Coconut water is the juice in the interior or
endosperm of young coconut. Its water is one of the nature’s most
refreshing drinks, consumed worldwide for its nutritious and health
benefiting properties.
The water is actually obtained by opening a
tender, green, healthy, and undamaged coconut. Inside, it's clear
liquid is sweet, and sterile and composed of unique chemicals such as
sugars, vitamins, minerals, electrolytes, enzymes, amino acids,
cytokine, and phyto-hormones. In general, young and slightly immature
coconuts harvested when they are about 5-7 months of age for the drink.
Botanically, coconut plant belongs within the Arecaceae family of
palm trees and has the scientific name: Cocos nucifera.
Each nut may contain about 200 to 1000 ml of water
depending on cultivar type and size. Any nuts younger than five months
of age tend to be bitter in taste and devoid of nutrients. In contrast,
mature nuts contain less water, and their endosperm thickens quickly to
white edible meat (kernel). Coconut
milk obtained from the meat is therefore
should not be confused with coconut water.
Coconut palm flourishes well along the costal
tropical environments. A coconut tree may yield several hundred tender
nuts each season. Different species of coconut palms are grown all over
the tropics. Naturally, their taste and flavor of water show variations
according to saline content in the soil, distance from sea shore,
mainland, etc.
Health benefits of coconut water
-
Coconut water is a very refreshing drink to
beat tropical summer thirst. The juice is packed with simple sugar,
electrolytes, and minerals to replenish hydration levels within the
body.
-
Research studies suggest that cytokinins
(e.g., kinetin and trans-zeatin) in coconut water showed significant
anti-ageing, anti-carcinogenic, and anti-thrombotic effects.
-
Coconut water has been generally offered to
patients with diarrhea in many tropic regions to replace the fluid loss
from the gastrointestinal tract and reduce the need for intravenous
therapy. The osmolarity of tender coconut water is slightly greater
than that of WHO recommended ORS (Oral Rehydration Therapy) osmolarity.
Presence of other
biological constituents like amino acids, enzymes,
minerals, and fatty acids may account for this higher osmolarity.
However,
unlike WHO-ORS, its water is very low in sodium and chlorides, but rich
in sugars and amino acids. This well-balanced fluid
composition with much-needed calories would be an ideal drink than any
other brand of soft drink beverages in dehydration conditions.
-
Coconut water is composed of many naturally
occurring
bioactive
enzymes such as acid
phosphatase, catalase, dehydrogenase,
diastase, peroxidase, RNA-polymerases etc. In effect,
these enzymes help in the digestion and metabolism.
- Despite very light consistency, its water has
much better composition of minerals like calcium, iron, manganese,
magnesium, and zinc than some of the fruits like oranges. (Compare the
mineral composition of oranges).
-
Its water is also a very good
source of B-complex
vitamins such as riboflavin, niacin, thiamin, pyridoxine, and folates.
These vitamins are
essential in the sense that the human body requires them from external
sources to
replenish.
-
Coconut water contains
a very good amount
of electrolyte potassium.
100 ml of water has 250 mg of potassium and
105 mg of sodium. Together, these electrolytes help replenish
electrolyte deficiency in the body due to diarrhea (loose stools).
- Further, fresh coconut water has a small amount of vitamin-C (Ascorbic acid); It provides about 2.4 mg or 4% of RDA. Vitamin C is a water-soluble ant-oxidant.
Source http://www.nutrition-and-you.com

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