Showing posts with label Jajan Pasar. Show all posts

KLEPON (Glutinous Rice Balls with Palm Sugar)

Posted by Lisa on Tuesday, July 16, 2013. Filed under: , , ,
4 Comments


Klepon  is a traditional rice cake, popular in Indonesia and Malaysia. It is a boiled rice cake made from glutinous rice powder, stuffed with liquid gula jawa (palm sugar), and rolled in grated coconut. Klepon is green because it is flavored with a paste made from the pandan or dracaena plant whose leaves are used widely in South East Asian cooking. In other parts of Indonesia, such as in Sumatra and in neighboring Malaysia, klepon is called as onde-onde.

KLEPON

Ingredients:
200 grams glutinous rice flour
180 ml water
2 drops pandan paste or essence
75 g gula Jawa (palm sugar), finely chopped
1 cup freshly grated coconut
1/2 teaspoon salt

Directions:
Place the glutinous rice flour in a mixing bowl and slowly add the water and pandan paste, mixing with your hands. Stop adding water when the dough forms a ball that pulls away from the sides of the bowl but doesn't stick to your hands.
Pull off about 1 teaspoon of dough and flatten into a disc. Place about 1/2 teaspoon of sugar in the middle. Fold up the edges and seal completely. Roll into a ball about 2 to 3 cm in diameter with the palms of your hands. Place on an oiled plate. Repeat until all the dough or sugar is finished.
Heat a large pot of water until it starts to boil. Prepare a large bowl of cold water. Combine the grated coconut and salt on a plate.
Drop the balls one by one into the boiling water, making sure not to overcrowd the pot. When they float to the surface, let them cook for one more minute.
Remove the balls with a slotted spoon and dunk them in the cold water. When they are cool, remove and drain well before rolling in the coconut-salt mixture. Serve immediately




Bolu Sakura (Caramel Steamed Cake)

Posted by Lisa on Friday, November 16, 2012. Filed under: , ,
5 Comments

So, here I am updating this blog after more than 5 years break! LOL
I start to do my old hobby of baking lately but never thought of continue to document it in this blog, until some friends asked me to. I have my oven back in my kitchen, even though I don't have anymore baking tools collections like I use to have few years back.  I'm not planning to bake everyday anyway.  So, let's see what I can do.

I made this steamed cake a week ago, and then I found out that Miss B from Everybody Eats Well in Flanders is hosting Aspiring Bakers #25 - Steaming Hot Cakes (November 2012).  I decided that this could be one of the right reasons to start to write again, LOL.

Bolu Sakura (Caramel Steamed Cake) is one of Indonesia's popular steam cake.  We can find it in almost every part of Indonesia.  This is my first time to make my own Bolu Sakura, and I am really happy with the result.  


Ingredients:
500 grams granulated sugar
500 ml of boiled water
220 ml chicken eggs (4 eggs medium size)
100 melted butter/ margarine
1 tsp vanilla
Butter/veggie oil to spread

Sift together:
450 grams all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 tablespoon of baking soda
1/4 tsp salt

Direction:
1. Prepare some small sakura/ flower cake molds, spread with butter/vegetable oil. Set aside. Heat up water in a steamer to boil. Wrap the steamer lid with a cloth napkin.
2. Place 250 grams sugar into a pan and and cook until it turn brown and caramelized. Pour the water gradually, do not stir instantly. Let it cook until boiling then have it a stir. Put a side.
3. Beat eggs, vanilla with the remaining sugar until thick and fluffy. Pour the caramelized sugar while keep beating at low speed until blended. Turn off the mixer.
4. Stir in the sifted-flour until well blended. Add melted butter/margarine gradually, stirring gently with a spatula until well blended.
5. Pour the batter into each mold up to 3/4 full. Steam for 15 minutes until cooked. Take it out from steamer. Let it cool slightly then remove from mold. Serve.

PS: If you don’t have those small molds, you may use a cake/pudding mold (made from plastic).

servings: 40pcs (small molds)