The Pantry / Coconut milk

Coconut milk

Coconut, pressed to a river of richness.


What it is

Coconut milk is the rich, sweet liquid pressed from grated coconut flesh steeped in warm water — not the thin water inside the nut, which is a different thing. The first pressing (thick) and later ones (thin) vary in richness, and it curdles if boiled hard.

Where it comes from

It belongs to the coastal cooking of the region — Bengal, the south, the west coast — and across maritime Southeast Asia. In the River Delta it enriches prawn and vegetable dishes with a sweet, mellow body.

What it's called

Coconut milk · from narkel/nariyal. Distinct from coconut water (the clear liquid inside the nut).

In the kitchen

Stirred into curries for a sweet, mellow richness — chingri malai curry, the delta's prawn dish, leans on it — and into sweets and drinks. Add it gently and avoid a hard boil, which splits it. Thick 'cream' enriches; thinner milk forms the body of a sauce.

What we know about the claims

As with coconut flesh, it is rich in saturated fat — a flavourful richness rather than a health food. Tinned versions vary in fat; some have additives, worth a label check.

Choosing and buying

Tinned coconut milk in every supermarket and grocer (UK and US); full-fat gives the richest result. Powdered and cartoned versions exist but are thinner.

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