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Characterization Of Coconut Oil (Cocos Nucifera L.) From Commonly Cultivated Kenyan Varieties Extracted by Different Methods


Samson Musyimi
Daniel Njoroge
Arnold Onyango
Daniel Sila

Abstract

The impacts of climate change and the need for implementing adaptation and mitigation measures The objective of this study was to  characterize the effects of different extraction methods and varieties on the extraction yields and quality profile of the resultant coconut  oil. Three mature coconut varieties (East Africa Tall, Tall Yellow and Dwarf) were collected and subjected to different oil extraction  techniques (traditional method, modified traditional method, mechanical expression and soxhlet method). The quality characteristics of  the oil were determined using established standard protocols. Soxhlet extraction exhibited the highest oil yield ranging from 45.4% to  58.4% followed by mechanical expression (39.2- 50.1%) and the least was traditional extraction method (6.3 to 10.2%) yield depending on  variety. The Dwarf variety gave significantly lower yields compared to the other varieties. The quality characteristics were within codex  standards except for the high levels of free fatty acid in traditionally (0.42%) and mechanically (0.33%) extracted oil. Lauric acid was the  dominant fatty acid at 47.5%-53.5% followed by myristic acid at 15.3-18.5% depending on variety and the method of extraction. The %  saturated fatty acid in all varieties was >90%. Unlike in previous studies, arachidic acid was present in all varieties. The study has  demonstrated that extraction methods and variety influence the oil yield and quality characteristics of coconut oil.           


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eISSN: 2958-7999
print ISSN: 2789-9527