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Sago with coconut milk (Burmese: အုန်းနို့သာကူ; Thai: สาคูน้ำกะทิ; RTGS: sakhu nam kathi) is a Burmese and Thai dessert. The main components of this recipe are sago and coconut milk .
This is a list of Thai khanom, comprising snacks and desserts that are a part of Thai cuisine. [1] Some of these dishes are also a part of other cuisines. The word "khanom" (Thai: ขนม), refers to snack or dessert, presumably being a compound between two words, "khao" (ข้าว), "rice" and "khnom" (หนม), "sweet". The word ...
Filipino boiled corn desert topped with freshly grated coconut, butter, and salt (or sugar). This variant adds coconut milk. Binignit: Dessert soup made from sweetened coconut milk, glutinous rice, fruits, and various root crops Biniton: Maguindanaon dish of chicken in coconut milk, cumin, curry, chilli and lemongrass Buko pandan
Bubur cha cha, also spelled as bubur cha-cha or dubo jiajie, is a Betawi and Malay dessert and breakfast dish in Indonesian cuisine, Malaysian cuisine, Singaporean cuisine and Phuket cuisine (Thailand) prepared using pearled sago, sweet potatoes, yams, bananas, coconut milk, pandan leaves, sugar and salt.
In Malaysia, sago gula melaka is a sago pudding made by boiling pearl sago in water and serving it with syrup of palm sugar (gula melaka) and coconut milk. [1] In Myanmar, thagu byin is a sago pudding made with sago, coconut milk and condensed milk. [2] Sago pudding is also a popular delicacy in New Guinea.
Bua loi or bua loy (Thai: บัวลอย, pronounced [būa lɔ̄ːj], lit. ' floating water lily ') is a Thai dessert. It consists of rice flour rolled into small balls, and cooked in coconut milk and sugar. [1] Some Bua loi also adds sweet egg into the recipe.
Cendol / ˈ tʃ ɛ n d ɒ l / is an iced sweet dessert that contains pandan-flavoured green rice flour jelly, [1] coconut milk, and palm sugar syrup. [2] It is popular in the Southeast Asian nations of Indonesia, [3] Malaysia, [4] Brunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Philippines, and Myanmar.
Cha mongkut is a dessert made from incense-scented flour, bean flour, sugar, coconut milk, and roasted watermelon seed which looks like kalamae invented 200 years ago in the era of King Rama II. Cha mongkut means the 'owner of the crown,' the top position. [4] There is confusion between cha mongkut and dara thong.