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I bought Coconut milk (88% coconut and rest water) in a sealed can, when I opened it the solid where already separated from the liquid. The solid part was at the top quite thick like frozen coconut oil.

It tastes perhaps (I am not sure) a little bit acidic. Has the coconut milk spoilt? Is there any use of it or I should just throw it? Can consuming it be harmful?

Porcupine
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1 Answers1

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I didn't notice an exact duplicate of this question anywhere, but it's quite common for canned coconut milk to separate leaving an opaque white solid layer of fat and solids, and a thin watery/syrup layer of cloudy coconut water.

Coconut water is naturally a little tart, so I don't find that concerning. If the can is in date and showed no signs of swelling or leakage, then I'm thinking it's fine.

But do what makes you feel comfortable/safe. And to avoid this next time, thoroughly shake the can before opening.

kitukwfyer
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    Before you shake the can look at your recipe, some call for spooning the cream off the top and frying it off with pastes or spices. – GdD Sep 17 '21 at 16:05
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    @GdD It sounds like frying stuff in coconut oil. – Porcupine Sep 17 '21 at 18:51
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    A well split can of coconut milk will not mix by shaking it. It will need stiring at least. – Willeke Sep 17 '21 at 21:29
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    @Willeke: Absolutely. On the other hand, for many recipes (curries, soups, stews) it doesn’t need mixing — it will mix during cooking anyway. – PLL Sep 18 '21 at 08:34
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    Normally I find it very pleasant to open canned coconut milk because there is almost nothing stuck to the lid (because there is a solid layer of fat at the top). Shaking it before opening will make can-opening much messier and less satisfying, I would never do that. – theonlygusti Sep 18 '21 at 22:23