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This
pudding is pure comfort food for a cold, snowy or rainy day. A good friend of ours
who lives in the neighbourhood walked over last evening and presented us with a
generous amount of black rice. She must have read my mind because black rice is
on my list of things to get from the Oriental grocery store. Black rice is
called Kao Hnyin Baung in Burmese and, during my childhood, was sold by street
vendors for breakfast in Rangoon. So it has a special place in my heart.
Black
rice, according to the information on the package, was known as “Emperor’s Rice”
in ancient China and was reserved exclusively for Chinese Royalty. Loaded with
antioxidants, Vitamin E and fiber, it is delicious with a sweet and nutty taste
which, combined with its rich, dark purple color, is a treat for the eyes and
taste buds.
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This
pudding comprises just 3 simple ingredients consisting of black rice, coconut
milk and the flesh of young coconut or grated fresh coconut. I used Macapuno Coconut
Strings, a Phillipino product that is made up of sweetened strings of young
coconut flesh, used four forkfuls of it and omitted sugar all together.
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The
pudding has a deep purple color and a very delicious and satisfying creamy
texture. Stir the pudding occasionally, towards the end of the cooking process,
to prevent it from sticking to the bottom of the pan.
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Serve
hot or chilled, garnished with a little coconut milk and strings.
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Ingredients:
1
cup black rice
2
cups water
¼
tsp. salt
2
cups or one 14 oz. can coconut milk, set 2 Tbsp. aside
4
forkfuls Macapuno Coconut Sport Strings
or ¼ cup young coconut flesh, sliced - set a few strings aside
Sugar
to taste
Directions:
1. Place
rice in a bowl, cover with water & soak overnight, preferably in the
refrigerator.
2. Rinse
and drain in several changes of water.
3. Transfer
rice, along with water, to a saucepan and bring to a boil.
4. Lower
heat to lowest possible setting and simmer for 25-30 minutes until rice is
tender.
5. Add
heated coconut milk, keep at a low simmer & cook to a delightfully soft
mush.
6. Add
coconut strings and salt, stirring well.
7. Adjust
sweetness, adding as much sugar as desired.
8. Remove
from heat and serve, garnished with reserved coconut milk and strings.
I shared this recipe on
Hi,
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for posting this recipe.
It was exactly what we were looking for when talk in the family veered nostalgically to our childhood days in Rangoon when we used to sit on the doorsteps waiting for the early morning street vendors to pass.
We were remembering the flavours and textures of Kao Hnyin Baung and tried to figure out how it was made. We knew the ingredients used but had no idea how to make it.
Your recipe explains it so well. Thanks once again.
Am going to try it out today as I've just got a packet of black rice delivered. Not sure if it is the sticky variety. The memories are too strong NOT to try.
Cheers
Leo