Coconut oil contains medium-chain triglycerides (MCT), which are an easy fuel for the body to burn, without turning to fat. Most other cooking oils and fats contain long-chain triglycerides (LCT). LCT's are usually stored as fat.
Since coconut oil is a MCT, it is more easily absorbed and converted to energy quicker. Coconut oil is unique in the fact that it is liquid at room temperature, which is beneficial because once it's absorbed into the body it doesn't harden and cause all kinds of heart and health problems.
Though it is considered a saturated fat, coconut oil is a different structure from the notorious saturated animal fats, and even offers benefits not available in the longer chained plant oils.Why is coconut oil a liquid instead of a solid?
The melting point of unrefined, non-hydrogenated coconut oil is 76 degrees Fahrenheit (or 24 degrees Celsius), just above normal room temperature (70 degrees Fahrenheit).
Coconut oil is a saturated fat, but it is composed of medium chain fatty acids. Medium chain fatty acids are rather unusual or uncommon in foods we eat.
Animal saturated fats are composed of long chain fatty acids, which have a higher melting point than medium chain fatty acids (approximately 90F for butter or 110F for lard). Thus, they are solid at room temperature.
Medium chain fatty acids are much easier for the body to utilize and thus unrefined coconut oil is actually a healthy saturated fat!
its an unsaturated fat which makes its freezing point lower.
unsaturated fats make it more dificult for things to crystallize and therefore makes it harder for it to be a solid. It remains liquid at room temperature
its in the length of the fatty acids. coconut oil have a large percentage of lauric and myristic acids which are short-chain. but not so much since coconut oil will easily solidify at temperatures below 24C.
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