Groundnut Oil vs Coconut Oil — Which One Should Your Family Be Cooking With?
But for the rest of us trying to make sense of fat profiles and smoke points — the question is fair: if you are picking between groundnut oil and coconut oil, which one should you be using?
Meet the Oils
Groundnut Oil (Moongphali Tel)
Mild nutty flavour, high smoke point, heart-healthy MUFA-dominant fat profile. Kitchen staple across Central, Western, and South India. Cold-pressed versions retain Vitamin E, resveratrol, and natural antioxidants.
Virgin Coconut Oil (Nariyal Tel)
Distinctly tropical aroma, rich in MCTs (medium-chain triglycerides), backbone of South Indian and Keralite cooking. Natural antimicrobial properties. Also beloved in Ayurvedic practice.
A Bit More on Groundnut Oil
Extracted from pressed peanuts, groundnut oil has been a kitchen staple across India for generations. It has a mild, slightly nutty flavour, a naturally high smoke point, and a fat profile genuinely good for heart health — mostly monounsaturated fats (MUFAs), which reduce LDL cholesterol and raise HDL. Cold-pressed versions retain Vitamin E, resveratrol, and natural antioxidants that are stripped out of refined versions.
A Bit More on Virgin Coconut Oil
Pressed from fresh or dried coconut meat, virgin coconut oil has a distinctly tropical aroma and a rich, creamy flavour. What sets it apart nutritionally is its high content of medium-chain triglycerides (MCTs) — particularly lauric acid, making up about 50% of its fat. MCTs are processed differently by the body: they go directly to the liver for quick energy rather than being stored. Virgin coconut oil also has natural antimicrobial and antifungal properties, which is why it is a Ayurvedic staple.
The Nutrition Numbers
| Nutrient / Factor | Cold-Pressed Groundnut Oil | Virgin Coconut Oil |
|---|---|---|
| Primary fat type | Monounsaturated (MUFA) ~48% | Saturated fat ~87% (mostly MCTs) |
| Vitamin E content | High — ~11% RDA per tbsp | Low — minimal Vitamin E |
| Omega-3 & 6 | Good balance of essential fatty acids | Low omega fatty acids |
| MCTs (quick energy) | Minimal | High — ~50% lauric acid |
| Antioxidants | Resveratrol, tocopherols, polyphenols | Polyphenols (in virgin variety) |
| Anti-microbial | Limited | Strong — lauric acid kills bacteria & fungi |
| Cholesterol effect | Lowers LDL, raises HDL | Can raise both LDL and HDL |
| Smoke point (cold-pressed) | ~160–180°C | ~175°C (virgin); ~204°C (refined) |
| Flavour profile | Mild, light nuttiness | Distinct coconut aroma and sweetness |
| Solidifies in cool temps? | No — stays liquid | Yes — below 24°C |
The Fat Debate — Is Coconut Oil's Saturated Fat a Problem?
Coconut oil contains about 87% saturated fat — more than almost any other cooking oil, and more than butter. This caused alarm in the 1990s when all saturated fat was lumped together as heart-damaging. The science has since become more nuanced.
Not all saturated fat behaves the same way. The MCTs in coconut oil — especially lauric acid — raise both LDL (bad) AND HDL (good) cholesterol. The NET effect on cardiovascular risk is still being studied. The consensus: in moderation, virgin coconut oil is fine. As your primary everyday cooking oil, it may not be ideal for everyone, especially those with high LDL or heart disease risk.
Groundnut oil, with its predominantly MUFA profile, has a cleaner track record for heart health and is generally considered safer for regular daily use.
Which Cooks What Better?
🥜 Use Groundnut Oil for
- Deep frying — samosas, pakoras, puris, vadas
- Stir-frying and bhuna-ing — spices shine without competition
- Everyday tadka and tempering
- Salad dressings — pairs well with chaat masala or lemon
- Baking — neutral enough for most recipes
🥥 Use Coconut Oil for
- South Indian curries — fish, prawn, avial, sambhar
- Payasam, kheer, and coconut-based desserts
- Kerala-style rice and parotta
- Light sautéing at moderate temperature
- Finishing oil — poured over hot dal before serving
- Oil pulling, skin and hair care (bonus use!)
What About Using Both?
Nutritionists and Indian cooking traditions both suggest the same thing: do not limit yourself to one oil. Rotating between groundnut oil, coconut oil, sesame oil, and mustard oil throughout the week gives your body a broader spectrum of fatty acids and micronutrients than any single oil can provide.
The Cold-Pressed Difference — For Both
Whether you are using groundnut or coconut oil, the single biggest upgrade you can make is switching to cold-pressed versions over refined. Refined groundnut oil has had its Vitamin E stripped, its flavour erased, and its antioxidants removed. Refined coconut oil loses its distinctive aroma and most of its polyphenols.
Cold-pressed versions of both oils retain everything that made them valuable in the first place. The difference in taste is immediately obvious. The difference in nutrition, though harder to taste, is just as real.
📚 References & Research
- Journal of Food Science and Technology (2011). Antioxidant capacity of virgin coconut oil vs refined versions. Referenced in: Claudia's Concept — Coconut vs Groundnut Oil Comparison (2025)
- Medanta Health Blog (2025). Which Oil is Best for Indian Cooking. medanta.org/patient-education-blog
- ICAR-IIGR, Government of India (2025). Groundnut Oil vs Other Edible Oils — The Healthier Choice. icar-iigr.org.in
- House of Veda (2025). Cold Pressed Groundnut Oil Benefits. houseofveda.com
- American Heart Association (2017). Dietary Fats and Cardiovascular Disease — A Presidential Advisory. Circulation.
- Sarita's Kitchen Official Blog (2025). Groundnut or Coconut: Choosing the Right Cooking Oil. saritaskitchenofficial.com
Bhavina's cold-pressed Groundnut Oil and Virgin Coconut Oil are both pressed on a traditional wooden ghani in Tumakuru — no chemicals, no solvents, no bleaching.
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