Coconuts are already being produced in vast quantities (60+ million tonnes[1]) for their meat and oil. I imagine the coconut water manufacturers are just using the water which would otherwise be thrown away, which is why the coconut water market has been able to grow so rapidly without increasing global coconut production.
Not necessarily true. The coconuts used for oil and meat are picked much later than the coconuts used for water. Of course that's only the case if you're talking about pure coconut water -- coconut brands who use concentrate are probably making the concentrate from the mature coconuts that are used for their meat and oil. gross stuff.
> “Part of it was the idea that the developing world needs as many alternative exports as possible,” he said. “And 85 countries around the world were growing coconuts."
You were downvoted, but I think this is an excellent question, especially about faddish products, and especially when they are a staple of LDCs.
It's easy for the spike in demand to have bad environmental consequences (e.g., biodiesel, Fiji water), or economic consequences for people who depend on the crop as a staple (e.g., quinoa). And this would certainly be a factor in whether I will buy the product.
I visited Kerala several years ago, and I have to say the life of a coconut farmer there seemed to have its advantages. They spent their days tending their carefully cultivated trees just a couple hundred meters from a beautiful coastline.
In the costal areas of India there are considerable amounts of coconut trees. Its not uncommon for a family with a moderate lot to have dozens of coconut trees.
What?? Look, coconut water is a new trend in the US, but not everywhere else where it's been consumed for quite a long time. Here in Brazil I've been drinking it (me and everybody else) since I was a kid, and it was just like having a soda or some OJ (actually the two came after the coconut), and Brazil doesn't come close to how much the Philippines and Indonesia produce, and we're the fifth largest producer. There's plenty of coconut water to go to the US.
P.S. We also drink a lot of sugar cane juice here, with ice and a bit of lime squeezed in it. I like it even better. Maybe it will be a fad in some 5 or 10 years, though it's sugar content is (obviously) quite high, and I don't think it keeps as well as coconut water. Give it a try if you're ever in Little Havana in FL.
I've spent some time in India and it is the same upthere. you can get a fresh coconut to drink its juice almost everywhere. It is less common to find cane juice as it requires a machine to crush the cane.
I know it's an old habit in some countries, but when something becomes a fad in the West it tends to get ugly, at least when it comes to waste. My fear is that this will contribute to deforestation even more and for what (except for making some people rich).
Also supporting hundreds of millions of sales and preserving the same quality is a problem; as someone noted the stuff they sell here it's ridden with sugar and preservatives. I'm sure it's not as tasty and healthy as your grandma's backyard stuff.
There are at least 5 brands of coconut water at my local Walgreens in San Francisco. One of them is half the price of all others, but it's overall a premium drink. Having tasted just about all of them, I prefer Zico. It seems they did sell too early.
Did they sell too early? It seems like the way to tell is to figure out what the founders and early-stage investors got out of the buyout. If they never have to work again, they sold at exactly the right time. If they do still have to work, then yeah, oops.
The first time I went to Mexico, I was excited to get a fresh coconut, a hole cut in the top with a machete and a straw inserted. It was much less refreshing than I expected, so I don't understand this trend.
Sometimes the coconut is not at the right point, so the water will no only not taste as sweet, but will also have an unusual taste, even bitter sometimes. Even though he shouldn't, the guy will still sell it to you, though.
I lived in Vietnam for about a year. On many major street corners, you could usually find someone selling coconuts. The vendor would pick up a fresh one, chop the top off with a machete, and insert a straw + spoon. While the quality varied, more often than not they were good. That said, it's definitely not a taste everyone will enjoy.
I've been back in the states since June. The coconut juice/drinks sold in the stores taste nothing like actual coconut juice. I'm not sure people would go as crazy over the real thing...but who knows.
Did you by any chance try it while on port/coastal/tropical town? I know not everybody likes it, but having grown up eating and drinking coconuts I love the stuff. And yes, the packaged water found in grocery stores here (U.S.) is not quite the same, but I do buy one by 365 (Whole Foods brand?) which is cheaper and IMO better that the alternatives found here.
My local supermarket sells young coconuts for about half the price of a can of coconut water and, I assure you, I'm about as far from where coconuts grow as you can get on this planet! The stuff is seriously overpriced at present. Also, most brands have sugar added, which makes the stuff sickly sweet. I can see how that's necessary to make inroads into the soft-drink market, but healthy it is not!
I have no stake in coconut water but I've tried them all.
Here's my breakdown:
Goya and those other cheap canned brands usually have sugar added and are heavily pasteurized to preserve.
Out of O.N.E, Vita, and Zico, O.N.E. is the best. Often times Vita has the sour potassium taste from overaging, and Zico is somewhat bland.
Now, here's the deal breaker, all of the above coconut waters are total trash compared to RAW coconut water. When coconut water is heated, it destroys the delicious taste. Coconut water naturally should look glowing pink.
There are two brands of raw coconut water. Copra and Harmless Harvest. I couldn't put my finger on it but Harmless Harvest had a slightly weird aftertaste. ( I bought a case so it wasn't just a mishap with a single carton.) Copra consistently delivered and I found myself drinking way too many because they're so tasty.
Until you try Copra or indigenous fresh Thai coconut water you're missing out. And I know this sounds like an ad, but I seriously have tried every coconut water and I'm just spreading the information. Cheers
Perhaps that's also why the raw ones tasted sweeter and better, they were both from Thailand. I know glass is the most inert but it doesn't seem like any of the brands sell glass bottles - pretty sure plastic would be the next best. Yeah, definitely try the raw when you can, I can't believe how awful the non-raw stuff taste in comparison - it's eye opening
Some "ethnic" (ex. Asian) stores will sell small glass bottles of it (they look like miniature coca cola bottles), sometimes the come in with chunks of coconut.
Not sure how fresh/healthy/pasteurized/sweetened they are but I seem to like those best out of the ones I tried.
Can't even tell you the brand. There were two that had the same packaging and one tasted better.
Don't miss a chance to taste raw coconut water, it is awesome. None of these packaged stuff (at least the ones I've tried) is anything close to the raw one.
Drinking out of clay cups - that tastes even better than steel :)
Aluminium cans have plastic lining. The difference that you notice could be smell from the outside of the can as your nose is in close proximity to it. Do a blind test with the drinks poured into glassware.
Harmless Harvest explains it on the bottle and their website. They suggest that it shouldn't be pink when harvested, but if it turns pink later that's natural and okay.
http://harmlessharvest.com/results/coconut-water#pink
In freshly cracked coconuts, pink water can be a symptom of spoilage. This is not the case with Harmless Harvest which is completely clear when bottled.
All of our coconut water is clear when bottled. However, some bottles turn pink with time due to varying levels of antioxidants, or phenols, interacting with light. We could use additives to hide the color change, but the pink bottles are just as delicious and safe to drink as the others. Variation is a part of nature. It’s ok to be pink.
I live in the Philippines. Drink coconuts every day. If the coconut is really young the water can have a pinkish beige hue. You usually want to drink the coconut a week or so after that though (when there's a bit of young coconut meat/gel formed inside), but by then the water is clear again.
Is Copra available in the US? So far the best I've had is Vita. Unfortunately sometimes it tastes great and sometimes it tastes pretty bad. For some strange reason, the smaller bottles of vita always taste bad.
I bought mine from FreshDirect. Not sure where they sell it retail but it looks like they have an email hello@coprawater.com, facebook, google+, etc so just holler at them.
Right, the price is steep. The thing is that the coconut water expires much quicker because it is raw, so I'm sure that is factored into the price. Compare the price of fresh fruit to canned fruit, I'm guessing the markup will be similar. Maybe not as high since coconut water can be marked to yuppy types. Still, buy one and have a taste when you can; it's a flavor experience.
> Now, here's the deal breaker, all of the above coconut waters are total trash compared to RAW coconut water.
Can anyone tell me how it's possible to transfer coconut water from a coconut to a bottle without contaminating it with bacteria/yeast from the air? I'm a bit skeptic about it actually being raw, but I hope it's true.
"Today, he’s not just nostalgic for the old days of the coconut water wars. He wishes that Zico was still a serious threat. He wants a competitor, throwing elbows, playing Monster to his Red Bull, a melee that goosed energy-drink consumption to new highs."
This. A lot of startup founders (myself included) freak out when we find someone else doing the exact same thing we are. But competition can also be great for kicking your butt into action and working to expand the market.
My startup is smack in the middle of this because we deliver snacks and beverages to silicon valley companies and buy direct from manufacturers (bbf.io/snacks) - indeed, there are crazy battles far beyond vita coco and zico, including easily a half dozen others, all offering deals.
Copra and Harmless indeed are awesome, but they're also 2-3x the cost, which is prohibitive for most people. They also have very short shelf-life, which makes it hard to scale. Shelf-stable coconut waters last 6+ months.
Coconut water isn't half as competitive as energy and protein bars. I have stories...
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[ 8.4 ms ] story [ 111 ms ] thread[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coconut#Cultivation
It's easy for the spike in demand to have bad environmental consequences (e.g., biodiesel, Fiji water), or economic consequences for people who depend on the crop as a staple (e.g., quinoa). And this would certainly be a factor in whether I will buy the product.
But this doesn't seem to be the case (yet) with coconut water: http://www.motherjones.com/blue-marble/2010/07/coconut-water...
I visited Kerala several years ago, and I have to say the life of a coconut farmer there seemed to have its advantages. They spent their days tending their carefully cultivated trees just a couple hundred meters from a beautiful coastline.
P.S. We also drink a lot of sugar cane juice here, with ice and a bit of lime squeezed in it. I like it even better. Maybe it will be a fad in some 5 or 10 years, though it's sugar content is (obviously) quite high, and I don't think it keeps as well as coconut water. Give it a try if you're ever in Little Havana in FL.
Also supporting hundreds of millions of sales and preserving the same quality is a problem; as someone noted the stuff they sell here it's ridden with sugar and preservatives. I'm sure it's not as tasty and healthy as your grandma's backyard stuff.
Many just need a hug and some emotional counselling.
I've been back in the states since June. The coconut juice/drinks sold in the stores taste nothing like actual coconut juice. I'm not sure people would go as crazy over the real thing...but who knows.
Here's my breakdown:
Goya and those other cheap canned brands usually have sugar added and are heavily pasteurized to preserve.
Out of O.N.E, Vita, and Zico, O.N.E. is the best. Often times Vita has the sour potassium taste from overaging, and Zico is somewhat bland.
Now, here's the deal breaker, all of the above coconut waters are total trash compared to RAW coconut water. When coconut water is heated, it destroys the delicious taste. Coconut water naturally should look glowing pink.
There are two brands of raw coconut water. Copra and Harmless Harvest. I couldn't put my finger on it but Harmless Harvest had a slightly weird aftertaste. ( I bought a case so it wasn't just a mishap with a single carton.) Copra consistently delivered and I found myself drinking way too many because they're so tasty.
Until you try Copra or indigenous fresh Thai coconut water you're missing out. And I know this sounds like an ad, but I seriously have tried every coconut water and I'm just spreading the information. Cheers
- coconut water from thailand has a better (sweeter?) taste than from brazil.
- drinking out of steel/aluminum vs plastic containers somehow makes a difference. that could just be in my head though.
Amy & Brian's is the brand i get around here that satisfies my criteria.
will have to checkout the raw stuff though :)
Not sure how fresh/healthy/pasteurized/sweetened they are but I seem to like those best out of the ones I tried.
Can't even tell you the brand. There were two that had the same packaging and one tasted better.
And yes, it was sweeter.
Drinking out of clay cups - that tastes even better than steel :)
I drink it most every day straight from the coconut or poured into a plastic bag, and it always looks clear as water.
In freshly cracked coconuts, pink water can be a symptom of spoilage. This is not the case with Harmless Harvest which is completely clear when bottled.
All of our coconut water is clear when bottled. However, some bottles turn pink with time due to varying levels of antioxidants, or phenols, interacting with light. We could use additives to hide the color change, but the pink bottles are just as delicious and safe to drink as the others. Variation is a part of nature. It’s ok to be pink.
I've never seen pink coconut water.
Wal-Mart carries Vita Coco @ $4 for 33 fl oz. Again, the freshness seems to vary so its not as good of a product.
Can anyone tell me how it's possible to transfer coconut water from a coconut to a bottle without contaminating it with bacteria/yeast from the air? I'm a bit skeptic about it actually being raw, but I hope it's true.
This. A lot of startup founders (myself included) freak out when we find someone else doing the exact same thing we are. But competition can also be great for kicking your butt into action and working to expand the market.
Copra and Harmless indeed are awesome, but they're also 2-3x the cost, which is prohibitive for most people. They also have very short shelf-life, which makes it hard to scale. Shelf-stable coconut waters last 6+ months.
Coconut water isn't half as competitive as energy and protein bars. I have stories...
Dandelion leaves, anyone?