It is about nostalgia foods that bring me up with happy remembrances. 记忆中的童年食物,缤纷时光,回味无穷的温馨滋味。。。。。
Monday, 2 June 2008
Tambun Biscuit
Tambun biscuit is one of malaysian specialities. It is a kind of traditionale chinese biscuit which filled with mung bean fillings, it taste a bit salty-sweet with a touch of fried shallots. Once you eat, you will never forget it and will craving for it. I can't find it at here, and I decide to make it myself and hoera.............. it taste good.
Source: Amy Beh
Ingredients
For the filling
250g split green peas, soaked for several hours and drained
160g castor sugar
2–2½ tbsp fried shallot oil
2 tbsp deep fried shallot crisps
3/4 tsp salt
For the pastry
Water dough
150g plain flour
1 tbsp icing sugar
1/2 tsp salt
60g corn oil
80g water
1 tbsp vinegar
Oil dough
100g plain flour
60g shortening / margarine
Egg glaze
1 egg yolk
1 tbsp water
A pinch of salt
Methods:
1. Steam the well-drained split green peas until soft and cooked through. Blend in a food processor until fine. Remove blended green pea paste into a non-stick wok and add in sugar, salt, shallot oil and shallot crisps. Cook over medium-low heat until sugar dissolves. Keep stirring until the mixture is well combined. Remove and leave to cool completely.
2. Water dough: Put flour, salt, icing sugar and oil into a mixing bowl. Combine water and vinegar in a cup and pour into the flour. Mix well to blend until dough is smooth. Leave aside to rest for 25–30 minutes.
3. Oil dough: Combine flour and shortening / margarine and mix into a smooth dough. Set aside to rest for 25–30 minutes.
4. Roll out both water dough and oil dough into long sausage shapes and cut each into 35–38 equal sized pieces. Roll out a piece of water dough and wrap in a piece of oil dough. Roll out flat and roll up into a Swiss roll. Repeat the rolling and flattening of the piece of dough three times. Do this for the rest of the pieces of dough.
5. To each piece of prepared pastry skin, add a heaped teaspoonful of filling. Gather up the sides and roll into a ball. Place each ball on a lightly greased tray.
6. Brush the biscuits with egg glaze and bake in preheated oven at 160°C for 15–20 minutes or until biscuits turn golden brown.
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2 comments:
May I know for the "split green peas" used in making tau sar peah, is it mung beans or green peas that you used ? In my impression, it is always refer it as mung beans. Green peas is a peas that is green in color but bigger in size.
hi jacqueline,
yes, splitted green peas is splitted mung beans which I used in this recipe. Thanks for correcting.
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