Kue bugis

Kue bugis

Kue bugis, the green color is acquired from pandan
Course Dessert
Place of origin  Indonesia
Serving temperature Room temperature
Main ingredients Rice flour, palm sugar, grated coconut
Cookbook: Kue bugis  Media: Kue bugis
Kue bugis mandi

Kue bugis is Indonesian kue or traditional snack of soft glutinous rice flour cake, filled with sweet grated coconut. The name is suggested to be related to Bugis ethnic group of South Sulawesi as their traditional delicacy, and it is originated from Makassar.[1] In Java the almost identical kue is called kue mendut.[2] Kue bugis, together with kue lapis and nagasari are among popular kue or Indonesian traditional sweet snacks, commonly found in Indonesian traditional marketplace as jajan pasar (market munchies).

Ingredients and cooking method

The cake is made of ketan (glutinous rice) flour as the skin, filled with grated coconut flesh sweetened with palm sugar. The skin is made of flattened dough made from the mixture of glutinous rice flour, wheat flour, mashed potatoes, santan (coconut milk), sugar and salt, and colored with suji or green colored pandan. The sweet filling is made of grated coconut, palm sugar, salt, and pandan leaf for aroma. Traditional kue bugis is wrapped in banana leaf, usually young banana leaf which is thin and green-yellowish in color, the contemporary version however might uses plastic wrapper.

There are several version of kue bugis, the traditional common one is green colored kue bugis acquired from suji or pandan leaf. Another version include black kue bugis which uses ketan hitam or black glutinous rice flour.[3] Another variant is called kue bugis mandi which is green ball covered in whitish layer made of white glutinous rice with coconut milk.

See also

References

  1. "Resep Kue Bugis asli Makassar" (in Indonesian). Resep Kue. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  2. "Resep Membuat Kue Mendut Tradisional" (in Indonesian). Masak Kue. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  3. "Resep dan Cara Membuat Kue Bugis Ketan Hitam Tradisional yang Enak" (in Indonesian). Bisikan.com. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/16/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.