I'll admit it, I'm a coconut fiend. I eat or drink from this luscious fruit daily. I sip on coconut water and sprinkle generous handfuls of the unsweetened, dried variety all over my morning bowl of oatmeal. But all that is kiddy stuff compared to this coconut butter. It's a sure–fire way to get the maximum concentration of rich, velvety coconut flavor and texture in each bite.
I buy mine from my local co‐op's dry bins area, but you can find Bob's Red Mill's brand here. Coconut butter is unlike coconut oil; it's an entirely different animal. Coconut oil is made from the extracted fat of the coconut meat, whereas this butter includes the fibrous shreds of the coconut meat, albeit in dried form. It's not difficult to make but it does require patience.
I recommend scraping down the sides of the food processor after an audible change where the blades aren't really catching any of the coconut. This will become an increasing issue as the paste starts to come together; your processor's blades will just whizz freely after 30 seconds or a minute of work.
Slowly but surely, you'll end up with a coconut paste similar in consistency to a peanut butter. It will be a little drier in texture but spreads nicely across toast or waffles (or anything in sight, in my case!). The butter will become solid at room temperature, but if you scrape a little off the top and throw it in the microwave for 10 or 15 seconds, it will become soft and pliable once more.
Coconut Butter
makes one small jar
What You Need
Ingredients
2 cups dried, shredded, unsweetened coconut
salt to taste (optional — I used Tahitian vanilla salt from The Meadow to sprinkle on top of my coconut butter toast)
Equipment
Food processor or Vitamix blender
Instructions
1. Process the Coconut - Put the dried coconut in the food processor or blender. Mix on high speed, scraping down the sides often for approximately 18 or 19 minutes, until a thick paste is formed.
• 3 Minutes - The coconut breaks down into clumps
• 5-8 Minutes - The coconut starts to look more sandy and paste-like. Scrape down the sides of the processor as often as necessary to continue processing the coconut.
• 11-15 Minutes - The coconut starts to pull together into a buttery paste. Continue to scrape down the sides of the processor regularly.
• Finished - The coconut has been ground to the consistency of peanut butter, thick and spreadable. Add salt to taste if desired, or leave plain and add salt when serving.
2. Store the Coconut Butter Store in a small jar in the fridge, scraping up spoonfuls and microwaving for 10-15 seconds to soften and serve.
Related: How to Make Creamy Ice Cream with Just One Ingredient!
(Images: Leela Cyd Ross)




Straw Mat from The ...

Great photos + idea! I love coconut butter.
I strongly recommend AGAINST using a VitaMix (or other) blender to make this. It's really difficult to scrape the sides down, and once it's fully processed it's almost impossible to get out and you lose a lot along the sides and underneath the blades. Not to mention it's a pain to clean. Learn from my mistake!
@Rachele - thanks for that tip! I think it just saved me a whole lotta cleanup!
This coconut butter thing seems like a cool idea, and potentially quite addicting.
I was making a vegan cashew mayo and found the mini food processor attachment that came with my immersion blender to be the right tool. It was small enough that everything kept falling back into the path of the blades. I bet something like that would work well here too!
absolutely love this idea.. love coconut anything.. anyone want to buy me a food processor? lol
Look out world, I've got coconut butter!
I used my Blendtec, so a note for anybody else with one-- they work just fine. A Vitamix's narrower base would make it a pain to scrape, but the Blendtec is wide and square enough at the base to work with this recipe. I was done in 10 minutes or less.
Here is something fun. A friend recommend we spread our coconut butter on a dark chocolate bar like Dagoba to satisfy a sweet tooth craving. Good fats for everyone! It was and is a slice of heaven.
Is there any reason why one could not add just vanilla extract?
I make coconut butter in my Vitamix at least once a week and have for the past 5 months. (ever since I discovered this AMAZING food!) I don't have to turn the machine off to scrape the sides down, I just use the tamper while it is processing. It only takes about 60 seconds to make a batch, and I use the Vitamix spatulas to get every last drop of delicious and healthy goodness out of the container. When I don't want to scrape it out with a spatula, I make a "clean out the container" recipe (that uses the the left overs) whenever I make nut butters, coconut butter, or thick recipes like hummus.
Forgot to add - I like to pour the coconut butter into mini muffin trays and put them in the refrigerator. Coconut turns solid under 76°. I pop them out, place them in a zip lock bag and store them in the fridge and call them "coconut bites" - YUM!
In answer to the question about adding vanilla extract. Yes, you can do this. I like to add Vanilla Flavored Stevia! :-)
FYI: Since you link to Bob's Red Mill product:
Bob's Red Mill supports a university that supports/performs animal testing. They made
a $25 million donation to Oregon Health & Science University, which does animal testing.
this looks great, can't wait to try it!
and get a life @SMMCC - Bob's Red Mill and OHSU are both doing amazing things!
I'm going to try this tonight, can't wait.
In case any coconut butter experts happen to see this before then, I was wondering if one way to ease the scraping down every 30 seconds issue would be to double the quantity. Maybe it would be easier for the food processor to reach and mix?
I'm quite positive I could get through two small jars before it would go bad. :)
So I tried and wanted to weigh in. It worked great to double the recipe. I didn't have to scrape all that much. My issue, and I think this was unrelated to the double quantity, was that the food processor motor got fairly warm after 10 minutes and the coconut just liquefied. It had the consistency of soup. It hardened in the fridge of course, but I don't know if it achieved the desired texture since it never got to that peanut butter-like consistency while it was being processed. That said, it is delicious, and I will have no problem using up. Thanks for the fun/delicious recipe!
Dangit....I need to get my Vitamix from my mom. Between this and DIY Nutella I don't think I can exist without it anymore.
oooo any ideas how long this would keep?
i tried this today but was unsuccessful. :( i tried this using Let's Do Organic unsweetened fine shredded coconut with my ninja blender. i blended the coconut for at least 35-45 min!! i would stop to scrap the edges down but it never got to anything more than super fine coconut. i even tried to add a little coconut oil in hopes that it would blend into a paste. no such luck! :/ any suggestions as to why this wouldn't work?? i really don't want to pay $10 for Artisana coconut butter when i can make it my self. Thanks!
Dear SMCC posted on 05.05.12, I reallyappreciate your input about the animal testing and Bob's red mill, I think that it is important not to sweep issues of question and cruelty under the carpet just because I dont want to face any inconveniences. Integrity with all life is imperative to me and I want to feel good about what I buy and who I buy it from. Athough I am aware that a lot of questionable tests go on with out my knowledge and I can not know all things, I appreciate you bringing consciousness to me and this site and how it relates to the food we buy and where we buy it from, thanks again, Rawlee
How much dry coconut flakes would I need to start with to yield 1/2 cup of coconut butter?
I also tried this and was unsuccessful. I even tried adding some coconut oil to no avail. I am left with a fine sand-like substance that is slightly oily. I have no idea what to do with this now. Any ideas?
I just made some coconut butter in my blendtec. I suspect the reason it works well in a blendtec and vitamix is because the blades in them are not sharp but instead blunt and there is just one in the bottom. The ninja has a series of blades and they are sharp. You have effectively made a very fine coconut flour in the ninja and the blendtec and vitamix community can make flour too by simply whipping up the coconut for about 30 to 60 seconds using a pulse mode.
The money they donated does not go to animal testing. If that helps. See http://www.oregonlive.com/milwaukie/index.ssf/2011/09/bobs_red_mill_founders_say_don.html
OHSU is a huge organization. The funding Bob's Red Mill sent didn't support animal testing. I wouldn't hold up a researcher because of the sins of another. Even if the organization sanctioned it. I respect that you may not agree, but thought you might like to know - if you didn't.
http://www.oregonlive.com/milwaukie/index.ssf/2011/09/bobs_red_mill_founders_say_don.html
I just tried this recipe this week and loved it! I would like to let other users know one caveat, however - the coconut MUST be unsweetened (as written in the recipe). I accidentally bought sweetened, and thought, heck, why not, I'll try it - but, it would not turn into a butter, just a very fine flour that then clumped together. (I am going to try to separate it out to use as a flour in cookies, though - wish me luck!)
Thank you so much for the recipe! I love it on raisin rolls (mmmmmmm...).