Besides being steamed, kuehs also come in baked form. Like this Bingka Keladi I made the other day. It was very dense, a little sticky, a little chewy just like any steamed kueh except it had drier outer crust. It looked plain & boring and rather unattractive compared to other colourful kuehs, but really looks can be deceiving. It was very fragrant and had a prominent coconut and yam taste. It almost felt like I was eating mashed yam in compacted form! This kueh was quite addictive too. Before I knew it, I had eaten almost half the cake!
Bingka Keladi (Baked Yam Kuih)
(Recipe adapted from here)
Ingredients
- 3 eggs
 - 3 cups coconut milk
 - 2 cups plain flour
 - 1 cup sugar
 - 1/2 tsp salt
 - 1 tsp vanilla essence
 - 2 Tbs butter
 - 2 cups yam (steamed or boiled, drained, then mashed)
 - 1 tsp purple colouring (optional)
 - sesame seeds for sprinkling on top
 
Method:
- Preheat oven at 200C. Grease a 9 inch square pan with butter and preheat in the oven for a while.
 - Using a blender or food processor, blend all ingredients together till smooth and combined. Do this in batches if you can't fit everything all at once. Batter will be quite thin & runny.
 - Add purple colouring and mix til coloring is well combined.
 - Pour batter into preheated pan. Sprinkle sesame seeds evenly on top.
 - Bake for about 1 hour, using both top and bottom heat. If you like crusty top, bake further for 10 minutes using top heat only.
 - Onced baked, remove from oven and leave to cool completely before cutting.
 
I'm submitting this post to Aspiring Bakers #12: Traditional Kueh (October 2011) hosted by SSB of Small Small Baker.
Made any kuehs lately? Do join in the fun too.
How I wish you have posted this earlier, because I just finish the yam that has been resting in my fridge today.
ReplyDeleteThis certainly got me interested... BookmarkING.
you made a very good choice in picking yam for the kuih bingka and i believe that this is really good and must be so fragrant! i just did a kuih bingka tapioca last week, one day i must also try with yam..not anywhere nearer, after this challenge, i guess i will stop making traditional kuihs for sometime!
ReplyDeleteFirst time heard of kuih bingka. I am so "jakun" hehe
ReplyDeleteQuay Po, i think we are all 'jakuns' in some way or another. haha!
ReplyDeleteisn't blogging great, we learn 'new' stuff everyday. hehe
Thank yyou for sharing
ReplyDelete