Difference between revisions of "Chendol"
RealRecipes (talk | contribs) m (Text replace - "\[\[Category:Malaysian ([^cC])(.*)\]\]" to "Category:Malaysian cuisine Category:$1$2 Recipes") |
RealRecipes (talk | contribs) m (Text replace - "Category:Desserts Recipes" to "Category:Dessert Recipes") |
||
| Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
[[Category:Malaysian cuisine]] | [[Category:Malaysian cuisine]] | ||
| − | [[Category: | + | [[Category:Dessert Recipes]] |
[[Category:Coconut Recipes]] | [[Category:Coconut Recipes]] | ||
[[Category:Palm sugar Recipes]] | [[Category:Palm sugar Recipes]] | ||
Revision as of 18:50, 10 May 2012
Description
Also called "jen dol"
Ingredients
- 10 screwpine leaves
- 2 – 3 drops green food coloring
- ½ cup green pea flour (hoon kway)
- 5 tablespoons palm sugar
- 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
- 4½ cups water
- 1 coconut, grated
- salt
Directions
- Pound screwpine leaves to extract the juice.
- Add sufficient water to the juice with green food coloring to make 2 cups.
- Mix green pea flour with the juice.
- Cook this mixture over medium heat stirring continuously until it bubbles.
- Place chendol frame (I have no idea what this even looks like, but should be a sieve with large holes) over a basin of cold water and ice cubes.
- Spoon the cooked screwpine mixture onto the chendol frame and with a spatula, press through the holes into the cold water.
- Drain off the water and chill the chendol.
- Boil the palm sugar and granulated sugar with ½ cup water to get syrup.
- Strain and cool the syrup.
- Add the remaining water to the grated coconut and extract coconut milk.
- Add a good pinch of salt to the coconut milk.
- To serve, place 1 tablespoon chendol into a small serving bowl, then add 1 tablespoon syrup and ¼ cup coconut milk.
- Top the bowl with ice shavings and serve immediately.
- Note: if pure green pea flour is used, mix 2½ cups of screwpine juice to ½ cup green pea flour.