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Showing posts with label Sticky Rice (Món Xôi). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sticky Rice (Món Xôi). Show all posts

Monday, August 29, 2016

Xôi Bắp (Sticky Rice with Corn and Mung Bean)

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I brought home a banana plant from my local nursery last late summer. When the winter came around, it didn't look good, even after I placed it under a roof to try and protect it.  Eventually, it looked like there was no way to revive it.  When spring arrived, my mother-in-law dug a hole in our vegetable garden and put it down right next to the other lush broad leaves in our garden.  Amazingly, it's has been thriving beautifully.


Every time I look at our banana plant, I just want to cook some dishes and wrap it banana leaves. Last week, I made xôi bắp (sticky rice with corn and mung bean) to share with a few families at our Lifegroup meeting.

Xôi bắp is a popular main dish that originated in Northern Vietnam. It uses 2 main abundant ingredients of the surrounding region -sweet rice and dried corn. The lure of this dish, however comes from the aroma imparted from the fried shallots and the salted sweetness of roasted sesame and peanut that beckon our senses. If you like dried white corn cooked with sweet rice sprinkled in a spice mixture of salt, sugar, sesame, and peanut, then this dish has your name written all over it.

Xôi bắp is a great dish for breakfast, but you can indulge in it anytime. I love to eat xôi that is wrapped in fresh banana leaves; it brings out a unique scent and freshness that reminds me of the lush and raw beauty of Vietnam.

In this xôi bắp recipe, I used dried corn instead of white hominy which is a type of corn that has been soaked in lye and packed in a can. Hence, the freshness is lost, I think. If you can't find dried corn where you live, white hominy would work too. You can find the dried corn at most of the Asian supermarkets.
RECIPE: Xôi Bắp

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Ingredients


4 cups sweet rice
2 bag (12 oz each) of dried white corn
or
4 cans (32 oz each) white hominy
salt
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For Garnish
1 bag (1.5 cups) split and deshelled mung beans
10 large Shallots
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Making Peanut Mixture
1/4 cup white sesame seeds
1/2 cup peanuts
1 teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons sugar
Directions
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Preparing Sweet Rice, Mung Beans, Dried Corn



Sweet Rice - rinse a few times, soak in water for an hour or overnight. Rinse and drain.


Dried White Corn -  rinse a few times, soak in water for an hour or overnight.
White Hominy -  if used, rinse and drain.


Mung Beans - rinse a few times, soak in water for an hour or overnight.  Rinse and drain.
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Cooking Dried Corn 


In a pot, add a tablespoon of salt, dried corn and water above the dried corn. Bring it to a boil then reduce the heat to medium-low and cook for at least 30 minutes or until corn is soft. Stir occasionally.  Add more water if needed.  The cooking time depends on how long you have soaked the dried corn.  Rinse it with cold water and drain.

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Steaming Mung Beans


Add mung bean in a steamer tray and steam it for about 10-15 minutes or until soft. Transfer to a bowl and smash it with a spoon. Set it aside.


Another way to cook mung beans is in a pot, add water about half an inch above the mung beans.  Bring to a boil.  Once it's boiling, pour some of the water out and leave just enough water at the same level of the mung beans.  Cover and simmer until cooked, stirring occasionally.


Once mung beans are cooked and cooled down, wrap rolls in plastic wrap. When serving sticky rice, slice mung bean into thin slices to add to the sticky rice as topping.


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Cooking Corn with Sweet Rice 


Mix cooked corn, sweet rice and a teaspoon of salt well together. Add water (1/2 of the pot) into the bottom of the steamer pot. Place the top steamer tray on top of the bottom pot. Pour the rice into the steamer tray. Make a small well in the center to create convection currents to help hot steam circulate. Cover it and steam on gentle, steady boiling water for about 15-20 minutes until the sticky rice and corn are soft and clear. Occasionally, fluff it well with a pair of chopsticks so that all the rice cooked evenly.


Sometimes, I combine all three ingredients - raw mung beans, sweet rice, and cooked dried corn together, then steam it.  It's less time-consuming, and yet still tastes wonderfully.  
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Frying Crispy Shallots


Slice shallots thinly.


Bring cooking oil to a medium heat. Once it's hot, add shallots and cook until shallots slightly turn brown


Turn off heat. Let shallots cook for a minute until shallot is golden brown. Don't wait for shallots to turn golden brown and turn off heat as the oil is still very hot and it will burn the shallots very quickly.  Set aside.

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Making Peanut Mixture



Toast sesame seeds on a skillet over medium low heat until golden. Do the same with peanuts. When both sesame seeds and peanuts have cooled down completely, put them in a ziploc bag and slightly crush them to release the nutty flavors. In a bowl, combine sugar, salt, crushed roasted sesame seeds and peanuts. Mix well.

Presentation





Place sticky rice on a plate. Spread mung bean on top. Drizzle a generous amount of fried shallot and fried shallot oil. This oil from frying the shallot is full of flavor, so you don't want to toss it away. Then sprinkle a good amount of peanut mixture. Enjoy!

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Eat well.  Stay healthy.

Friday, July 29, 2016

Xôi Lá Cẩm (Magenta Sticky Rice)

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I am excited that our magenta plants (cây lá cẩm) are growing brilliantly. We just harvested our first bunch of the magenta leaves for xôi lá cẩm - magenta sticky rice (sweet rice aka glutinous rice) that I have been wanting to share the recipe for a long while.



As I was boiling the water with the magenta leaves, my girls were super excited to see how just a bunch of little green leaves can turn into a beautifully radiant purple.  This is a natural food coloring plant, therefore, it is tasteless and won't affect the taste or the fragrance of food.


As soon as my first batch of magenta sticky rice came off the stove, it was an instant hit with the family.  This magenta sticky  rice is flavored in the rich, and creamy coconut cream and topped with fresh shredded coconut, a mixture of salted, slightly sweetened roasted peanut and sesame seeds.  Xôi (sticky rice) served warm or room temperature, wrapped in banana leaf not only holds everything together perfectly, but it also adds that subtle fragrance to the sticky rice.  I am lucky this year that both magenta plants and banana trees are thriving.


The natural mild sweetness of warm sticky rice brought back fond childhood memories in the 80's of how almost everyday I received breakfast money from my mom to enjoy such treats. As I stepped right out in front of my house, I could smell the wonderful Vietnamese street food breakfast. Sticky rice was always a comforting, traditional favorite.  And it's so pleasing to the eye.
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RECIPE: Magenta Sticky Rice
Printable Recipe

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Ingredients


1 liter bottle magenta water
4 cups sweet rice
1 cup coconut cream
1/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon salt

for toppings
1/2 cup roasted peanuts
1/4 cup roasted sesame seeds
 1 teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons sugar
1 coconut
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Directions

Cooking Magenta Leaves



Thoroughly wash and rinse magenta leaves or leaves with stems. Bruise the leaves and stems then place them into a pot, cover with water to the same level of the leaves above the leaves level. Bring it to a boil, turn the heat down to medium low, cover and simmer for about 20 minutes.


The leaves will emit a beautiful violet color. Turn off the heat and let it cool down completely. The color will turn a deeper tone of purple. Drain the magenta water into a bowl. Squeeze the leaves to extract the liquid. Discard the leaves. I stored magenta water in the 1 liter water bottles and freeze them for use later.

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Soaking Sweet Rice


Wash the sweet rice a few times until water is cleared. Pour a bottle of the magenta water to the sweet rice and soak for an hour or two or overnight (I soaked mine for about an hour). Since the sweet rice is not submerged under the magenta water, be sure to mix it up occasionally so that the rice absorb the magenta water extract.
 


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Preparing Coconut Cream


Combine coconut cream, salt, and sugar.  Mix well. 
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Preparing Shredded Coconut 


Crack a coconut in half. Scrape the coconut meat using a bottle cap attached to a piece of flat wood or any tool that works for you.

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Preparing Nuts


Toast sesame seeds on a skillet over medium low heat until golden. Do the same with peanuts. When both sesame seeds and peanuts are cool down completely, put them in a ziploc bag and slightly crush them to release the nutty flavors.

In a bowl, combine sugar, salt, crushed roasted sesame seeds and peanuts. Mix well.

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Steaming Sweet Rice



Add water (1/2 of the pot) into the bottom of the steamer pot. Place the top steamer tray on top of the bottom pot. Pour the rice into the steamer tray. Make a small well in the center to create convection currents to help hot steam circulate. Cover it and steam on gentle, steady boiling water for about 10 minutes. 


Drizzle half of the coconut cream mixture to the sticky rice and fluff it well with chopsticks. Cover and continue steaming for another 10 minutes. Drizzle the remaining coconut cream mixture and fluff it well. Steam it for another 10 minutes (total steaming time is 30 minutes) until the sticky rice is soft and translucent. Fluff with chopsticks for the last time then turn off the heat.  

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Presentation



Serve magenta sticky rice warm or at room temperature on a serving plate or a banana leaf;  mound the shredded coconut on top, spread a spoonful of crushed nuts mix over the shredded coconut. Dig in!
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Eat well.  Stay hungry.