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In this recipe book, the instructions to make the kueh pie tee are found in two recipes named the Popia and the Pie Tee. Handy's Popia recipe provides steps to make the kueh pie tee's filling, while her Pie Tee recipe contains instructions to make the piecrust shells. [8] Noting that the recipe is found in a recipe book published in Singapore ...
A hawker in Singapore preparing kueh tutu. Here he is scooping the peanut filling into the flour. Here he is scooping the peanut filling into the flour. Putu piring ( Jawi : ڤوتو ڤيريڠ ) is a round-shaped steamed rice flour kueh (dessert) or sweet snack filled with palm sugar popular in Singapore .
Kuih pie tee – this Nyonya speciality is a thin and crispy pastry tart shell filled with a spicy, sweet mixture of thinly sliced vegetables and prawns. Kuih pinjaram – a saucer-shaped deep-fried fritter with crisp edges and a dense, chewy texture towards the centre. It is widely sold by street food vendors in the open-air markets of East ...
Kue talam is an Indonesian kue or traditional steamed snack made of a rice flour, coconut milk and other ingredients in a mold pan called talam which means "tray" in Indonesian. [1] The cake mold used to create kue talam are either larger rectangular aluminium tray or smaller singular cups made from ceramics, aluminium, melamine or plastic. [2]
Ang ku kueh (Chinese: 紅龜粿; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Âng-ku-kóe; Tailo: Âng-ku-kué; Teochew Peng'im: ang⁷ gu¹ guê²), also known as red tortoise cake, is a small round or oval-shaped Chinese sweet dumpling with soft, sticky glutinous rice flour skin wrapped around a sweet central filling.
Kue semprong, the Asian egg roll, the love letter, sapit, sepit, kue Belanda, or kapit [1] is an Indonesian traditional wafer snack (kue or kuih) made by clasping egg batter using an iron mold (Waffle iron) which is heated up on a charcoal stove. It is commonly found in Indonesia, [2] Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei.
Putugal, also known as kuih putugal or kuih Portugal, is a Eurasian steamed rice cake or kuih that appears in all the former Portuguese territories of Asia. [1] Putugal is typically made from rice or tapioca flour traditionally colored blue using the butterfly pea flower, stuffed with ripened banana and garnished with grated coconut. [ 2 ]
Clorot, celorot, cerorot, or jelurut is an Indonesian traditional sweet snack (kue or kuih) made of sweet and soft rice flour cake with coconut milk, wrapped with janur or young coconut leaf in cone shape. [7] It is a popular traditional sweet snack commonly found in Brunei, [4] [5] [6] Indonesia, and Malaysia. [8]