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Friday, January 7, 2022

Kuih Bangkit

 Source: https://whattocooktoday.com/kue-bangkit-santan.html


Ingredients: 

250 gm pre-cooked tapioca flour/starch Get at least 350 gr

5 pandan leaves cut into 3-4 inch pieces

100 ml coconut cream plus more as needed. Do not shake the can. See notes

1 egg yolk

90 gm icing sugar

⅛ tsp salt optional, it does bring out flavor of the cookie

Red coloring optional


Instructions: 

Get the coconut cream:

It's important not to shake the canned coconut cream. You can also chill the coconut cream in the fridge to help separate the cream from the water. I scoop up the cream on top. The watery bottom can be saved for other use in other recipes

Cook the tapioca flour (you can prepare few days ahead):


If you want to use the stir-fry method: Stir fry the flour with pandan leaves over low-medium heat on a dry wok without oil for about 1 hour. The flour will get lighter and lighter as you cook them. Remove the pandan leaves. Shake off any excess that clings on the leaves. Let them cool down completely and then store in an air-tight container until the next day if not using on the same day

Baking method (highly recommend): place the flour in a pan lined with some parchment paper.Bake at 300 F for 2 hours. Stir it twice halfway

Whether you are doing the stir-frying or baking the tapioca flour, the weight of the flour should be decreased by 13-14%, indicating your flour is "dry" enough now to be used for kueh bangkit. So if you bake 350 grams, it should be about 300 grams or close to that when it's done baking

Making the dough (Very important part, please read my post above too!):

Let the tapioca starch cools down in the oven so it won't collect any moisture. Then store it in an air-tight container for up to 7 days. I recommend using it the next day

Place the eggs yolk and icing sugar in a mixing bowl and whisk with an electric mixer starting at low speed and then gradually increase to medium high speed until the mixture is creamy and turns slightly pale yellow in color, about 3 minutes


Sift in the tapioca starch into the egg yolk mixture. Don't shake the sifter as the tapioca starch will fly everywhere. Use a rubber spatula to help you sift the starch. Use a rubber spatula to gently mix it. It won't come together yet. Add about 70 ml of the coconut cream first and then knead the dough with your clean hand. Most likely it will still be too dry to come together, add a bit more, tablespoon by tablespoon and continue to knead. Do this until you come to the point when you get a dry hard dough that is not smooth. I ended up using about 90 ml of coconut cream total (but please don't add all at one go). You may need a bit more or a bit less

Test the teexture and consistency of the dough:

Pinch off a small amount and press the dough with your hand. It will hold and you can divide it into half but when you press the dough with your fingers, it will crumble. This is the consistency we want to get that melt-in-mouth texture.

Shaping:

Preheat oven at 300 F / 150 C (I updated this since some of you need to bake for a long time). I have a conventional oven (with heating elements at the bottom). Dust the baking sheets (I use an aluminum pan for best heat transfer) with some extra tapioca starch to prevent sticking. I find this works better than lining the pan with parchment paper. Dust the cookie mould with the extra cooked tapioca flour you made earlier. Shake off excess flour


Pinch off one dough and press it firmly into the mould. Keeping the rest of the dough covered. Use a sharp paring knife to trim off excess dough on the top. I found that I don't need to dust the mould much because mine is made of plastic. Flip the mould over and firmly tap the mould to release the shaped dough. You shouldn't have difficulty if the mould is nicely coated with flour. Place them on the baking sheet, about 1/2 inch apart. The cookies do not expand much at all. Repeat with the rest of the dough

If the dough gets dry as you are working on shaping the cookies, you can add a bit of the extra coconut cream you have earlier and mix it again to make the dough less dry, but I don't have to do this

Baking (see my post above for more details with type of oven and baking temperature):

My oven uses bottom heat only. See the above post under "baking temperature" if your oven is different. Place them inside the oven 3rd rack from the top (or middle of the oven) and bake for 15 minutes (for 5 gr cookies). The bottom should be lightly golden brown and the top is pale white

Dot with red food coloring (optional):

Use a toothpick and dot the tip of the toothpick on red food coloring and dot on top of the cookie. This is totally optional

Storing:


Store in an air-tight container once they've cooled down completely and they will last for 1 month at room temperature. It tastes the best the first week you made them



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