The Best Canned Coconut Milk for Thai Cooking

A review of the best canned coconut milk for Thai cooking. I chose the most common coconut milks I’ve seen sold in stores, tested and rated them based on price, quality of ingredients, taste and texture.

Best Canned Coconut Milk for Thai Cooking

Disclaimer: These are my own opinions based off my own cooking, tastes and preferences. 

Welcome to Day 2 of my Thai Cooking At Home series! This week I am laying the ground work so we can hit the ground running next week fully prepared to cook our favorite Thai recipes at home! Today I’m sharing a review of popular canned coconut milk brands. I hope it will give you some helpful information to guide you towards the best coconut milk to use when you are cooking Thai dishes at home!

Best Canned Coconut Milk for Thai Cooking

Coconut milk is a key ingredient in Thai cooking. It’s used as the base in many dishes, like soups and curries. The brand of coconut milk you use can chance the consistency, texture and taste of your dish. I’m providing you with facts and my honest opinion on 6 brands of canned coconut milk below.

I chose the 6 brands based off their availability. These are the 6 brands I see sold most often at the stores I frequent (Safeway, Giant, Trader Joe’s, Aldi and Whole Foods), I excluded brands sold at the international grocery store where I also shop since they had a LOT of brands, but many are not sold in mainstream stores.

My review compares the price, ingredients, consistency/texture and taste of each brand. Please note the top 3 brands are organic, I did not intentionally chose organic vs. non-organic for this comparison, but that is how it worked out.

Best Canned Coconut Milk for Thai Cooking

 

#6 – CHAOKOH

 

Price – $2.99 / 13.5oz can

Ingredients – Coconut Extract, Water, Citric Acid, Sodium Metabisulfite

Consistency – Thin creamy top with some separation, smooth texture

Taste – Fake

Review – The clear loser. First off, it’s expensive and I don’t care for the taste. 

Recommendation – Avoid for Thai Cooking and really anything else!

 

Best Canned Coconut Milk for Thai Cooking

 

#5 – GOYA

 

Price – $1.79 / 13.5oz can

Ingredients – Coconut Milk, Water, Potassium Metabisulfite

Consistency – No separation at all, texture is pulp-like with tiny coconut flakes

Taste – Very sweet and fruity

Review – I think this was designed to be a drink mixer, it’s perfect for a piña colada, but does not work well in Thai Cooking! I rated it 5th instead of 6th because of the low price point and because it does actually contain real coconut milk, not extract.

Recommendation – Avoid for Thai Cooking, use in Piña Coladas 🙂

 

Best Canned Coconut Milk for Thai Cooking

 

#4 – Thai Kitchen

 

Price – $3.49 / 13.66oz can

Ingredients – Coconut, Water, Guar Gum

Consistency – Good separation between coconut cream and milk, but the texture is chalky

Taste – Good, natural coconut flavor if you can get past the texture

Review – I like the taste, but despite the slightly larger can, this coconut milk is by far the most expensive on the list and the chalky texture is not ideal.

Recommendation – You can use this in Thai Cooking and your dish will turn out fine, but there are better, cheaper options available.

 

 

#3 – Trader Joe’s

 

Price – $1.69 / 13.5oz can

Ingredients – Water, Organic Coconut

Consistency – Good separation between coconut cream top and milk, does contain some coconut pulp so texture is a little grainy.

Taste – Nice coconut flavor, a little fruity

Review – The price can’t be beat and I like the clean ingredient list. The downfall is the coconut pulp, I prefer a creamy coconut milk for Thai cooking. Bonus – it has a pop-top for easy opening!

Recommendation – I use this coconut milk often in Thai Cooking, it’s cheap and the flavor works, it’s not the number 1, but it will work fine.

 

 

#2 – KA•ME

 

Price – $2.49 / 13.5oz can

Ingredients – Organic Coconut, Purified Water, Organic Guar Gum

Consistency – Good separation between coconut cream and milk, smooth texture

Taste – Good, natural coconut flavor

Review – I almost swapped this with the TJ’s for the #3 spot because of the higher price point, but ultimately decided it deserved the #2 spot because of it’s creamy consistency and natural coconut flavor.

Recommendation – Perfect for Thai Cooking, just on the pricier side.

 

Best Canned Coconut Milk for Thai Cooking

 

#1 – Whole Foods 365

 

Price – $1.99 / 13.5oz can

Ingredients – Organic Coconut, Purified Water, Guar Gum

Consistency – Good separation between coconut cream and milk, very smooth texture

Taste – Good, natural coconut flavor

Review – This coconut milk claimed the #1 spot because I could not find fault for it in any category!

Recommendation – Perfect for Thai Cooking!

 

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Summary: Best Canned Coconut Milk for Thai Cooking

 

In my opinion I would steer clear of the Chaokoh and Goya for Thai Cooking. The Thai Kitchen brand would work fine if you are in a pinch and any of the top 3 (Trader Joe’s, KA•ME and Whole Foods 365) will work great for Thai Cooking.

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Best Canned Coconut Milk for Thai Cooking

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Leave a Comment

  1. Natalie A Allan said:

    I wonder how the trive brand would rank…

  2. Dean said:

    I think that you’ve misunderstood the ingredient ‘coconut extract’. It is real coconut – not artificial. In fact, Chaokoh coconut milk is recommended by many others.

    • Andrew said:

      chaOkoH is highly RECOMMENDED by thai cooks. Reason being is because the top Part can be skimmed off for coconut creme. Reduced coconut cream with oils Separated + curry paste gives the restaurant styke taste

    • Jen said:

      Chaokoh and aroy-D are the only brands used by thai chefs and home cooks alike! (outside of thailand anyway.)

      • Atchara said:

        Yes, Jen. you’re right, Chaokoh and aroy-D are the only brands used by thai chefs and home cooks alike! (outside of thailand anyway.) Those are export items and inside of Thailand mostly use in Many restaurants and home too.i am Thais and love to cook.but sometimes I go buy fresh coconut milk or creame at the local market they have everyday for us.

        REPLY

  3. Jen said:

    Dean is correct. “CocOnut extract” is, indeed, real cocOnuT, so the difference is merely in labeling.In fact, all coconut milk used in thai cooking is Produced by actually *extracting* the liquid from Freshly grated COCONUT. I watched my thai grandmother do this by hand,grating 1/2 a coconut at a time using a MetAl tool. She would then squeeze The mound of shredded coconut through a cheesecloth to obtain the “milk.” The Only acceptable alternativeS to this time-consuminG task? The Chaokoh or aroy-D Brands of coconut milk! 🙂

  4. Mia Sun said:

    Great info if you live someplace with every store IMAGINABLE to shop at. Then I see your about, and notice that you do in fact live in Alexandria, and have probably don’t even have a walmart within driving distance for you.

  5. Karen Bass said:

    Have you tried A taste of Thai, unsweetened coconut milk? I purchased it at Walmart the other day fairly inexpensive. I think it tastes great but I am new to the coconut milk game. Three ingredients are coconut water and guar gum.

  6. Stephen said:

    Hi,

    disclaimer Stay away from Chaokoh and Goya. they are unethical and abuse animals. it’s appalling that the level they undertake to make a profit.

    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/monkey-labor-continues-in-thailands-coconut-market

  7. Bonnie Brinkman said:

    Please ask folks not to buy Coconut milk that comes from Thailand.
    Slave monkeys are put in neckchains and other awful non-monkey accessories. They sometimes pull monkeys teeth, too.
    Thanks for your attention to this.

  8. Dave said:

    Great writeup! There are so many options to choose from when it comes to coconut milk.

    From an ingredient perspective, the Trader Joes brand appears to be the cleanest. I prefer to stay away from additives like guar, gums, etc.

    A lot of commenters seem to like CHAOKOH the best, but I am uneasy having a preservative like Sodium Metabisulfite in my food.

  9. Yulina said:

    This entire list made me sad as a Thai person…
    ArroyD in a box is what we use when we make curries and desserts.
    Chaokoh is okay as a substitute.

    The only western brand coconut milk I use if no access to ArroyD is Native Forest. They are sold at whole foods and a few other places.