Monday, 11 February 2013

Kuih Bangkit.... the one that melts in the mouth.

Happy Lunar New Year to all my Chinese readers. Hope the Year of the Snake brings more happiness and prosperity to you & your loved ones...


Yesterday, I made kuih bangkit. Kuih bangkit is a must-have cookie every Hari Raya in my house. I usually use the recipe shared by my late aunt.  I've also seen so many versions of the kuih bangkit recipe, but this time, I wanted to try the recipe shared by Sonia, the queen of baking experiment.


This  recipe is definitely  a keeper. It produces fragrant, delicious and most importantly, melt-in-the-mouth kuih bangkit! However, I made some minor changes to the recipe..


What I did differently from Sonia:
  1. Sonia stir fried the flour, I baked it because I thought it would be less messy. After cooling it overnight, I sifted it. While sifting, to my surprise, some part of the flour was still warm! Sonia is right. Ideally, the flour should be left to cool for a few days.
  2. Sonia didn't boil the coconut milk first but I did. As we all know, fresh coconut milk can turn bad quite fast, so I decided to play safe. Also, Sonia used only 70-80g of coconut milk. My mixture could not form into a dough, so I added 40g more coconut cream from a box. All in, I used 120g.
  3. I added 1/4 tsp potash so that my bangkit will rise. I also sprinkled sesame seeds on my kuih bangkit.
  4. Sonia pressed the dough into a mould. I rolled out the dough & cut using a cookie cutter.
  5. I baked the bangkit at 150 deg C for 40 minutes.

Kuih Bangkit
Adapted from recipe by  Sonia @ Nasi Lemak Lover,

Ingredients:
200g tapioca flour
60g sago flour (I ground green sago pearls using a coffee grinder & sifted the flour to get 60g.)
4 screwpine (pandan) leaves, cut into small pieces
1 egg yolk
a pinch of salt
1/4 tsp potash
85g icing sugar
120g  freshly-squeezed coconut milk (You may not need to use all.)

Topping:
egg white
sesame seeds

Method:
  1. Stir fry tapioca flour and sago flour with pandan leaves in a clean wok for 75 mins (low flame) until flour becomes very light and turn slightly yellow, and pandan leaves turn crispy. (I baked the flour in the oven at 150 deg C.) Cool flour until completely cool. Sift & set aside.
  2. In a mixing bowl, whisk egg yolk & potash until creamy. Add icing sugar and half coconut milk & whisk till combined.
  3. Add in flour & mix using hand. Slowly add in the remaining coconut milk, a little at a time, just until the mixture clings together to form a stiff, smooth and pliable dough.
  4. Roll the dough out to about 1/2 cm thick between 2 pieces of plastic. Cut into desired shapes with cookie cutters. Brush top of cut dough with egg white & sprinkle sesame seeds. Place cookies 1 cm apart on a baking pan. Leave aside for at least 1 hour to allow the cut-out dough to dry out  a little. This will prevent the cookies from spreading, hence maintaining the shape of the bangkit when baking.
  5. Bake in preheated oven at 150 deg C for 40 mins. (After the first 20 minutes, turn baking tray around & continue baking for another 20 minutes.) Remove cookies onto a wire rack to cool completely. Store in an air-tight container.
 I'm submitting this post to Chinese New Year Delights 2013 hosted by Sonia of Nasi Lemak Lover.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Faeez, wishing u and family bountiful and blessed year 2013.

Can I confirm with you that I can use baking soda in place of potash for making of kueh bangkits? I do not wish to buy potash just for one time usage for kueh bangkits, that's reason for my question.

Thank you.
Priscilla Poh

Faeez said...

Priscilla, thank you for the well wishes.:)
I think it shd be no problem replacing the potash with baking soda. In fact, many people also use baking powder..

Anonymous said...

As Salam Faeez, green sago pearl adakan sagu biji yg utk masak bubur kacang hijau? Tkaseh Faeez.

Faeez said...

Salam, sago pearl tu sebenarnya sagu biji, biasanya putih tapi ada juga diwarnakan merah atau hijau. Sebenarnya, resepi ini gunakan tepung sagu, tapi oleh kerana Faeez takde tepung sagu, saya hancurkan sagu biji hingga jadi tepung. :)

Anonymous said...

Wsalam Faeez,oh..rupa nya sago biji yg buat masak bubur. ok kak siti faham.Tkaseh Faeez, kak siti dah blajar ilmu yg baru dr Faeez.

siti jaleha

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