Pandan cake explained

Pandan cake
Alternate Name:Pandan chiffon cake[1] [2]
Region:Southeast Asia
National Cuisine:Malaysia,[3] Indonesia, Singapore
Type:Cake
Main Ingredient:Juice of pandan leaves or Pandanus extract, flour, eggs, sugar, butter or margarine
No Recipes:true

Pandan cake is a light, fluffy, green-coloured sponge cake[4] flavoured with the juices of Pandanus amaryllifolius leaves.[5] [6] It is also known as pandan chiffon.[1] [2] The cake is popular in Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Sri Lanka, Hong Kong, China, and also the Netherlands.[7] [8] [9] [10] It is similar to the buko pandan cake of the Philippines, but differs in that it does not use coconut.

Ingredients

The cake shares common ingredients with other cakes, which includes flour, eggs, butter or margarine, and sugar. However, the distinct ingredient is the use of pandan leaf, which gives the cake its distinct green colouration. The cakes are light green in tone[11] due to the chlorophyll in the leaf juice. It sometimes contains green food colouring to further enhance its colouration. The cakes are not always made with the leaf juice, as they can be flavoured with Pandanus extract, in which case colouring is only added if a green colouration is desired.[12] The original pandan cake common in Indonesia, the Netherlands, and Singapore is a usually soft sponge cake akin to the light and fluffy chiffon cake, made without any additional coating or frosting.[2] [13] The other variants are actually derived from other cake recipes, with any similarity only in the usage of green pandan flavouring extract.

History and origin

In Southeast Asia, cake-making techniques were brought into the region through European colonization. Malaysia and Singapore were British possessions, whilst Indonesia was formerly a Dutch colony. European colonists brought their cuisine along with them, with the most obvious impacts in bread, cake, and pastry-making techniques.[14] In Southeast Asian cuisine, the pandan leaf is a favourite flavouring agent used to give off a pleasant aroma, and added to various dishes ranging from fragrant coconut rice, traditional cakes, to sweet desserts and drinks.[15] It was the fusion of European cake-making techniques with locally grown ingredients that created the pandan-flavoured cake.

In 2017 CNN named the pandan cake as the national cake of Singapore and Malaysia.[10] This has led to reactions in Indonesia that regarded the pandan cake, locally known as kue bolu pandan, as Indonesian. In Singapore pandan cake was popularised by one of the city's most popular bakeries, Bengawan Solo,[13] a cake shop owned by a Singaporean citizen of Indonesian origin.[16]

According to CNN Indonesia, this cake originated from Indonesia, which can be traced to the cake-making techniques of Dutch colonists in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia).[3] The colonial Dutch and Indo peoples combined cake-making techniques from Europe with the available local ingredients like the pandan leaf as flavouring and colouring agents. This cake is also known as pandan cake in Dutch, and is quite popular in the Netherlands due to its historical link to Indonesia. Other than its use in chiffon pandan cake, pandan leaf is also used as green colouring and flavouring in the Dutch-Indonesian favourite pandan spekkoek or lapis legit (layered cake), demonstrating the prominence of pandan leaf in Dutch-Indonesian cake and pastry making.[17]

Names in different languages

kek pandan

bolu pandan

pandan cake

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Quek . Eunice . Is pandan chiffon cake Singapore's national cake? . The Straits Times . 20 May 2020 . 30 April 2017.
  2. Web site: Chiffon Cake Pandan. Holland Bakery. en. 2020-05-20.
  3. News: Mengurai Huru-hara Kue Pandan Singapura . CNN Indonesia. id-ID. 2020-05-20.
  4. Book: What Herb Is That?. 127. 9780811716345. 29 December 2014. Hemphill. John. Hemphill. Rosemary. 1997.
  5. Book: The World Cookbook. 615. 9781610694698. 29 December 2014. Jacob. Jeanne. Ashkenazi. Michael. 15 January 2014.
  6. Web site: Cheap Sweets: Pandan Chiffon. 22 December 2014. LA Weekly. 29 December 2014.
  7. Web site: Pandan Cake Pops . 18 March 2015 . Jeff Keasberry . 21 April 2017 . 16 January 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180116174042/http://keasberry.com/en/blog/pandan-pops/ . dead .
  8. Web site: Pandan Chiffon Cake . 29 October 2017 . Asian Inspirations .
  9. Web site: Pandan Chiffon Cake . Asian recipe . 2018-01-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180116135826/https://www.asian-recipe.com/indonesia/indonesia-pandan-chiffon-cake.html . 2018-01-16 . dead .
  10. News: Cakes of the world: Tiramisu, baklava, cheesecake and more national treats . Zoe Li . Maggie Hiufu Wong . CNN . 3 April 2017 . en. 2020-05-20.
  11. Book: A World of Cake. 288. 9781603425766. 29 December 2014. Castella. Krystina. January 2010.
  12. Web site: Recipe: Pandan chiffon cake with coconut glaze . May 5, 2011 . Los Angeles Times. November 5, 2011.
  13. Web site: Welcome to Bengawan Solo . www.bengawansolo.com.sg . 2020-05-20 . 2020-05-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200504134536/http://www.bengawansolo.com.sg/prod_rolls.aspx?id=3 . dead .
  14. Web site: 5 December 2016 . Crocodile bread and spekkoek: the tasty intersection of Dutch-Indo food . Luke Nguyen . SBS .
  15. Book: The World Cookbook: The Greatest Recipes from Around the Globe, 2nd Edition (4 Volumes): The Greatest Recipes from Around the Globe . Jeanne Jacob . Michael Ashkenazi . ABC-CLIO . 2014 . 9781610694698. 615.
  16. News: Mengurai Huru-hara Kue Pandan Singapura . CNN Indonesia. id-ID. 2020-05-20.
  17. Web site: Layered cake pandan. Belimpex. en. 2020-05-20.