* Serimuka
Posted on November 7th, 2008 by Linda. Filed under Coconut, Cuisine, Dessert, Glutinuous Rice, Malaysian, Pandan, Singaporean.
My grandmother used to make and sell nyonya “kuih”. I wish she was still around so that I can pick up the right skills from her!
Chef’s tip: The green is natural from the pandan leaves. Besides adding fragrance to the cake, it gives it this beautiful green color. Blending the leaves with a little water and then extracting the liquid is how you get pandan juice.
Ingredients
1 1/2 cups sweet glutinous rice
1 cup coconut milk
1 Tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon kosher salt
2 pieces pandan
8 pandan leaves
½ cup water
3 eggs
¾ cup coconut milk
¾ cup sugar
6 Tablespoons pandan juice (see step 5)
1 Tablespoon corn starch
1 ½ Tablespoon all-purpose flour
1 Tablespoon rice flour
½ teaspoon kosher salt
Banana leaves
Preparing the rice.
1. Wash the rice. Add water till it covers the rice by 1 inch. Let rice soak at least 6 hours to overnight.
Cooking the rice
2. Drain rice. Place the rice in a cake pan lined with banana leaves. Place in a steamer rack.
3. Combine sugar and salt with the coconut milk. Add to the rice. Bury a knot of pandan leaves in the rice. Steam for about 20 minutes.
4. When rice is done, remove the pandan leaves. Using a piece of banana leaves or aluminum foil, flatten the rice down to form an even compact layer. Steam for another 10 minutes.
Preparing the pandan juice
5. Chiffonade the pandan. Place the pandan and water in a blender and puree. Strain out solids. Reserve juice.
Preparing the custard
6. In a small bowl, whisk together the eggs, coconut milk, sugar and pandan juice. Set aside.
7. Place the 3 different flours and salt in a bowl and whisk to mix. Slowly add the liquid egg mixture, a little at a time, and incorporate till it is smooth and there are no more lumps.
8. In a double boiler, heat the custard, stirring constantly till just begins to thicken. Remove form heat.
Completing the serimuka
9. Pour the thickened custard over the compressed and steam over low heat for another 20 minutes, or until set.
10. Allow to cool completely before cutting.
Serves: 8
3 Responses to “Serimuka”
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November 17th, 2008 at 10:38 am
I’m a Sabahan living in Canada and miss the kuihs back home terribly and this was one of my favourites. Thanks for posting this! I’m going to attempt this. Can almost taste the salty sweetness in the rice part.
November 18th, 2008 at 9:19 pm
Your kuih serimuka looks so good and professional! really miss all the kuihs back home sometimes
May 27th, 2009 at 11:18 pm
Hello, my sister (one of your ex-classmates) introduced me to your blog (yes I am one of her little twin sisters, you know who now right
and I tried out this recipe. Really good, hubby couldn’t stop eating. Didn’t have pandan (live in Germany) so just used green colouring so maybe a little “flavour” was missing but it was still really good. Thank you!!