Receta Kueh Bangkit
Kuih Bangkit is also one of the traditional cookies served during Chinese New Year besides Pineapple Tarts. This cookie very light and coconut fragrant that melts in your mouth.
Kueh, translated from Malaysian or Indonesian into English means "cake", but strickly speaking kuehs are more like biscuits or cookies. While variations are common, the biscuit must be sweet and have an auspicious color. Kuehs appear to have been adopted in Southeast Asia from China. In Southeast Asia, most have assumed the popular Malay name. Read more from here
Here is the recipe
- 300g Tapioca Flour
- 30g Butter (room temperature)
- 1 egg yolk
- 110g Coconut milk
- 1/4 tsp Vanilla powder
Method:
Place aluminium foil on baking tray to bake 1kg of tapioca flour with 6 pandan leaves in preheated oven 140C for 15 mins. Leave to cool and keep in an airtight container or plastic bag before use. (you can prepare this days ahead)
Boil coconut milk (250g) on low heat with 220g sugar and a pinch of salt, stirring all the time, till sugar dissolves and off heat. Leave to cool completely and store coconut milk in fridge for next day use.
Mix all the ingredients in the mixing bowl ~ egg yolk, butter, coconut milk (110g) and vanilla powder to mix well and lastly add cooked tapioca flour, beat for 30 seconds.
Dust some cooked tapioca flour on the table and knead the dough to smooth (if dough is too try add a little more coconut milk or add little more tapioca flour if it is too wet). **Cover the dough with cling wrap or the dough will dry up and crack. Roll out dough to about 0.5 cm thick and use cookie cutters to cut into shapes.
Line baking tray with some cooked tapioca flour and put shaped biscuits on baking tray to bake at 160C for about 15 mins. Kuih Bangkit is cooked when the back of the cookies are slightly brown. Leave to cool completely and store in an airtight container.
kitchen notes:
if you're not making big portion, bake 500g tapioca flour would be enough for extra dusting and molding.
After boiling 250g coconut milk (1 packet), you'll get around 200-220g. Is better to boil more than not enough.
Enjoy Baking!