One of my favourite desserts is kueh, a whole genre of little cakes and confections found in the indigenous cuisines of Southeast Asia. Called kueh, or kuih, it is an integral part of Indonesian, Malay and Peranakan culinary culture. You’ll also find renditions of that genre in Thailand. There hundreds of different kinds of kueh in these parts, and with regional differences. These bite-sized morsels are mostly sweet, and eaten as a snack, as breakfast or as a dessert, though honestly the course-by-course concept of the meal where dessert comes last is really a foreign import as far as Asian cuisines are concerned.
I am always fascinated with kueh, and not just in the eating, but because every jewel-toned morsel is a mark of the creative genius of local women over the centuries. This is because this vast array of kueh primarily revolve around a very small pantry of very humble ingredients such as coconut flesh and milk, sugar, tapioca, sweet potato, mung beans, bananas, sago, pandan, glutinous rice. All these would have been easily available in the kampong or village gardens, within arm’s length of front doors. Â But the stunning variety of flavours, textures, colours these housewives of old came up with is pure genius.


Anyways, back to the kueh. One of my favourites is kueh salat, a double-decker delight comprising glutinous rice on the bottom and a lovely, softly gelatinous pandan-coconut kaya layer on top. I always wanted to try making it as I have pandan leaves growing like a weed in my backyard, and I had picked some butterfly pea flowers while jogging this morning. This is my first try, and it was a success. It’s so easy to make, I won’t ever have to buy kueh salat again.
Pandan Layer 8 pandan (screwpine) leaves, cut into 6cm pieces (or use pandan extract if the leaves aren’t available, but there’s nothing like the actual thing) 100 ml water 200 ml coconut milk 3 eggs 5 Tbsp flour 2 Tbsp cornstarch 190g sugar Rice Layer 300g glutinous rice, soaked in water for 1 hour 70 ml water 130 ml coconut cream 1/2 tsp salt 2-3 pandan leaves, washed 20-30 butterfly pea flowers, washed (optional)* Method Note: This kueh is never served chilled but at room temperature when it is quite soft and pliable. You can store it covered in the fridge for up to 3 days. The rice layer tends to dry up a little in the fridge but I zap it in the microwave for a bit before eating, and that does the trick. *Butterfly pea flowers have been traditionally used as a natural blue colouring in Southeast Asia. Crush 20-30 blooms and infuse it in 1-2 Tbsp water. When the rice layer is cooked, sprinkle some of it randomly onto the rice before adding the pandan layer. You do not have to use all of the colouring. Store the excess in a sealed container in the fridge – it should last a few days.Kueh Salat
First, make the rice layer. Grease an 8-inch cake pan or deep heat-resistant dish. Add in all the ingredients except pandan leaves and stir to combine. Place the pandan leaves neatly on top of the rice. Steam on high heat for 20-30 mins until rice is cooked.
Looks delicious!
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Thanks, Ken! And thanks for popping by my blog!
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Nice recipe. I have read many recipes using pandan leaves but am not sure whether I will get these here in Delhi. Is there any replacement for these? I mean can I add any other flavor if I do not get pandan leaves.
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Hi Vandana! Great to connect with you again! Hope you have been well! If you can’t get pandan leaves, you can use pandan extract which comes in little bottles. The flavour of pandan is very distinct, so I don’t think there is another substitute flavour really. But I searched up the internet, and found this post by a chef in India (http://thefoodfables.blogspot.sg/2014/02/pandan-superflavour.html) who compared it to the kewra plant which he was more familiar with. He says its flavour is the same, but when I looked up the kewra plant online, it isn’t the pandan we have in Singapore — the leaves looks similar but really not the same at al. I am not familiar with the kewra plant, but if he uses it to cook, maybe you could explore that…? Do let me know how it turns it, if you get to try the recipe! 🙂
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Never mind. I will order for pandan leaves online. I saw they are available online. Will surely revert back to you when I try this dish.
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Gorgeous colour! I’m hoping to find pandan leaves in our China town market!
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Good luck with that. Do let me know if you try this recipe and how it turned out! 🙂
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Lovely! Reminds me of my life in the islands… Reading the post I had memories of coconut palms and fresh tropical islands after the rain. Xo
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How lovely! Sadly, that feel of coconut palms and that island life is a thing of the past in Singapore today. But it is a feel and memory from my childhood days. Which islands were you living in? Was it SEAsia?
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I lived on Saipan for more than half of my life. Moved there at age 18 and lived there until we moved to Japan in 2011!
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Hello, I found your little space in the community pool, so glad I did!! amazing write up!!!keep writing and inspire us…. surely will be waiting for more!!
Please do visit my blog when time permits, thanks in advance and see you there! 🙂
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Thanks! I’m following your blog too. So glad to link up with you.
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I’m glad to follow you back 🙂
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Thanks!
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I loved your post. Kueh Salat is one of my favourite things to eat and I miss it so!
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Thank you so much for popping by! Ya, I can’t imagine life with kueh salat! 😉
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