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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 .
Mango pomelo sago is a type of contemporary Hong Kong dessert. It usually includes diced mango, pomelo, sago, coconut milk, and milk. It can be found in many Chinese restaurants and dessert stores in Hong Kong, as well as in Singapore, Malaysia, Guangdong, Taiwan and Papua New Guinea. [1]
Glutinous rice cake ball stewed in gula jawa (palm sugar), served with thick coconut milk. Similar to kolak biji salak: Bubur cha cha: Betawi and Malay A traditional Betawi and Malay dessert, prepared using pearled sago, sweet potatoes, yams, bananas, coconut milk, pandan leaves, sugar and salt. It can be served hot or cold. Bubur kacang hijau ...
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.
Sago soup or Sai mai lou is a type of tong sui dessert in Cantonese cuisine, [1] [2] [3] which is also a variant of tapioca pudding. It is basically made by pearl tapioca (sago), coconut milk and evaporated milk. The dish is traditionally prepared using sago starch, which is derived from sago palm pith. [4]
Thagu byin (Burmese: သာဂူပြင်; pronounced [θàɡùbjɪ̀ɴ]; also spelt thagu pyin) is a traditional Burmese snack or mont.The sweet delicacy is essentially a sweet sago pudding made with sago, coconut milk and condensed milk. [1]
Shwe yin aye (Burmese: ရွှေရင်အေး; pronounced [ʃwèjɪ̀ɴʔé]) is a traditional Burmese dessert commonly associated with the Thingyan season. [1]The dessert consists of sweetened sticky rice, sago pearls, pandan jelly noodles (), and cubes of gelatine, coconut jelly, and a slice of white bread steeped in a concoction of sweetened coconut milk, served cold.
Various sweet desserts may also simply be called ginataan, especially in the northern Philippines. [1] For example, the Visayan binignit, a soup made with coconut milk, glutinous rice, tubers, tapioca pearls, and sago is simply called ginataan in Tagalog (a shortened form of the proper name, ginataang halo-halo). [10]