Cuphea oil is oil pressed from the seeds of several species of the genus Cuphea. Interest in cuphea oils is relatively recent, as a source of medium-chain triglycerides like those found in coconut oil and palm oil. Cuphea oil is of interest because it grows in climates where palms - the source of both of these oils - do not grow.

The fatty acid content of cuphea oils are as follows. The composition of coconut oil is included for comparison:[1]

SpeciesCaprylicCapricLauricMyristicOther
C. painteri73.0%20.4%0.2%0.3%6.1%
C. hookeriana65.1%23.7%0.1%0.2%10.9%
C. koehneana0.2%95.3%1.0%0.3%3.2%
C. lanceolata87.5%2.1%1.4%9.0%
C. viscosissima9.1%75.5%3.0%1.3%11.1%
C. carthagenensis5.3%81.4%4.7%8.6%
C. laminuligera17.1%62.6%9.5%10.8%
C. wrightii29.4%53.9%5.1%11.6%
C. lutea0.4%29.4%37.7%11.1%21.4%
C. epilobiifolia0.3%19.6%67.9%12.2%
C. stigulosa0.9%18.3%13.8%45.2%21.8%
Coconut8.0%7.0%48.0%18.0%19.0%

These oils are also valuable as sources of single fatty acids. C. painteri, for example, is rich in caprylic acid (73%), where C. carthagenensis oil consists of 81% lauric acid. C. koehneana oil may be the richest natural source of a single fatty acid, with 95% of its content consisting of capric acid.

References

  1. Robert Kleiman (1990). "Chemistry of New Industrial Oilseed Crops". Advances in New Crops: 196–203. Retrieved 2006-10-09.


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