food

food
Showing posts with label kakanin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kakanin. Show all posts

Friday, May 25, 2012

Puto Bumbong

Puto Bumbong is a type of Puto or Rice Cake named after the bamboo tube.  It is unusual among puto, being sticky and having a long thin shape and purple color.  Traditionally it is made of glutinous rice, soaked in salted water and dried overnight.  Pour in bamboo tubes or Bumbong and then steamed until done.  It is served with grated coconut, raw sugar and pinipig!







1  cup glutinous rice
2  teaspoons purple food color (ube)
2  cups water
Panutsa ( sugar cane sweet) or Mascuvado (raw sugar)
pinipig



  • Soak glutinous rice in water overnight.
  • Grind the soaked rice.
  • Mix food color while the glutinous rice is being ground.
  • Wrap the ground glutinous rice on a piece of muslin cloth and place it in a strainer to drain excess liquid. Another technique in draining excess liquid is by pressing a heavy object that has been placed over the muslin cloth.
  • Once the ground rice has slightly dried, rub it against the screen of a strainer to produce coarse grained rice flour.
  • The rice flour for making puto bumbong is now ready to cook.
  • Fill each bamboo tube (bumbong) with just enough glutinous rice and put them into the steamer. See to it that the steamer contains boiling water.
  • Steam rice flour in the bamboo tubes for 10 minutes.
  • Once cooked, shake out the contents of each bamboo tube or remove the cooked glutinous rice from the bumbong with the help of a knife.
  • Spread butter on the puto bumbong and place a small piece of panutsa (sugar cane sweets) or 1 tbsp. of mascuvado (raw Sugar)
  • Add a small amount of grated coconut and pinipig before serving.


     

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Maja Blanca

Maja Blanca is a Filipino dessert made primarily from coconut milk. It is also known as coconut pudding or coconut cake. It has a consistency of thick gelatine and a delicate flavor. As the name suggests, the dish is creamy white in color. It is an all-time favorite dessert during family gatherings and special occasions and it's very easy to make it.

This is my mom's Maja Blanca! :)


2/3 cup cornstarch
2/3 cup sugar
1 can cream-style corn
2 cups coconut milk
3 tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
latik (browned coconut cream curds)

Combine all the ingredients in a shallow pan. Cook with constant stirring until thick. Transfer to a molder. Chill until set.

To prepare latik, extract kakang gata from one big coconut. Transfer gata to a karajay or pan. Cook over high fire until it begins to elude oil. Lower heat and continue cooking until the curd separates from the oil. Keep the oil for other uses and use the latik to top maja blanca, sapin sapin or suman.


* Kakang gata - is the first pressing of the coconut milk.

* You can use toasted coconut grated coconut instead of latik


Courtesy of The Maya Kitchen

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Palitaw, Palitaw... Lulubog, Lilitaw!

Palitaw is a small, flat, sweet rice cake eaten in the Philippines as a snack or dessert. They are made of malagkit (sticky rice) washed, soaked, and then ground. Scoops of the batter are dropped into boiling water where they float to the surface as flat discs - an indication that they are done. When served, it will dipped in grated coconut, and presented with a separate dip made up of sugar and toasted sesame seeds.




2 cups glutinous rice flour
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup sesame seeds, roasted
1 cup grated coconut

1. Combine glutinous rice flour with water and mix until a dough is formed.

2. Scoop about 2 tablespoons of dough then mold it into a ball-shaped figure.

3. Flatten the ball-shaped dough using the palm of your hands.

4. Boil water in a cooking pot then put-in the flattened dough.

5. When the flattened dough starts to float, remove them from the pot and set it aside allowing water to drip.

6. Combine sugar and roasted sesame seeds then mix well.

7. Dunk the rice cake in grated coconut then in the sugar-sesame seed mixture.

8. Arrange in a serving plate then serve.


Courtesy of Panlasang Pinoy



Thursday, April 28, 2011

Guinataan or Binignit



Binignit or Guinataan is a warm root crop and fruit stew  from the Visayas region in the Philippines.The dish is traditionally made by Cebuanos with slices of saba, taro, sweet potato. The people in the neighboring island Leyte, usually include landang (palm flour jelly balls), langka (jackfruit), anise and thickened with milled glutinous rice in cooking binignit. The vegetables along with pearl sago is cooked in a mixture of water, coconut milk and the local landang and sweetened by muscovado or brown sugar.

It is a Filipino sweet dish which is usually served as snacks and usually prepared during the Holy Week especially Good Friday.  The soup is best served when hot.


 Ingredients:

2 pieces yellow camote or sweet potatoes (cubed)
1 piece white gabi or taro root (cubed)
1 piece ube or purple yam (cubed)
4 pieces ripe saba banana (sliced)
6 pcs ripe langka or jackfruit
4 tbsps landang or tapioca
2 cups coconut milk
1 cup coconut milk, diluted with water
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 tsp salt


Procedure:
 
1. Place the diluted milk in a large pot and add the bananas, ube, camote and gabi. You can also save a lot of time by boiling the hard ingredients first before adding to the diluted coconut milk. 
 
2.Add the landang or tapioca, salt and sugar.
 
3.Add the langka strips and simmer until the mixture is thick and all the ingredients are tender.
 
4. Pour in 2 cups of coconut milk and adjust the heat to medium.
 
.5. Do not bring to a boil to prevent curdling of the cooking liquid.
 
6.Place in small serving bowls and serve.