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This chocolate mixture is combined with the remaining haupia and poured on the pie crust. [2] Once the pie is assembled, it is refrigerated to allow both the haupia and chocolate layers to set. [2] The pie is typically finished with a layer of whipped cream, made by whipping heavy cream with sugar until it forms soft peaks. [2]
Sweet potato haupia pie is a dish of Hawaiian cuisine. [1] It is a pie made with sweet potato filling and topped with a layer of haupia (coconut pudding) and uses a macadamia nut shortbread base or short crust. Although it is called a "pie", it is usually prepared in rectangular pans as dessert bars, although a pie dish (or tart pan) can be used.
Kūlolo is a Hawaiian dish made with taro and coconut. Considered a pudding, kūlolo has a chewy and solid consistency like fudge or Southeast Asian dodol, with a flavor similar to caramel or Chinese nian gao. [1] [2] Because taro is widely cultivated on the island of Kauai, taro products such as kūlolo is often associated with the island. [3]
Haupia and other similar coconut puddings are a variety of traditional Polynesian pudding. Puddings made in the Pacific islands generally consist of two components; a base made from a starch such as taro or breadfruit and an emollient such as coconut milk or oil that bound the material together when cooked.
Taste of Home's recipe for five-ingredient chocolate fudge relies on pantry staples: butter, semisweet chocolate chips, milk chocolate chips, sweetened condensed milk, and vanilla extract.
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Haupia—a standalone dessert, or coconut flavoring accompaniment to others; Hawaiian shave ice also known as "ice shave" in other parts of the state [7] Kōʻelepālau — Pudding of mashed sweet potato mixed with coconut milk; Kūlolo—a distant Austronesian relative of the dodol using taro and coconut milk
[1] [3] It is similar to other Native Hawaiian puddings like kūlolo and piele. [4] [5] It was once a dish well documented by many non-Hawaiians as an everyday dish, [6] [7] or as a dessert found at ʻahaʻaina (or lūʻau) found alongside kūlolo, [8] [9] and was noted by Robert Louis Stevenson during his visits in the late 1800s. [10] [11]