Wednesday 28 July 2010

Pandan Chiffon Cake

This was a special request from my brother. The first time I tried to make this cake, it failed horribly. Fortunately I've now worked out the correct temperature and cooking times and the cake turned out perfectly. The aroma is amazing and the cake is really light and spongy.

What is pandan I hear you ask? Pandanus amaryllifolius is a tropical plant in the screwpine genus which is known commonly as pandan and used widely in Southeast Asian cooking. It is an upright green plant with fan-shaped sprays of long, narrow, bladelike leaves and woody aerial roots. The plant is sterile, flowers only very rarely, and is propagated by cuttings.

The plant is rare in the wild but cultivated widely for use as a flavoring in cooking. The leaves are used fresh or wilted, and are commercially available in frozen form in Asian grocery stores in nations where the plant does not grow. They have a nutty, botanical fragrance which enhances the flavor of Indonesian, Singaporean, Filipino, Malaysian, Thai, Bangladeshi, Vietnamese and Burmese foods, especially rice dishes and cakes.

Addendum 7/4/15 

I'm entering this to Formula 1 Foods hosted by Caroline from Caroline Makes. It's a new blog challenge where the idea is to cook something from the country that is hosting the Formula 1 race. This year, the race was in Malaysia on March 28/29. This cake is very popular in Malaysia.




egg white foam 

ready to go in the oven 


Egg white foam
6 egg whites
1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
100g caster sugar

Egg yolk batter
6 egg yolks
150g coconut milk
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoon pandan juice (I omitted this as I didn't have any)
1/4 teaspoon pandan essence (I used 1 teaspoon as I didn't have any pandan juice)
few drops green colouring
4 tablespoon cooking oil
80g caster sugar
140g plain flour

  • To make egg yolk batter, combine egg yolks, coconut milk, salt, cooking oil, pandan essence, colouring and caster sugar in a mixing bowl.  Fold in flour until it forms a batter.
  • To make egg white foam, beat egg whites and cream of tartar until mixture forms soft peaks. 
  • Gradually add in sugar, beating at high speed until frothy and stiff peaks form. 
  • Gently fold beaten egg white foam into egg yolk batter until well mixed.
  • Pour batter into ungreased tin.
  • Bake in a preheated oven at 130C for 35 minutes and then at 160C for a further 25 minutes. 
  • Remove from the oven and invert the cake tin onto a wire rack. 
  • Allow to cool completely before unmoulding from tin.



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