Foodie

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Pandan Chiffon Cake

This recipe from Chef Bernard Decaix is different as he does not have oil but 300 ml of the coconut milk required is enough to moist the cake. As usual, i do not use pandan leave juice but use 1 tsp pandan paste instead. I omitted pandan juice not by choice and i found that without it, the fragrance from the paste did not play second fiddle.

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Ingredients:

150 g : cake flour
0.5 tsp : baking powder
0.25 tsp : salt
8 - : egg yolks
300 ml : coconut milk
2 tbsp : pandan juice
160 g : castor sugar
0.5 tsp : pandan essence
9 - : egg whites
1 tbsp : castor sugar
0.5 tsp : cream of tartar



Method:

Preparation Batter

Pre heat the oven to 180c/350 f(convection).

Pour the coconut milk into a saucepan and add the castor sugar. Bring to a boil, stirring slowly to disslove the sugar. set aside to cool.


Sieve the cake flour, baking powder and salt.

In a bowl, combine the egg yolks, coconut mixture, pandan juice and pandan essence.

Whisk lightly, then add the flour to the egg yolk mixture. Mix until the batter is smooth. Set aside.

Whisk the egg whites lightly and add in the cream of tartar and castor sugar. Continue to whisk until the mixture is stiff. Do not overheat or allow the mixture to become dry. Set aside.

Baking the cake

Gently fold half the beaten egg whites into the egg yolk mixture and blend well.

Fold in the remaining egg whites and work very lightly with a spatula. Make sure the mixture is well mixed.

Place the finished mixture in an ungreased 10 inch chiffon cake /tube mould. Level and bake in the oven until golden brown (about 45 minutes).

Remove the cake from the oven and invert the mould. Allow it to cool for 1 hour.

Do not remove the mould while the cake is still hot.

When it has cooled, use a long, fine palatte knife to loosen the sides of the cake to remove it from the tin.

Serves

218 comments:

«Oldest   ‹Older   201 – 218 of 218
kzi said...

hi, Lily,, thanks for the recipes..
i like pandan chiffon cake very much..

The Hangry Fix said...

Hi Lily,

This is a GREAT recipe, I baked it today, and my family loved it. My cake turned out well...

Its taste great, and it is so moist and spongy. I actually blogged about this cake on my blog.

http://fueledbyfoodblog.blogspot.com/2010/05/pandan-chiffon-cake.html

Anonymous said...

Hi Lily,

Having read the other comments and getting enthusiastic in trying this recipe, I wanted to know after putting the cake into the 3rd lowest runk, the oven mode should be set at broil/ above heat/ lower heat or both? This is because my oven is not a convection oven and I'm quite new at chiffon baking. Thanks!

Ting Ting

Anonymous said...

Hi Lily,

Thanks for the recipe. I have tried baking this twice. But both times the cake looked good at the top, but was dense at the bottom (about 1 cm), like rubber.

Would you have any idea what could have possibly gone wrong to cause this?

Victoria

Unknown said...

victoria

dense at the bottom meant that you have overmixed when folding in the eggwhites. If the egg whites have been whipped perfect, it should not deflate that fast. It takes getting used to folding in eggwhites and practice is the way to go.

pricillia3 said...

Hi Lily,
I have a question if I use the pandan paste,do I still use the pandan essence? Thank you very much for your times and helps

Unknown said...

priscilla3

pandan paste has essence already, so no essence needed

Peter said...

Hi Lily,

I have tried to bake this cake a few times but it never came out right.
Now that I found you blog and read all the comments and all of your tips I see I do a lot of things wrong.

I never knew you could overbear eggwhites :-)

I'll try again today and I am confident now. Will let you know how it turns out.

Grtzz from Holland

Peter

Unknown said...

peter

i wish you the best in trying out this delicious cake.

Anonymous said...

Hi, I am from HK, where can I get the pandan paste and essence? Tks.

near Wan Chai/ Causeway?

Unknown said...

anonymous

i am sorry i can help you, I hope hong kong readers can help.

Rihana said...

Hi Lily, thanks for the recipe. My question is:
how to mix the egg yolks? can i use hand mixer or just hand whisk? do i need to whisk it until increase in volume like when making other cake? or just as long as all ingredients are blended well? Thank in advance for the advice.

Unknown said...

rihana

the egg yolk does not need much whipping, the rise of this cake is mostly from the egg whites, so the whisking of the egg white is the most important.

Ancella said...

I've tried the recipe but the cake break while baking.Can I use less flour b'cos I find that it's not fluffy enough!Can I use double action baking powder ? Thanks in advance for all ur recipes.Do you have the recipe for chow mai peang?(chinese type )

Unknown said...

ancella

the flour is already very low, using less flour is not advisable. not fluffy - perhaps you have deflated the egg whites. I use double action baking powder.

i have not made chow mai paeng but have luk tau paeng http://lilyng2000.blogspot.com/2010/01/putu-kacang-hijauluk-tau-paeng.html

Daphne said...

Hi Lily,

You appear to have a typo in the oven temp for the celcius measurement, Also, please could you confirm we should be using convection (fan) mode for the cake instead of top and bottom elements?

Many thanks!

Daphne said...

Dear Lily

I'm the one who wrote earlier about the typo in the temp. All the previous times I had baked this cake, somehow I'd never noticed it had to be baked in convection mode - but it always turned out really well nevertheless. Although I was concerned about baking a cake using convection mode, today I did bake it that way, at 175degC, and it was a success. Thank you for the lovely recipe... works wonderfully. Very moist, fragrant and rich :-).

Unknown said...

daphne

thanks for the info, i will amend it to 180c.

glad your cake turned out well

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