• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to after header navigation
  • Skip to site footer
the healthy home economist text logo with green silhouette of a person jump cheering

The Healthy Home Economist

embrace your right to a lifetime of health

Get Plus
  • Home
  • About
  • My Books
  • Shopping List
  • Archives
  • Log in
  • Get Plus
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Get Plus
  • Log in
  • Home
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Archives
  • My Books
  • Shopping List
  • Recipes
  • Healthy Living
  • Natural Remedies
  • Green Living
  • Videos
  • Natural Remedies
  • Health
  • Green Living
  • Recipes
  • Videos
  • Subscribe
Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Healthy Fats / MCT Oil (Liquid Coconut Oil): The Coconut Oil Dregs

MCT Oil (Liquid Coconut Oil): The Coconut Oil Dregs

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Why Coconut Oil is a Fat Superstar+−
    • MCT Oil is a Factory Food
  • Dregs from Fractionated Coconut Oil+−
    • The trouble with MCT Oil
    • MCT Oil Manufacturing
  • Liquid Coconut Oil Scam+−
    • Higher Percentage of Heat Unstable Fats
  • MCT Oil and Liquid Coconut Oil Aren’t Cheap!
  • What about MCT Oil with Lauric Acid?
  • Isn’t MCT Oil Best for Alzheimer’s?

Liquid coconut oil also labeled MCT oil, is not a legitimate healthy fat and why these expensive, highly processed lipids that occur nowhere in nature are best avoided by smart consumers.

bottles of liquid coconut oil and mct oil on store shelves

If there is one truism in the world of food manufacturing, it is this. If a particular whole food becomes popular with consumers, food manufacturers will figure out a way to adulterate and cleverly market it.

The endgame is fooling the average consumer into erroneously believing that this new fractionated food is “better” than the original.

This adage very accurately applies to the much-hyped supplement MCT oil. Manufacturers also shrewdly market it as liquid coconut oil for cooking purposes.

Both of these impostors have been popping up on health food store shelves sometimes boldly and inaccurately marketed as “better than coconut oil”.

Why Coconut Oil is a Fat Superstar

Coconut oil in its unprocessed, unfractionated state is one of the healthiest fats on the planet. It has nourished degenerative disease-free traditional cultures in Asia for centuries.

What’s more, these cultures suffered from essentially no heart disease. Thus, misguided accusations that coconut oil isn’t “heart healthy” are clearly false and completely unsupportable with anthropological evidence.

Coconut oil is loaded with beneficial fatty acids called medium chain triglycerides (MCTs). These MCTs or MCFAs (medium chain fatty acids) do not need to be digested by bile salts.

These digestive juices are secreted by the liver and stored by the gall bladder.

Hint: this is why coconut oil is good for those who’ve had gall bladder surgery.

What’s more, MCTs are not typically stored by the body as fat as longer chain fats are. Instead, they are quickly converted to energy which makes them particularly suitable for weight loss.

Consumers have caught onto the benefits of coconut oil for weight loss and overall wellness in recent years. Numerous companies now market virgin and expeller pressed versions for a variety of culinary uses.

MCT Oil is a Factory Food

Some companies are marketing impostor products trying to ride the wave of coconut oil popularity. Coconut oil processed into wannabes like MCT oil or liquid coconut oil becomes something else entirely, and for the consumer, it is definitely not for the better.

When I first saw liquid coconut oil on the shelf of my local health food store, I thought, “What in the world is this?  A coconut oil that stays liquid in the refrigerator and is “excellent” for cooking?”  I secretly wondered and knew that something fishy was going on.

Anyone familiar with coconut oil knows that it is a solid fat at temperatures below 76 F/ 24 C.  

If the coconut oil stays liquid all the time, even in the refrigerator, that is your clue that it is fake.

Similarly, I was receiving emails from readers who were using MCT oil, the supplement version of liquid coconut oil, instead of actual coconut oil for weight loss and other health purposes.

Things just didn’t seem on the up and up to me, so I started to sniff around…

Dregs from Fractionated Coconut Oil

The dominant medium chain fatty acid in coconut oil is lauric acid, comprising 50% of the total fat content. It is no exaggeration to call lauric acid a superstar of fats, as it has scientifically proven antiviral, antibacterial and antifungal properties.

Our human digestion converts lauric acid into monolaurin which defends us against viruses, bacteria, parasites and other pathogens. In short, lauric acid is a huge boon to the immune system.

Lauric acid is not only one of the healthiest fatty acids on the planet, it is highly elusive as well. Made only by the mammary gland in humans and available in small amounts in butterfat and significant amounts in palm kernel oil and coconut oil, this beneficial fat is not widely found in nature.

The trouble with MCT Oil

People want lauric acid for the health benefits, but personal care manufacturers want it too for enhancing the quality of their products.

Isolated lauric acid functions as a skin conditioning agent. It is an inert and stable emollient used in creams, ointments, lotions, and lipsticks. Lauric acid slows the loss of water from the skin by forming a barrier on the skin’s surface.

It also alters the thickness of liquids acting as a viscosity controlling agent and provides surface glide by promoting color dispersion in finished products.

This is why lauric acid is removed from coconut oil and sold off for manufacturing purposes to personal care companies.

What’s left when the highly saturated lauric acid (and potentially a few other highly saturated fatty acids too depending on the manufacturer) with a melting point of 110F/ 43C is removed from coconut oil?

You guessed it!

MCT oil, which is sold as a supplement, and liquid coconut oil, sold for cooking. They are both the same thing, in essence, the coconut oil “dregs”.

MCT Oil Manufacturing

Another problem with MCT oil and its cooking counterpart liquid coconut oil is the manufacturing.

The forcible removal of lauric acid from coconut oil is not an easy process. You could not do it yourself at home!

It typically requires chemical recombination of refined fatty acids in coconut oil with a synthetic vegetable-based ester.

Chemical residues in the resulting MCT oil would be a definite concern as a result.

A more natural process is molecular distillation of virgin coconut oil. This method involves no chemicals and is a physical process only.

While MCT oil manufactured in this manner would be nontoxic and safe to consume, it is important to note that MCT or liquid coconut oil is not found anywhere in nature.

As such, regular consumption would have unknown health consequences.

To obtain the full health and weight loss benefits of MCTs in the proper proportions as found in nature, you need to consume virgin coconut oil, and if you need one with no taste, expeller-pressed coconut oil.

Don’t fall for the MCT oil scam! It is a manmade product found nowhere in nature.

Liquid Coconut Oil Scam

The reason I suspect that liquid coconut oil is marketed as “better than coconut oil for cooking” is that it stays liquid even when refrigerated.

However, while this is better for convenience, it is not better from a health perspective especially considering that coconut oil itself doesn’t need to be refrigerated due to high resistance to rancidity even in very hot climes.

For example, I keep large buckets of coconut oil in my garage which regularly gets over 100 F/28 C during summer days, and it keeps perfectly for months on end.

Note also that the most beneficial and elusive fat of all in coconut oil, lauric acid, is completely absent from liquid coconut oil.

Two saturated fatty acids primarily remain…caprylic acid and capric acid.

Dairy foods, particularly goat milk and cheese, contain these fats naturally.

The other fats remaining in MCT oil/liquid coconut oil are oleic acid (the primary fat in olive oil) and linoleic acid found in vegetable oils.

Higher Percentage of Heat Unstable Fats

While oleic acid is heat stable and fine for cooking, linoleic acid definitely is not!

Removing lauric acid and other high melting point saturated fats from coconut oil results in a lipid that is no longer ideal for cooking.

It is a far worse choice than virgin or expeller-pressed coconut oil.

The reason is because it contains a much larger percentage of heat unstable fats. What’s more, the longer-chain vegetable fats encourage weight gain, not weight loss.

Would liquid coconut oil be a better choice than vegetable oils? In that case, I would agree. Vegetable oils like soy, corn and even canola would be far worse choices for cooking than liquid coconut oil. But when compared with true blue coconut oil, the scammy “liquid” versions pale by comparison.

Do yourself a favor, if you want to experience the benefits of coconut oil for cooking or weight loss, use the real thing. Skip the cleverly marketed liquid coconut oil versions.

MCT Oil and Liquid Coconut Oil Aren’t Cheap!

As if not being as good as real coconut oil isn’t enough, food manufacturers have the gall to charge a fortune for MCT oil and liquid coconut oil.

Sometimes the price tag is higher than a quality jar of virgin coconut oil itself!

This is one trick that manufacturers use to make you “believe” that their factory foods are better than the real thing.

MCT Oil is similarly priced, at or higher than the same amount of real, authentic virgin coconut oil.

You get the dregs and pay more for the “privilege”. Nice huh?

What about MCT Oil with Lauric Acid?

While most MCT oil on the market has no lauric acid whatsoever, I have seen some brands of MCT oil recently where there is some lauric acid present.

This means that manufacturers removed only some of the lauric acid (and sold it off for industrialized purposes).

The lauric acid amount present is not at the same high percentage as in unadulterated coconut oil, however.

If you remember the discussion from above, virgin and expeller pressed coconut oil are approximately 50% lauric acid. MCT oil with lauric acid contains far less.

The highest I’ve seen to date is 30%. Some brands do not list how much lauric acid is present at all!  

One thing is for sure. If the MCT oil or liquid coconut oil stays fluid in the refrigerator, it doesn’t have much lauric acid in it.

Also, remember the problem with chemical residues in MCT oil if it wasn’t extracted using a physical process only.

The bottom line is that MCT oil is a manmade factory fat. It occurs nowhere in nature.

It doesn’t occur naturally in nature and using it regularly won’t produce the health benefits and weight loss results of using the real thing: coconut oil.

Isn’t MCT Oil Best for Alzheimer’s?

There’s been quite a bit of buzz in recent years surrounding MCT oil and its application in Alzheimer’s reversal using lipids.

It is true that MCTs are the active ingredient in Axona, a popular drug for those with Alzheimer’s Disease.

It is highly doubtful that MCTs are better than virgin coconut oil (VCO) for this purpose, however!

Dr. Bruce Fife, author of Stop Alzheimer’s Now, recommends VCO instead of MCT oil or MCT drugs such as Axona because the drugs become ineffective over time, wear off quickly, have side effects, and cause free radical damage to the cells. And, MCT oil on its own is an adulterated, inferior form of coconut oil.

When the MCTs in virgin coconut oil are converted into ketones they act as a super fuel for the brain. This super fuel provides energy to the brain as well as stimulates healing and repair. Hence, these fatty acids are very important for those who espouse the keto diet.

And, don’t forget. Lauric acid is the most beneficial MCT of all and yet is absent in most MCT oil brands on the market or in significantly reduced amounts.

Go for the real thing and you won’t ever be disappointed down the road that clever marketing has somehow cost you your health or failed to produce the wellness results you seek.

glass bottle of unhealthy mct oil

References

(1) MCT Oil Manufacture

(2) Eat Fat Lose Fat

(3) Nutrition and Physical Degeneration

(4) Stop Alzheimer’s Now

More Information

Coconut Oil Capsules: As Effective as Straight Up?

How to Use Coconut Oil for Weight Loss

When Coconut Oil May Not Be Right for You

Why Buying Coconut Oil at Costco is Risky Business

Why Bulletproof Coffee Shoots You in the Foot

FacebookPinEmailPrint
Category: Healthy Fats
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

You May Also Like

rendered lard

How to Render Lard Traditionally (+ Video)

cod liver oil capsules in a brown bottle

Whole Food Alternatives to Cod Liver Oil

Yogurt Brands. Ranking the Best and Worst

Yogurt Brands. Ranking the Best and Worst

best cold-pressed oils

Top 7 Cold Pressed Oils for Boosting the Immune System

How to Properly and SAFELY Use Coconut Oil for Weight Loss

How to SAFELY Use Coconut Oil for Weight Loss

sesame seed oil benefits and uses in the kitchen

Sesame Oil. Omega-6 Fat Worth Eating?

Going to the Doctor a Little Too Often?

Get a free chapter of my book Traditional Remedies for Modern Families + my newsletter and learn how to put Nature’s best remedies to work for you today!

We send no more than one email per week. You will never be spammed or your email sold, ever.
Loading

Reader Interactions

Comments (117)

  1. jessica

    Feb 22, 2018 at 3:17 pm

    Hi Sarah, I’ve read some articles saying that Lauric Acid is the least beneficial fatty acid in coconut oil – this seems to be the opposite of what you’re writing. I’m confused about these contradictions, can you help us understand?

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Feb 23, 2018 at 8:57 am

      Any source that says lauric acid is the least beneficial fat in coconut oil is writing this simply to sell product and make money off of people’s confusion. Don’t buy that baloney for one second.

  2. Brenda Hendricks

    Feb 15, 2018 at 10:14 am

    Does he he need to stop taking his pill for alzheimers when using these 2 products

    Reply
  3. Eileen

    Jan 16, 2018 at 4:15 pm

    Hello there-
    Are you saying that in order to get the most beneficial coconut oil it should be 100% organic cold pressed unrefined extre virgin and have Lauric acid in the ingredients?

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Jan 17, 2018 at 9:37 am

      Lauric acid would be in the coconut oil .. it won’t be listed in the ingredients. The ingredients should just say virgin coconut oil.

  4. Michael Boice

    Dec 24, 2017 at 3:24 pm

    Let’s say you wanted to make an old fashioned deep fried pastry. I’ve no idea how my relatives in Italy once deep fried pastry but I do not see a suitable oil – cold pressed organic canola was my choice. I make this pastry but once a year.

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Dec 24, 2017 at 7:44 pm

      They almost certainly used extra virgin olive oil, a healthy choice. Canola oil is a modern invention of the food industry and should be avoided at all costs! https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/canola-oil/

  5. Sam Elowitch

    Dec 1, 2017 at 6:44 pm

    Merely because something is “natural” does not magically make it beneficial.

    Reply
  6. Roy

    Nov 20, 2017 at 2:33 pm

    Your comment about MCT oils not being found in nature while true is misleading. MCT oils are fractionated coconut oil and the better ones are distilled without using chemicals. Now, brandy is not found in nature, it is distilled from wine which is processed grape juice. Yet one does not hear any adverse comments about brandy not being found in nature. Cobra venom is 100% natural yet I would prefer staying as far from it as possible.

    Now, if you noted that some MCToils are badly processed and hence not recommended, I would agree with you wholeheartedly.

    Note, I have not interest in selling MCT oils – I just found a logical fallacy in your statement. I wholeheartedly agree with you in that natural is generally best.

    Reply
  7. Vaughn Malecki

    Oct 30, 2017 at 3:05 am

    What would be the best choice for making salad dressings? I used the best sunflower oil I could find mixing it with olive oil. I need something that is a liquid obviously….

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Oct 30, 2017 at 8:15 am

      Extra virgin olive oil is best as the base for salad dressing.

  8. Susan Brauser

    Sep 28, 2017 at 3:53 pm

    I am so fortunate to have come across your article on MCT oil. What you write makes perfect sense to me and you seem to be the only one bringing a dose of reality to the hype. I actually bought a bottle yesterday to help with my mom’s mental functioning and was going to combine it with coconut oil which I love and use all the time. I will discard the bottle of MCT oil. It makes life much simpler.
    Thank you!

    Reply
  9. melissa

    Jul 6, 2017 at 1:23 pm

    I was only looking into MCT oil because DR. Mercola says that if you have leaky gut (not sure i do but i certainly don’t have a lectin free diet) than consuming coconut oil can be problematic.. something about transporting an endotoxin into the bloodstream. ! eek. Now that I know more about MCT oil I will probably just take my chances and continue to use coconut oil for high heat cooking.. along with grapeseed. Just wondering your thoughts on any issue with those who may have sensitive guts/leaky gut/IBS consuming conconut oil. I don’t seem to have any gut issues related to the oil that I know of!

    Reply
  10. Craig Giddens

    Jun 7, 2017 at 1:17 pm

    Any suggestions on how to take coconut oil on a regular basis? I tried taking it straight and it was kind of heavy on the digestion system.

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Jun 7, 2017 at 10:59 pm

      It is very nice mixed into a cup of hot tea. Yes, it can be heavy at first especially if you’ve been lowfat for a long time. Work up slowly to give your gall bladder and liver time to adjust.

« Older Comments
Newer Comments »

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Sidebar

Mother Nature’s Medicine Cabinet

5 Secrets to a Strong Immune System

Loading

The Healthy Home Economist

Since 2002, Sarah has been a Health and Nutrition Educator dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. Read More

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Check Out My Books

Mother Nature’s Medicine Cabinet

5 Secrets to a Strong Immune System

Loading

Contact the Healthy Home Economist. The information on this website has not been evaluated by the FDA and is not intended to diagnose, treat, prevent, or cure any disease. By accessing or using this website, you agree to abide by the Terms of Service, Full Disclaimer, Privacy Policy, Affiliate Disclosure, and Comment Policy.

Copyright © 2009–2025 · The Healthy Home Economist · All Rights Reserved · Powered by BizBudding Inc.