grating contraptions, then grate it
yourself. For every grated coconut, add one cup of lukewarm water (not
hot) and start squeezing to extract the milk. Keep going until the
liquid is nice and thick. Strain through a fine sieve and if you are
particular about
removing
all coconut bits and solids, pass through a cheesecloth. The bits and
solids can alter the texture of your cooked dish. I happen to think
they are fine but others might want really smooth coconut milk. This
first pressing yields a nice milk that is NOWHERE near as thick and
viscous as canned milk. Generally, you can thicken it further by
boiling it down. The squeezing is rather cathartic, a good replacement
for punching a dummy. You can squeeze the grated coconut from several
nuts at the same time. Set aside the EVCO.
From the SAME grated coconut, add 1.5-2.0 cups of
lukewarm water and start squeezing again until you have extracted the
remaining milk.
This
process yields a thinner milk that is typically used at the beginning
of the cooking process for recipes with coconut milk or gata.
The EVCO is added to the dish at a later stage. Make your coconut milk
and use it soon after you squeeze it. While I almost always encourage
people to use the fresh alternative, this is not possible in areas
where you don’t have geriatric coconuts readily available (think
Juneau, Alaska or Paris, France for example) and you must resort to
canned alternatives. Some canned alternatives are pretty good, but they
do tend to be thicker than fresh coconut milk and you just have to
adjust your recipes. I find canned coconut milk an excellent way to
shortcut a decent shrimp or chicken curry recipe. At least now you know
how to do it from scratch if you have to.
จำได้ตอนเด็กๆเคยกินกะน้ำตาล ว่าแต่ไหนซับภาษาไทยของเค้าอะ นี่อยากรู้เรื่องนะเนี่ย
#1 By solapolo on 2009-06-13 08:57