Showing posts with label Pandan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pandan. Show all posts

Saturday, 11 April 2026

"Rainbow sky with clouds" Painted Swiss Roll

 Inspired by the sunrise view from my kitchen window, I decided to make these impressive looking but deceptively easy painted Swiss rolls!


The paint used is from raw/fresh natural food sources, not from any bottled food colouring. The Swiss roll is dairy-free too!



Composition:
- Pandan coconut chiffon sponge
- Non-dairy whipped cream
- Blue pea flower pandan coconut jelly cloud inserts

This class is suitable for parent-child pairs or two adult pairs who are beginners at baking. Please refer to the link below for more class details or to sign up.

https://www.bakersgym.com/service-page/kids-class-painted-swiss-roll

with love,

Phay Shing

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Saturday, 30 August 2025

Sugar-Free Sunflower Gula Melaka Pandan Kaya Cake

I finally got around to making my mum's super belated birthday cake! Dad took much longer than expected to recover from his surgery so we had to postpone her celebration. Thank God all's good now. Presenting the gula melaka pandan kaya cake that I planned to make a few months ago with the design based on one of Mum's Nagomi Art paintings!


This is mum's painting. Doesn't it look like some professional art piece?

I did a "full-dress rehearsal" of the cake over here with a tulip themed Nagomi Art design as my reference if you are interested:

Cake composition:
- Sunflower chiffon cake inserts made using only Gula Melaka and prebiotic soluble fibres as the "sugar"
- Green and brown gula melaka pandan kaya pudding with gula melaka as the only "sugar"
- White chiffon sheet cake made using pandan water and no egg yolks to keep the cake white. A sugar replacement and prebiotic soluble fibres were the "sugar" in this cake

Just to share some works-in-progress photos:



Some photos of the cake at the restaurant where we had the celebration 





You may see the reel for the process of making this cake over here:

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DNnVY5XpCy5/?igsh=MXViYzQzZHZ3OTVodg==

I shared the sugared version of the recipe together with my Tulip roll cake reel so please refer to the captions of that reel if you need a reference recipe. 


Needless to say, everyone enjoyed the cake that was tasty but light and refreshing enough to be consumed after a sumptuous meal!


with lots of love,

Phay Shing

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Thursday, 14 August 2025

Spinach Pandan Frog Swiss Roll

This is the last in my series of 5 cute animal Swiss rolls made from baby food puree. Don't be put off by the spinach in this because you don't taste it at all. Great way to sneak in some veggies to feed your kids if they are finicky eaters 🤭. This cake is fragrant and yummy according to my taste testers so do give this a try!


This is the spinach puree I used but you may make your own from fresh spinach leaves. 


I will share the ingredient list here. You may refer to my reel for the method and video of the process:


Frog Swiss rolls
(makes about 9 frogs)
Egg yolk batter:
3 egg yolks
30g neutral oil of choice
30g reduced spinach puree with pandan* 
20g plain yoghurt/milk
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/8 tsp salt
54g cake flour
3/8 tsp (2.2g) sponge gel

Meringue:
110-120g egg whites 
1/4 tsp cream of tartar 
45-60g caster sugar

Cream:
70g whipping cream of choice** 
45g cream cheese, softened at room temperature 
5g milk powder 
10g icing sugar
25g reduced spinach puree with pandan*
1/2 tsp vanilla extract

Eyes, mouth and cheeks:
1/16 tsp charcoal powder or black cocoa powder
Pink gel colouring or strawberry emulsion
5g butter/oil
5g icing sugar
5g egg whites
5g cake flour

* 80g spinach puree + 3/8 tsp (3g) pandan paste. Heat until reduced to 75% original puree weight. I used Popote's spinach puree which has some potato added. You may make your own from 100% fresh spinach leaves for an even more naturally vibrant green.

** Use non-dairy for better stability in hot climate. Use heavy cream with at least 35% fat for better taste but add 2 tsp icing sugar & be careful not to overwhip or it will split. Use a combination of creams if you wish.

Here are some pictures of works-in-progress. Plain slices look inviting too!




with love,

Phay Shing

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Monday, 5 May 2025

Gula Melaka Pandan Kaya Painted Swiss Roll (new technique!)

 I am really excited to share a new game-changing technique that will make painted cakes much easier for beginners without much artistic or baking skills! This is a bake to test the proof of concept and I am very pleased with the results!




Some of you may recognise the style of artwork is Nagomi art. Why the choice of nagomi art style? It's because my mum took up a nagomi art class recently and I was inspired to turn one of her paintings into her birthday cake design. This tulip design is taken off the internet (FortuneArtDream from Pinterest) for my practice run. The choice of cake flavour is because Mum took up a Peranakan cooking course last year and has been practicing making kueh kosui on and off. I thought this flavour profile is reminiscent of the kueh.

Cake composition:
- Pandan gula melaka chiffon sponge cakes for the tulip centers and white sponge canvas for the painting
- Gula melaka pandan kaya pudding in green and brown colours as the roll cake filling

If you have followed me long enough and are familiar with patterned chiffon cakes and swiss rolls, you will know that the standard method is to use a patterning batter that is baked together with the base sponge batter as the cake designs or as guides to mark out areas where additional details are painted in post-baking. Working with patterned batter can result in many challenges where things can go wrong, such as:
1. Cracks along boundaries between pattern and base sponge
2. Pattern stuck to Teflon sheet/parchment paper instead of base sponge
3. Patterning batter turning runny/deflating before piping finish the pattern
4. Difficulty in optimizing oven settings to bake the cake

What I have done in this new technique is to do away with the patterning batter and we start with a blank canvas in the form of a solid coloured sponge (usually white). Baking a single-coloured sheet cake is way easier and faster!

How do we get the pattern on then? By tracing a mirror imaged picture onto parchment paper and printing it onto the cake! I was inspired to try this when I saw reels shared by qeleg_cake (Instagram account) on printing faint outlines onto sponge cake before painting. What I did differently was to use edible marker instead of cake paint, and parchment paper instead of transfer paper.

Here's some pictures of the painted cake halfway through and upon completion.



You may refer to the reel below for the recipe of the cake (see the captions and pinned comments of the reel) and printing technique. Do note that although I made this cake using prebiotic fibres, a sugar replacement and gula melaka, the recipe I shared only uses regular white sugar and gula melaka as the sugar-free version with prebiotics is class material.

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DJRIsoGpLPN/?igsh=MWxkMWRoa3o3dWo4Ng==


with love,

Phay Shing

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Wednesday, 23 April 2025

"Green Eggs and Ham" Kid's Baking Class

 If you are familiar with Dr Seuss' stories, you will definitely be familiar with one of his classics, Green Eggs and Ham. This is my version of it and the whole thing is actually sweet instead of savoury, complete with runny "yolk" that can burst when you poke at it!




This will be a fun-filled class combining Science, Art and Culinary experience in a single session.

What's on the menu?
- Coconut gula melaka strawberry crepes as "ham"
- Coconut panna cotta as "egg whites"
- Spherified pandan gula melaka yoghurt as "green yolks"
 
Watch this reel to see the texture, the jiggles and oozy action!





Please click on this link to register.


with love,

Phay Shing


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Thursday, 13 March 2025

(Almost) Sugar-Free Pandan Gula Melaka Chiffon Cake

 Of course I had to try one of the most classic flavours for sugar-free chiffon with prebiotic fibres added --- Pandan!


I added a little gula melaka to boost the flavour so it's not entirely sugar-free but it's definitely white sugar-free. Check out the texture!


I couldn't resist making a simple cutie..


As with all intentional pandan cake bakes, I use homemade pandan juice concentrate which takes some work and patience to prepare.


You may see the process in the reel. Unfortunately I am not able to share my sugar-free chiffon recipe with the prebiotic fibres as I intend to use it for class. But I shared my default pandan chiffon recipe with gula melaka added in the captions of the reel so do check it out. It's tried and tested over the years.


https://www.instagram.com/reel/DGxfat2pJSY/?igsh=MXU1eHF5Mmd0czIxcw==


with love,

Phay Shing

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Monday, 2 December 2024

Pandan Chiffon Christmas Trees

 


Sharing an easy and creative way to make our favourite yummy Pandan Chiffon Cake into Christmas Trees🎄! Recipe video on my IG here. 

Pandan Chiffon Christmas Trees (makes 9)😋 
2 egg yolks 
16g caster sugar 
26g vegetable oil 
28g fresh/coconut milk 
65g cake flour, sifted 
1 tsp pandan paste 
½ tsp vanilla extract 

3 egg whites 
30g caster sugar 
¼ tsp cream of tartar 

Assembly 
Melted marshmallow 
Sprinkles 

1. Preheat oven to 140°C. Double wrap a baking tray with aluminum foil, make small holes and insert conical cups. 

2. Whisk egg yolks with sugar. Add oil, milk and vanilla extract and whisk well. Whisk in cake flour and mix until no lumps. 

3. Add pandan paste to egg yolk batter. This makes all green trees. 
Optional: For white stripes, transfer 30g egg yolk batter to a new bowl for plain batter, and mix pandan paste to remaining batter. 

4. Prepare meringue: whisk egg whites with cream of tartar till foamy. Add in caster sugar in 3 additions and whisk till firm peaks. 

5. Gently fold meringue into the egg yolk batter. 
Optional: For white stripes, transfer 30g meringue to plain egg yolk batter and remaining meringue to green egg yolk better. Fold meringue into respective egg yolk batters. 

6. Fill each paper cone till 1.5-cm from brim. 
Optional: Pipe green and white layers till 1.5-cm from brim. 

7. Bake at 140°C for 35 mins or till bamboo skewer inserted into middle comes out dry. 

8. Unmold cakes when fully cool and trim off the base to level. 

9. Melt marshmallows with a sprinkle of water. Stick on sprinkles and star sprinkle using melted marshmallows. 

Keep in airtight container in fridge for up to 5 days. Enjoy! 🩷🥰 

The Redman pandan paste is one of my personal favourite as it is rich and flavourful. Item code of the ingredients above at redmanshop.com: pandan paste (67762), caster sugar (1417), cake flour (1208). 

Thankful to be the new brand ambassador for RedMan by Phoon Huat during this festive season. Use my exclusive code SUS05 to get a 5% discount on all @Phoonhuat products! 

Enjoy baking!
Love,
Susanne

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Wednesday, 1 November 2023

Chiffon Cake Longevity Peaches (no artificial colouring added) on Pandan Kaya Cake

 I have been making longevity peach chiffon cakes for the past 9 years and this is the first time I decided to make it as naturally coloured as possible for my grandmother's 88th birthday. You may click on this link to see my past bakes that are longevity peach themed and made in various flavours like lychee rose and yuzu. Grandma likes to celebrate her birthday according to the lunar calender so the actual date we celebrate is not fixed each year. Because of this, I had to make the cake for her at a rather busy period so I kept things simple but yummy.

Here's this year's longevity peach cake for grandma!

The peaches sit on top of my signature pandan kaya cake!

Here's a better look at the peaches!


The peaches are almost naturally coloured, not 100% naturally coloured, because the bottled pandan paste I used for the leaves already has artificial green colouring added. In the past I had to use white colouring to make the peaches appear whiter instead of yellow, and used pink gel colouring to add on the pink. This time round I used a chiffon cake recipe adapted from Mimi that doesn't use any egg yolks to omit the use of artificial white colouring, and I used diluted fresh dragonfruit puree to colour the peaches pink naturally. The peaches were made a week in advance and frozen due to my busy schedule, but they still appeared and tasted as good as new!

You may refer to this post for my reduced sugar pandan kaya cake that is still tasty and refreshing at the same time. I increased the amount of sugar/gula melaka by about 20% for both the chiffon sponge and pudding to suit the tastebuds of my grandma and the whole clan of the extended family since this request was not a "siew-siew-siew-siew dai" (less-less-less-less sweet in colloquial Singapore) order 😆, but is still less sweet than commercially sold cakes in general. My cousin commented that it tastes better than Bengawan Solo's signature pandan kaya cake!

Chiffon cake longevity peaches (makes about 12-15 mini peaches):

Egg yolk batter
35g cake flour
Pinches of salt
10g caster sugar
15g vegetable oil (I used canola)
40g milk
1/4 tsp vanilla extract
1/8 tsp cocoa powder
1/4 tsp pandan paste

Meringue*
2 large egg whites (about 38-40g each egg white)
30g caster sugar
1/4 tsp cream of tartar

Decoration
Pink dragonfruit puree, sieved & diluted with water 
Water or simple syrup** 
Cake glue or melted marshmallow

* I split ingredients in half as the leaves & peach body have different baking time & temperature profiles

** Make simple syrup by dissolving sugar in hot water in 1:2 ratio. Using syrup instead of water helps to keep the sponge moist longer during storage

Steps:
1. Line a baking tray (or 2) with teflon sheet or parchment paper. Size of tray doesn't matter as we just need to spread the batter as thin a layer as possible for the leaves. Lightly grease heart shaped silicone molds with a little oil. You may use egg shells if you don't have the heart molds, and carve out the shape after baking. Wash and air dry eggshells thoroughly if using them. Preheat oven to 125C with fan on.

2. Make egg yolk batter. I know the name seems somewhat inappropriate because there is no egg yolk used but this is the same portion that is in all chiffon cake recipes where the yolk normally goes. In a mixing bowl, use an electric mixer to mix oil, milk, vanilla, salt and sugar together. Sift in flour and whisk until well combined. Divide into 2 equal portions. Add sifted cocoa powder and pandan paste to one portion, cover with cling wrap and set it aside. Cocoa powder is added to deepen the green colour and make it appear less neon bright.

3. Make one portion of meringue with one egg white portion of ingredients. In a clean metal bowl, beat egg white with cream of tartar until firm peaks, gradually adding sugar once the egg whites are foamy. Take your time to build up a stable, tight and glossy meringue at medium speed. Going high speed all the way creates large air bubbles and the meringue is not as stable.

4. Quickly but gently fold the meringue into the white egg yolk batter in 3 additions. Transfer into piping bag. Fill the mold until full.

5. Bake for 25-35 min. Increase temperature to 150-160C and bake for another 5 min. Cool completely before unmolding. Note that the baking profile is just a guideline and is dependent on mold size and oven so adjust accordingly.

6. Preheat oven to 170C with the fan on. 

7. Prepare another batch of meringue. Fold meringue into green egg yolk batter. Pour into lined baking tray and spread as thin a layer as possible.

8. Bake for 30 seconds. Turn off the oven fan and continue baking for 8-9 min or until done. Keep an eye on it as it can go from done to brown within a minute or less. Immediately flip onto fresh parchment paper and cool completely before cutting out the leaves with cookie cutter. You may use scissors/knife and a homemade template if you don't have an appropriate cutter.

9. Use scissors to trim off browned parts of the peach body. You may also use scissors or a small fruit knife to carve the shape if you used egg shells to bake.  Use the back of the knife to make an imprint in the middle of the peach.

10. Brush the tip of the peach with diluted dragonfruit puree. I didn't measure the dilution ratio as the exact measurement is not important. I go by the colour I get visually. You can always apply another coat if the colour is too faint, or add a little more puree to your paint. Don't use undiluted puree as the colour is too dark. Use some water to blend the pink colour towards the white parts of the peach. In the past I used a toothbrush spray to create the ombre pink effect but this method is much cleaner!

11. Glue the leaves onto the peach body using cake glue or melted marshmallow. Store in airtight condition in the fridge or freezer until ready to consume.

Here's the reel of the process of making the peaches!

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CzJF8h9y0VV/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

I had leftover pandan sponge and pudding so I assembled a few pandan kaya cupcakes. 

Looking cute!


I think I am going to stick with this method of making chiffon cake longevity peaches from now on with the exception of substituting the milk with some other liquids for flavour variation. I hope this post is helpful for those of you who want to create healthier versions of longevity peaches for your loved ones that minimizes artificial food colouring. You may use matcha powder for the leaves to make it fully naturally coloured but I wanted the peaches to match the flavour profile of the cake below. Maybe I shall try that next time! 


Update: I did an Instagram poll and majority are in favour of a longer, more detailed video tutorial so I made a youtube video version of it and you may see it here:

https://youtu.be/-qU4WdBn6DQ?si=6iTMFX7E4kkrj-wv


with lots of love,

Phay Shing

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Monday, 24 July 2023

Less Sweet Pandan Kaya Cake

This cake was tailor-made for my friend's mum's 70th birthday. How good was it? The birthday girl who has a long history of refusing cake because she doesn't like cream, butter or anything too sweet finished the slice given to her! The rest of the cake? Everyone else finished it within minutes despite being too full after a meal. It's tasty, refreshing & not too sweet. I decorated the cake with blueberry-apple marshmallow flowers & simple cocoa gula melaka chiffon basket weave ring.


Here's the review from my friend!

Those of you not familiar with the colloquial language of Singapore, siu-dai or siew-dai means less sweet. So I had the challenge of making a cake that is really less sweet but still tasty enough for the birthday girl and everyone else at the celebration.

Not many people make pandan chiffon cake the old school way from homemade pandan juice concentrate nowadays because it's a labour of love! I use a combination of homemade concentrate & bottled pandan paste to impart flavour & colour that my recipients love so much over the years.

I adapted the recipe from this basket weave cake I made for my mum a few years ago.

Pandan Chiffon Sponge

(makes two 7.5" round sponges)

A)

45g oil

70g pandan juice concentrate*

40g coconut milk

12g Gula Melaka, grated (coconut palm sugar)

1/4 tsp salt

1/2 tsp vanilla extract

1/2 tsp pandan paste 


B)

120g cake flour, sifted into large bowl


C)

6 egg yolks


D)

6 egg whites

1/2 tsp cream of tartar

72g caster sugar (use more if prefer sweeter & for more stable meringue)


Pandan Kaya pudding

E)

720g coconut milk

300g water^

60g clear pandan water*^

45g Gula Melaka, grated (use more & add caster sugar if prefer sweeter)

3/4 tsp vanilla

3/8 tsp pandan paste

3/8 tsp caramel essence (optional)

1/4 tsp salt

3/4 tsp green liquid colouring (optional)

2 tsp agar powder


F)

78g cornstarch

390g water^


* Blend about 25-30 mature pandan leaves with 120g of water. Strain juice & squeeze out as much liquid as you can from pulp. Let juice settle over 3 days in fridge. Separate clear water from concentrate. 

^ Traditional recipes use pandan water from water boiled with a few pandan leaves. Over here I just used what is usually discarded. It saves you the effort for one step!

Steps:

1) Line pans with parchment paper or teflon sheet. Preheat oven to 140-150C (no fan) with optional steam baking. Note that baking temperature and time is oven dependent so adjust accordingly.

2) Place A) in saucepan & heat until gula melaka is dissolved & mixture is 80C.

3) Pour 2) into B) & whisk until a dough forms.

4) Add C) 2 yolks at a time. Whisk until well combined after each addition.

5) Make meringue (D). Whip egg whites with cream of tartar until firm peaks form, adding sugar gradually once egg whites are foamy. Slowly build up your meringue using medium speed to avoid creating large air bubbles and to help with stability.

6) Fold meringue into 4) in 3 batches. I like to use the whisk to fold in the first two batches and finish off using a silicone spatula.

7) Fill pans until 80% full. Bake for 40 min or until done. 

8) Cool completely & unmold. Slice each cake horizontally for 4 pieces of sponge.

9) Mix F) in jug. Set aside.

10) Put E) in pot, whisk to disperse agar & set aside for 5 min. Bring to boil while whisking continuously. Continue simmering for 1 min while whisking. 

11) Whisk F) again to disperse cornstarch before pouring in a thin stream into 10) while whisking continuously. Continue cooking pudding for another 1-2 min. Remove from heat.

12) Assemble cake by alternating sponge and pudding layers within a cake ring or acetate sheet. Stir pudding mixture in pot to prevent it from setting during assembly. Refrigerate for at least 3 hours before unmolding. Neaten the pudding layers if need be by carefully cutting stray bits off.

See my Instagram reel for snippets of the process!

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CvE_U7PgJKl/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

Traditional pandan kaya cake is usually totally covered with the pudding and garnished with some desiccated coconut or finely grated fresh coconut. I kept the design clean and simple for this cake so I omitted the coconut and revealed the pudding and sponge layers as part of the aesthetics.

See how squishy my marshmallow flowers are in this post! I used some sugar-replacement to replace white sugar so it is overall a little more diabetic-friendly. Keep a lookout for my Deco Marshmallows book which will cover how to make marshmallow flowers made from lots of fresh fruit, as well as how to make them without white sugar too!


Do give this cake a try if you are looking for something that's tasty, refreshing and not too sweet for birthday celebrations! 


with love,

Phay Shing


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Monday, 28 November 2022

Pandan Vanilla Christmas Tree Marshmallows (Video tutorial)

Busy as I am, I needed to get this out of my system! Presenting my Pandan vanilla Christmas tree marshmallows filled with Meiji's Apollo strawberry chocolate candy!



You may make these without the candy if you wish! 

Pandan vanilla marshmallow
Ingredients (makes about 40 trees):
57g egg whites
150g caster sugar
62g light corn syrup
1/8 tsp salt
3/4 tsp pandan paste
1/4 tsp vanilla extract
45g water
7-8g fish gelatin (200 bloom)
28g ice water

I am not including much details or the steps here as this is likely to be an entry in my upcoming Deco Marshmallows book. 

Please refer to the video below for the tutorial and some tips!

https://www.instagram.com/reel/Clhr9UBADAW/?igshid=NTdlMDg3MTY=


with love,

Phay Shing

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Sunday, 22 May 2022

Macaron Bear in Ondeh-ondeh Choux Pastry

 I discovered a baking studio near home and decided to give it a try. For my debut, I will be sharing how to make two genres of bakes in simple but cute form: macaron bears in ondeh-ondeh choux au craquelin!

Just in time for dinner dessert on Father's Day too!

If you don't look too closely, you may mistake the choux pastries for actual ondeh-ondeh balls!


Perhaps what may be different about this studio as compared to others I have worked with is the number and range of facilities they have. Baker's Gym where I will be teaching this, has the most number of ovens available, has a blast freezer and their teaching principle is to let everyone do individual work. This teaching principle happens to be my preferred way as well because you learn more when you have hands-on practice by yourself from start to finish.

Please refer to this link for more details of class content and to register.


with love,

Phay Shing

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Friday, 1 April 2022

Bunny Pandan Coconut Gula Melaka Swiss Roll

This project has been on my waiting list for a while after I made the corgi swiss roll based on my 3D corgi design. Presenting my bunny swiss roll based on my 3D teacup bunny macarons and 3D bunny macaron designs!




Pandan coconut gula melaka chiffon sponge with the same flavour of diplomat cream and coconut agar jelly in the middle. 

To be honest, I had trouble taking photos of the roll cake together with the macarons because which ever angle you choose, something will aways look odd😅. I did a poll on Instagram and chose the one that was more popular as the cover photo.

I begin the project by making the templates for cookie cutter and patterned roll. I made my own cookie cutter based on the template design.

Coconut agar jelly

Ingredients (fills two 7x7" trays to about 2cm height):
500g coconut milk
500g coconut water (may replace with coconut milk if prefer richer jelly)
12g agar powder
pinch of salt
3 pandan leaves, knotted or cut into short strips
30g sugar (or to taste. Mine is considered very low sugar)

Steps:
1. Put coconut milk, coconut water, salt and sugar in saucepan. Scatter agar powder over and let it bloom for about 5 minutes. Try not to let the agar powder clump together.

2. Add pandan leaves and bring to a boil while stirring.

3. Once the coconut milk boils, keep boiling for another two minutes while stirring to ensure all agar powder is dissolved. 

4. Pour into trays and cool before refrigerating for at least 2hours or overnight. I lined my trays with teflon sheets but it isnt necessary.

5. Unmould and use cookie cutter to cut out bunny head shape. Store cutouts in airtight container until ready to assemble.

Note that this portion or agar is more than what you need so feel free to halve the recipe. 



Pandan coconut diplomat cream

Ingredients:
200g coconut milk
10g pandan juice concentrate*
40g gula melaka, finely chopped
1/8 tsp salt
20g cornflour
2 egg yolks
15g unsalted butter
3/4 tsp pandan paste
70g whipping cream (you may use dairy, non-dairy or a combination of both. You may need to stabilize dairy cream with gelatin in hot weather. You may use more cream if you prefer lighter taste and texture.)

* This needs to be prepared in advance. Omit and use 1-1.5 tsp pandan paste instead if you do not want to use pandan juice concentrate. Blend pandan leaves with a little water. Squeeze out the pulp and sieve the extracted juice. Let it settle in fridge in a container/bowl for three days before using the dark green layer that settled to the bottom of the container/bowl.

Steps: 
1. Heat coconut milk, pandan juice concentrate, gula melaka, salt and pandan paste in a saucepan
until steaming hot (not boiling). In the mean time, whisk together egg yolks and cornflour in a heavy bowl or measuring jug.

2. Once coconut milk is hot, remove from heat and pour in a thin stream into egg yolk mixture while whisking the egg yolk mixture continuously. Pour everything back into saucepan. 

3. Cook the custard over medium-low heat while whisking continuously. Once it thickens, remove from heat and keep whisking until smooth. Place back on heat and cook until it thickens further, about another few minutes. Be careful not to use too high heat or it will become scrambled eggs. 

4. Remove from heat and add butter. Whisk until well combined. Transfer into mixing bowl. Press cling wrap on surface of pastry cream. Refrigerate for at least an hour or overnight.

5. When ready to assemble with sponge, lighten the pastry cream by whisking it briefly. Whip the whipping cream until stiff and fold into pastry cream to make diplomat cream. Transfer into piping bag.


I can't disclose the recipe for the chiffon sponge as I bought it from Keem Ooi. You may purchase it from her by dropping her a DM on Instagram (account name is keempossible_2). I tweaked her original recipe to include gula melaka, coconut milk and pandan juice concentrate.

Here's a peek at my pattern piping and the pattern reveal after baking!


Roll up the baked sponge while warm to cool completely before filling.


Apply the cream and line the bunny agar cutouts about 12cm from the start of the roll. 


Cover the agar cutouts with more cream and coat the sponge with a thin layer of cream before rolling. Refrigerate for at least an hour or overnight before adding in the details with edible paint. You can make the paint by using gel food colouring diluted with a little water.


Works in progress! I cover the portions I am not working on with cling wrap to minimize drying out of the sponge. This picture shows it all covered because I took a short break. 

I made this bunny swiss roll in time for Easter and a cute spring collaboration on Instagram too! Follow me on Instagram at phay_shing as I am most active there and not all my bakes will be featured in the blog in a timely manner.

with love,
Phay Shing
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Sunday, 13 March 2022

Nut-Free Rainbow Unicorn Macarons

My friend requested for some nut-free rainbow unicorn macarons. Since St Patrick's Day is just around the corner, I threw in some shamrock and rainbow cloud macarons as well for photography! 


I made nut-free macarons before using a mix of rice flour and pumpkin seed flour, as well as cake flour. This time round I needed a pure white base so I can't use pumpkin seed. Wheat-based flour is a convenient alternative.  The last attempt of wheat flour-based macarons were made using french method. This time round I use swiss method.

Cake flour based nut-free macaron recipe
Ingredients (makes about 40 - 50 macarons) :
Mass
200g cake flour (low protein wheat flour) 
200g icing sugar (mine has cornstarch added) 
80g egg whites
1 tsp white powder colouring (optional) 
Gel food colouring 

Swiss Meringue 
145g caster sugar
40g icing sugar
110g egg whites 
1 tsp egg white powder (optional) 
1/2 tsp cream of tartar (optional) 

Steps:
1. Prepare template and line baking tray with parchment paper. 

2. Prepare the mass. Sift together dry ingredients in the mass. Add egg whites to form a thick paste. Cover with cling wrap and set aside. 

3. Make swiss meringue. Whisk together egg white powder, icing sugar and caster sugar.  Add the sugar mix and cream of tartar into egg whites in standmixer bowl (or clean metal mixing bowl if using handheld mixer). Set bowl over saucepan of water. Heat the water over low heat and whisk the egg whites with sugar mix until temperature reaches about 50C. Take your time to heat up the water to ensure all sugar is dissolved. 

4. Transfer to standmixer and whip on medium speed until firm peak. The meringue peak should be fairly straight with a small curl at the end when you slowly lift the beater. 

5. Fold in about a third of the meringue into the mass and mix well thoroughly. Fold in the rest of meringue until just combined. Split into the various rainbow colours and add the respective gel colouring. Fold until the consistency is correct. The batter should fall off the spatula in a continuous manner and any peaks of batter disappear in about 15 seconds. 

6. Transfer batter into piping bag and pipe the unicorns. Let the piped batter rest until it isn't sticky to touch at all.  Duration of resting depends on humidity. It can vary from 30min to 2 hours.


Piped batter. Takes about an hour to pipe a tray! 

7. Preheat oven to 165C and set oven rack to second lowest position. Once the tray is in, reduce temperature to 140C and bake for 10-12 min. Reduce temperature to 120C and bake for another 10-12 min or until feet doesn't appear wet. Cool completely before peeling parchment paper away from macaron shell. 

Freshly baked shells! 

I decorated the shells with black edible marker and peach coloured lustre dust. A little vodka is used to make paint with black marker for the light horn lines and with lustre dust for the heart shaped inner ear and cheek. 

Pandan coconut white chocolate buttercream
Ingredients:
75g unsalted butter
90g white chocolate (finely chopped or use chips) 
12g 100% dark chocolate couverture (may replace with white chocolate and/or butter if unavailable) 
38g coconut cream powder
1/4 tsp salt 
1 and 1/4 tsp pandan paste

Steps:
1. Place all ingredients in a heatproof bowl. Set over pot of freshly boiled water without the water touching the base of the bowl. Melt the chocolate and butter and mix well. 

2. Set aside in aircon room temperature for an hour to firm up. Alternatively, refrigerated for 10 to 15 min or until toothpaste consistency. You may choose to whip the mixture until it is lighter in texture. 

3. Transfer to piping bag and fill the macaron shells. Mature the filled macarons by storing in fridge in airtight container for at least 24 h before consuming. Let the container stay at room temperature for 20 min before opening and consuming the macarons. 

Filling the unicorns! 



Follow me on Instagram @phay_shing as I post my work more frequently there and not everything I do gets posted on the blog.


With love, 

Phay Shing

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Monday, 10 January 2022

Pandan Kaya Chiffon Croissant Cereal

I don't usually follow trends but this idea in my head got me so excited I just had to try it out! Presenting my pandan kaya mini chiffon croissant cereal! 

 
I was excited because it is a combination of traditional pandan kaya cake in croissant form and miniaturised as a cereal treat. There's a cereal trend several months ago but I didn't follow it until I have a reason to present my bakes that way. Not only is this visually cute, the form factor of it in bite size and eaten with fresh blueberries makes it a refreshingly good and new way of enjoying pandan kaya cake. Only thing is, it is rather time consuming to assemble a bowl of it😂! You could speed things up by making bigger croissants than I did. I made them tiny enough that you can fit a few in your mouth comfortably with a couple of blueberries. The actual baking and making of the pudding layers is very fast so feel free to assemble in a way that suits your patience level and time best. This can also be made into swiss roll form or layered cake. 

I took the chance to test out Scoop Wholefood's pandan powder for making pandan chiffon cake. Something I had been procrastinating for some time. You may make pandan juice concentrate the traditional way if you wish by blending fresh leaves with a little water, sieving and settling the juice for 3 days, and then using the concentrate that settled. 

Pandan chiffon thin layer cake
Ingredients (makes one 10 x 12" and one 7x7"cake):
Egg yolk batter
2 egg yolks 
21g pandan juice concentrate from 1tbs (heaped) pandan powder and 3tbs water*
18g coconut milk 
14g any vegetable oil
38g cake flour
A pinch of salt
1/8-1/4 tsp pandan paste
1/4 tsp vanilla extract 

Meringue
2 egg whites
15g caster sugar
15g granulated gula melaka 
1/8 tsp cream of tartar

*to make pandan juice concentrate from pandan powder with insoluble fibers, rehydrate the powder with water and let it sit for half an hour. Sieve out the liquid and weigh out 21g for baking. 

Steps: 
1. Preheat oven to 170C. Line baking trays with teflon sheet or parchment paper. 

2. Prepare egg yolk batter. Whisk together egg yolks until pale and thick. Add oil and whisk until well combined. Add coconut milk, pandan juice concentrate and flavourings and whisk until combined. Add sifted flour and salt and whisk until no trace of flour is seen. 

3. Prepare meringue. Use electric mixer to beat egg whites with cream of tartar until firm peak or just reach stiff peaks, adding sugar gradually once egg whites are foamy. Use low speed to whip egg whites for a more stable meringue with smaller air bubbles. 

4. Quickly but gently fold meringue into egg yolk batter in 3 additions. Scoop out the batter onto prepared trays and spread it out in a thin layer using an offset spatula or bench scraper. 


5. Place baking trays in oven and immediately lower to 150C and bake for 10-11min or until skewer comes out clean. Be careful not to overbake or you will have difficulty rolling the sponge without breaking it. 

6. Immediately remove from oven and flip onto fresh sheet of parchment. 



Roll the sponge into a tight roll to cool completely. In the meantime, prepare the pudding. 




Pandan kaya pudding 
A) 
100g coconut milk
5g pandan juice concentrate 
1/8 tsp pandan paste
1/8 tsp vanilla extract 
Pinch of salt
10g gula melaka
15g caster sugar (or to taste) 
75g Water
1/2 tsp agar powder

B) 
13g cornflour 
65g water

Steps:
1. Mix together ingredients in B) in a jug and set aside. 

2. Place all ingredients in A) in saucepan and bring to a boil while whisking. Make sure all agar powder is dissolved. Use medium heat. 

3. Stir contents in B) again. Pour into A) in a thin stream while whisking the contents in saucepan continuously. Continue cooking and whisking for a minute after it starts boiling again. Remove from heat. Do note that as the pudding cools, it will start to set so you will have to stir it now and then if you are not ready to assemble yet. 

Assembly
1. Unroll the cooled cakes. 

2. Spread a very thin layer of pudding on the cake and let it set for 20 min or until pudding is solid (doesn't stick onto your finger when you touch) but still soft before rolling. 


3. Cut triangles 2.5cm base by 7cm height or any preferred size. Layer cake and pudding really thin and use rolling pin gently roll flatter with pudding side down. 


Roll it up like a croissant by starting the roll from the base of the isosceles triangle, pudding side up. Leave it on a tray lined with parchment to set fully. 


You may have excess pudding. Just transfer into a jelly mould and refrigerate it. Enjoy it as a pudding treat. 

If you don't have the patience to make these minis, try cutting bigger triangles or simply make a swiss roll like the one I did below. 


The mini croissant cereal is really delicious when paired with juicy blueberries that are slightly sweet and tart, not too sour or strong tasting so that it doesn't overpower the pandan kaya flavour but rather, complements it.

Store the cake in fridge and consume within 3 days. 

Follow me on Instagram at phay_shing as I am more active there and post more stuff there than on Facebook and blog. 

With love, 

Phay Shing

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