Green Tea with Azuki Beans Chiffon Cake (cooked dough method)
As mentioned, I did some experimentation with the cooked-dough method for chiffon cake. This time, using green tea with azuki beans.
The cake turned out denser and not as fluffy. After adding the flour, the batter turned very dry, kinda like the orange chiffon attempt I tried before. But did it turn out better than the orange chiffon. Not as good as the pandan one, but still soft and nice. Maybe more liquid is needed for Green Tea... will try this again when I have the time. :) Here's the recipe for anyone who wants to give it a go.
What you need
The cake turned out denser and not as fluffy. After adding the flour, the batter turned very dry, kinda like the orange chiffon attempt I tried before. But did it turn out better than the orange chiffon. Not as good as the pandan one, but still soft and nice. Maybe more liquid is needed for Green Tea... will try this again when I have the time. :) Here's the recipe for anyone who wants to give it a go.
What you need
- 5 nos. Egg Yolk
- 110gm milk
- 50gm corn oil
- 90gm Cake flour
- 1 and 1/2 tbsp green tea powder
- 100gm cooked azuki beans
- 5 nos. Egg white
- 80gm Castor Sugar
- Preheat oven at 170 deg C
- Cook milk and oil together till you see some bubbles at the side of the pot, while is warmed add in sifted flour and green tea powder and mix well using a whisk.
- Whisk in egg yolks one by one and set aside.
- Whisk egg whites till foamy and add in sugar whisk till stiff.
- Add in 1/3 meringue into the cooked dough and fold well.
- Pour this mixture back to the balance meringue and fold well until well-combined.
- Fold in the azuki beans.
- Pour into a 20cm chiffon mould, bake at 150 deg C bake for 40 mins.
- Invert the cake to cool, unmould when completely cooled.
(Tip: Fold in whipped egg whites when the dough is still warm.)
Labels: Chiffon
4 Comments:
I have read about this cooked dough method...very interesting way of making a chiffon cake :) I realised that green tea powder tends to absorb moisture...so more liquid is required, be it used for making cakes or bread. Otherwise the bakes will tend be on the dry side.
By Happy Homebaker, at 3:17 PM, October 29, 2010
Yes, you are so right abt adding more liquid for green tea bakes, HHB.
By Baking Fiend, at 4:07 PM, October 29, 2010
I would love to try this combo too.
By Little Corner of Mine, at 10:56 PM, October 29, 2010
I have just recently bought green tea powder and am planning to bake with it. Thanks for the heads-up on the extra liquid needed for green tea bakings!
By Anonymous, at 11:44 AM, November 01, 2010
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