Watched all the bigger channels on how to make cream of coconut and this is by far the best and most informative! Big shout out to Steve the Bartender for saying where he found the recipe he used in his video!
Thank you! This opens another door on my quest for sugar free or low sugar cocktails! Making this with allulose will yield an extremely low carb version. Diabetics rejoice! ETA I believe when using allulose you don’t NEED to add coconut milk powder since allulose acts so closely to sugar.
Man. Ive watched probably 100+ channels of making fruit syrups etc for drinks. Specifically I am trying to make my distilled Rum different, but not butchered with sugar. Im trying to replicate as close as I can coconut Bacardi. Got any thoughts? It has to be clear like Bacardi so the simple way is add cocnut to the distilate. But thats not what I am after. Yopur other fruit based syrups etc are awesom.
It should be fine, but it may break the coconut oil emulsion and when thawed will form to separate layers. You'll just need to reblend it and it should be fine.
Here I have the problem of not being able to find coconut cream, but creme of coconut is plentyful. I live in PR so creme of coconut is widely used. Also both names translated into spanish is crema de coco.
I had a pina colada in Jamaica years ago. It was my first, and it was delicious. Since then, I've never had another good pina colada. Even in Thailand they've not been the same. My suspicion is that even good bars rarely use cream of coconut and instead settle for coconut milk. So, my two questions: 1) Simmering sugar in coconut milk would seem to produce less viscous product than pre-made cream of coconut (unless you simmer it down for a long time). Is this correct, and would it be easy to adjust for the extra moisture? 2) Is the taste going to be the same as pre-made, commercial cream of coconut? I don't mean 'pretty close'; I mean would it be *identical* in taste (if not in consistency)? I'm not looking for 'good enough'; I want an excellent pina colada, but I don't want to have to go back to Jamaica just for a drink. Thanks for the informative, helpful video :-)
Adding sugar to coconut milk will make it thicker, not thinner,.And the taste is basically the same, it's so easy and cheap to make just try it and see.
@@Artofdrink Yes, adding a lot of sugar would thicken coconut milk, but would that make it as thick as store-bought cream of coconut? That was my question. I get the impression from numerous online descriptions that cream of coconut is cooked down or has thickener added to be thicker than coconut milk -- in addition to being a little thicker because of the added sugar. I think I will add the coconut powder for a deeper coconut flavor and I guess to thicken it further. And yes, I will try this soon. Thank you.
@@GregConquest the ratio provided gets it thick enough and if you use good coconut cream with a high fat content there is no need to cook it down. The key to the texture of a good Pina Colada is the ice and the blender. Really cold ice, powerful blender to create fine ice shards.
Hey mate just made mine using high fat coconut milk (Ayam brand) with the sugar content you specified. Is it normal for the mixture to turn to a greyish tint when the sugar dissolves with the coconut milk? My coconut milk was white, and I heated it up on low and mixed. Once it mixed, the white started disappearing and the entire mixture was just a grey colour. Just wondering if that's normal.
@@Artofdrink thank you very much for replying. Yeh it had lost all its whiteness I thought it might just be the brand of canned coconut milk I was using. Like a transparent grey almost
The big problem fotr the novice trying to make a pina colada is plenty of recipes and videos will refer to "coconut cream" when they mean cream of coconut. I wound up with coconut cream. In the end, I made simple syrup, and poured that into the blender with the coconut cream, rum and pineapple juice. Let me control the sweetness.
Hi Darcy, would using the actual milk from a ripe coconut change much in the way of flavour profile, shelf life? I’m more a fan of fresh, basic ingredients, rather than supporting canneries and all their exploits.
You can make the coconut milk from grating the flesh of the coconut and then pressing that to extract the milk. The coconut water doesn’t have the same flavour.
On 2 cans of coconut cream of 400 ml (18% fat) I put 375 g. sugar and it was really sweet and great, so I think that 375 g per 1 can is just too much and too sweet. It was perfect for pina colada and swimming pool
Just remember that having less than a one to one ratio of sugar to coconut milk means that the sugar content is not high enough to preserve, meaning it can ferment or spoil rapidly. So you should definitely refrigerate your recipe.
Watched all the bigger channels on how to make cream of coconut and this is by far the best and most informative! Big shout out to Steve the Bartender for saying where he found the recipe he used in his video!
Thanks so much!! Expect more in the future.
This man really knows what he's talking about. 😀
Was not expecting there to be so many options for tweaking. Thanks for this thorough video!
Thank you for the full explanation, nice video
Fantastic recipe. Thanks for this one.
Really interesting video. Gives me diy ideas and saves me the trouble of finding cream of coconut. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you! This opens another door on my quest for sugar free or low sugar cocktails!
Making this with allulose will yield an extremely low carb version.
Diabetics rejoice!
ETA I believe when using allulose you don’t NEED to add coconut milk powder since allulose acts so closely to sugar.
Underrated video! I've always wondered how to get a very strong coconut taste like coconut cream but I don't know how.
Thank you, and this recipe definitely ups the intensity of the coconut flavour.
This is amazingly comprehensive...thanks so much
Thanks!! This was very helpful. I use Coco Lopez in my smoothie and I have been looking for a way to make it healthier.
Great explanation and video. How much citric acid would you recommend adding for the ‘one can’ size batch? Thanks
I'd recommend one to five grams, depending on taste preferences.
Man. Ive watched probably 100+ channels of making fruit syrups etc for drinks. Specifically I am trying to make my distilled Rum different, but not butchered with sugar. Im trying to replicate as close as I can coconut Bacardi. Got any thoughts? It has to be clear like Bacardi so the simple way is add cocnut to the distilate. But thats not what I am after. Yopur other fruit based syrups etc are awesom.
What if you have KTC Creamed Coconut? Its a solid block of coconut which has 65% fat. How would I make Cream Of Coconut form that for Pina Colada?
Thank you for the videos.
How would freezing the Cream of Coconut effect it?
It should be fine, but it may break the coconut oil emulsion and when thawed will form to separate layers. You'll just need to reblend it and it should be fine.
Here I have the problem of not being able to find coconut cream, but creme of coconut is plentyful. I live in PR so creme of coconut is widely used. Also both names translated into spanish is crema de coco.
I had a pina colada in Jamaica years ago. It was my first, and it was delicious. Since then, I've never had another good pina colada. Even in Thailand they've not been the same. My suspicion is that even good bars rarely use cream of coconut and instead settle for coconut milk. So, my two questions: 1) Simmering sugar in coconut milk would seem to produce less viscous product than pre-made cream of coconut (unless you simmer it down for a long time). Is this correct, and would it be easy to adjust for the extra moisture? 2) Is the taste going to be the same as pre-made, commercial cream of coconut? I don't mean 'pretty close'; I mean would it be *identical* in taste (if not in consistency)? I'm not looking for 'good enough'; I want an excellent pina colada, but I don't want to have to go back to Jamaica just for a drink.
Thanks for the informative, helpful video :-)
Adding sugar to coconut milk will make it thicker, not thinner,.And the taste is basically the same, it's so easy and cheap to make just try it and see.
@@Artofdrink Yes, adding a lot of sugar would thicken coconut milk, but would that make it as thick as store-bought cream of coconut? That was my question. I get the impression from numerous online descriptions that cream of coconut is cooked down or has thickener added to be thicker than coconut milk -- in addition to being a little thicker because of the added sugar. I think I will add the coconut powder for a deeper coconut flavor and I guess to thicken it further. And yes, I will try this soon. Thank you.
@@GregConquest the ratio provided gets it thick enough and if you use good coconut cream with a high fat content there is no need to cook it down. The key to the texture of a good Pina Colada is the ice and the blender. Really cold ice, powerful blender to create fine ice shards.
Bottom line, "If you can mix 2 things together, you can make this."
😂
Hey mate just made mine using high fat coconut milk (Ayam brand) with the sugar content you specified. Is it normal for the mixture to turn to a greyish tint when the sugar dissolves with the coconut milk? My coconut milk was white, and I heated it up on low and mixed. Once it mixed, the white started disappearing and the entire mixture was just a grey colour. Just wondering if that's normal.
Yes, that is normal. Coco Lopez is a greyish colour but once you mix or blend it in a drink it will be white.
@@Artofdrink thank you very much for replying. Yeh it had lost all its whiteness I thought it might just be the brand of canned coconut milk I was using. Like a transparent grey almost
Hello, just wanted to know once the coconut recipe done, how long time does it last ?
Also, do I have to keep it en the fridge ?
Thank you !
In the fridge, a month or so.
How would you store this?
Store it in a fridge and it should last a month or so.
@@Artofdrink thank you
Is the optional "coconut powder" referring to coconut milk powder, or coconut flour? I assume it's coconut milk powder?
It is coconut milk powder.
@@Artofdrink Thanks for the quick response!
The big problem fotr the novice trying to make a pina colada is plenty of recipes and videos will refer to "coconut cream" when they mean cream of coconut. I wound up with coconut cream. In the end, I made simple syrup, and poured that into the blender with the coconut cream, rum and pineapple juice. Let me control the sweetness.
I love your voice
How much of each acid should be added to this recipe?
Typically I don't add any acid to the cream of coconut, but the commercial versions use a small amount (unfortunately I do not know their usage rate).
Hi Darcy, would using the actual milk from a ripe coconut change much in the way of flavour profile, shelf life?
I’m more a fan of fresh, basic ingredients, rather than supporting canneries and all their exploits.
You can make the coconut milk from grating the flesh of the coconut and then pressing that to extract the milk. The coconut water doesn’t have the same flavour.
@@Artofdrink thank you, I’ll try that. Do you think it’ll have a much reduced shelf life?
@@colzer28 yes, probably only a few weeks in the fridge
On 2 cans of coconut cream of 400 ml (18% fat) I put 375 g. sugar and it was really sweet and great, so I think that 375 g per 1 can is just too much and too sweet. It was perfect for pina colada and swimming pool
Just remember that having less than a one to one ratio of sugar to coconut milk means that the sugar content is not high enough to preserve, meaning it can ferment or spoil rapidly. So you should definitely refrigerate your recipe.