How to Open a Coconut

JustinAll Recipes, Culinary Tips & Techniques, Produce Recipes 5 Comments

Like opening an oyster, opening a coconut is pretty simple once you learn the basic technique.  A 4 acre island in Belize was the perfect spot to get plenty of practice.  Here’s how:

1. Get a coconut and a cleaver or machete.

2. Hold the coconut by the stem side and at a 45-degree angle, chop into the top of the coconut (photo at right below). With the blade in the coconut, push to peel the outer green layer. (left photo).   (Our fresh coconuts only need to have a little bit peeled).


3. What is under the skin is much more tender. Still at a 45 degree angle, use the knife to slice away the rest of the white flesh to peel it away from the hard nut.

4. Flip the coconut to trim the stem-side to make it flat so it stands up. About 1 inch from the end chop in at a 90-degree angle. Peel away the green skin…then shave away the white part to make a flat bottom.




5. Hold the bottom. At a 45-degree angle, chop into the top of the hard sphere near the top. Chop lightly…it will cause a round chunk of the top piece to pop off.

6. Drink with a straw or straight out of the nut.

7. If you want to eat the meat, chop the nut in half after you are done drinking and spoon out the meat.

There are two types of coconuts (in Central America at least):
1. Trunks with a thin base: these have a thin layer of tender meat inside and are good for drinking and scraping out the meat.

2. Trunks with a fat base: these have a thick hard layer of coconut meat and are good for cooking.  This type of meat is also what coconut milk and coconut oil are made from.

Comments 5

  1. Hey Crabby … Good luck getting a machete and watch those fingers. I opened my first coconut highly intoxicated on a nicaraguan island holding the coconut in my hand. I managed to keep all my fingers, but that could’ve been ugly. 😉

  2. Pingback: The Crabby Cook – Jessica Harper | Going Coconuts In Florida

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