Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Taro cake (traditional Chinese: 芋頭糕; simplified Chinese: 芋头糕; pinyin: yùtóu gāo; Cantonese Yale: wuhtáu gōu) is a Cantonese dish made from the vegetable taro. While it is denser in texture than radish cakes , both of these savory cakes are made in similar ways, with rice flour as the main ingredient.
Or kuih (Chinese: 芋粿) – a steamed savoury cake made from pieces of taro (commonly known as "yam" in Malaysia), dried prawns and rice flour. It is then topped with deep fried shallots, spring onions, sliced chilli and dried prawns, and usually served with a chilli dipping sauce.
The resulting cylindrical rice cake is then served on banana leaves, slathered with more butter or margarine, and sprinkled with muscovado sugar (or just brown sugar/white sugar with or without sesame seeds) and grated coconut, others had special toppings of puto bumbong like condensed milk (as an alternative ingredient to sugar), or even ...
Get the recipe: Golden Yam Cake. Lemons for Lulu. This easy poke cake takes everything we love about a pumpkin roll cake and turns it into an easy to assemble stir and bake cake!
Mama Cheung posts videos of Cantonese dishes to YouTube and Instagram. [6] Having been a housewife for around four decades, Mama Cheung did not plan to become a YouTuber. [1] In 2014, her children uploaded a video of her making sugared yam [] to YouTube which received positive viewer feedback and sparked her interest to make more videos. [1]
Dioscorea polystachya or Chinese yam (simplified Chinese: 山药; traditional Chinese: 山藥), also called cinnamon-vine, [2] is a species of flowering plant in the yam family. It is sometimes called Chinese potato or by its Korean name ma. [3] [2] It is also called huaishan in Mandarin and wàaih sāan in Cantonese.
The Teochew also have a fried lotus cake (or lotus pastry) (simplified Chinese: 莲花酥月饼; traditional Chinese: 蓮花酥月餅; pinyin: Liánhuā sū yuèbǐng), eaten on the Mid-Autumn Festival. This moon cake is deep-fried, not baked. The yam filling and flaky pastry crust are what set Teochew mooncakes apart from other mooncakes.
Nian gao (Chinese: 年糕; pinyin: niángāo; Jyutping: nin4 gou1), sometimes translated as year cake [1] [2] or New Year cake [1] [3] [4] or Chinese New Year's cake, is a food prepared from glutinous rice flour and consumed in Chinese cuisine.