Banana Shwe Gye Cake Burmese Semolina Cake Recipes

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BANANA SHWE GYE CAKE RECIPE



Banana Shwe Gye Cake Recipe image

Breakfast cereal in the United States means something crunchy scooped out of a box from the supermarket, a bowl of granola or perhaps oatmeal, cooked in haste in the microwave.In Asia it's a different story. Breakfast cereal could be rice soup in Thailand, wheat porridge studded with nuts, curry leaves and chiles in India, a semolina cake soft with bananas in Myanmar, a ball of rice stuffed with coconut and brown sugar in Sri Lanka or a powdery mixture of roasted barley and dried fruits in Nepal.Interesting traditions surround these foods. Thai khao tom--rice soup embellished with meat, hot chiles and other toppings--is eaten at either end of the day, says Vibul Wonprasat of Venice, artistic director of the annual Thai Cultural Day in Los Angeles. "Thais believe liquid is easier to digest in the morning, before working," he explains. "Lunch is a heavier meal. When working late at night, Thais like to have liquid food before going to bed."Wonprasat, an artist, takes special pains in preparing khao tom. He cooks the rice in bottled water to simulate the rainwater that Thais collect in huge urns for kitchen use. Broken jasmine rice, available in some Asian markets, softens and breaks down into a creamy puree ideal for porridge. The label may say "broken rice" or specify jasmine broken rice and may also include the Vietnamese name for the broken grains, cao thom.Garlic-flavored pork meatballs garnish Wonprasat's soup, along with cilantro and a dash of black pepper. Side dishes of fish sauce and sliced chiles soaked in vinegar provide additional seasoning.In south India, one might breakfast on upma, a wheat porridge that includes vegetables, chiles, black mustard seeds and curry leaves. Vasanti Jayaswal of West Los Angeles makes upma in the style of Bangalore, although she is from Trivandrum in the state of Kerala. To give a nutty flavor, she includes a small amount of lightly browned Indian dal, or roasted cashews can also be added.Leilei Thein of San Diego calls her Burmese banana cake banana shwe gye. In Burmese, "shwe gye" means semolina, which she uses instead of regular flour. Made with coconut milk as well as evaporated milk, the sweet cake is as likely to show up at breakfast as at other times of day. "In Myanmar, no distinction is made between what is served for breakfast or for afternoon tea," explains Thein, who grew up in Mawlamyine (formerly Moulmein) in southern Myanmar. "We eat a lot of snack food at breakfast time too."Bhante Walpola Piyananda, abbot of the Dharma Vijaya Buddhist Vihara in Los Angeles, tells a legend about the origin of Sri Lankan kiribath (milk rice), which is rice cooked with coconut milk and salt. "This is sacred food to Sri Lankans, as well as delicious," he says. "It is the last food that the Buddha ate before being enlightened. A servant girl saw him meditating and perceived him as god. She ran to her mistress, who then prepared kiribath for the holy person and brought it to the Buddha. He was enlightened one day later."For auspicious days, kiribath rice would be served for breakfast, spread flat on a platter and accompanied by jaggery (brown sugar), treacle and bananas.In a variation, the rice is molded in small cups and then filled with coconut in jaggery syrup. This recipe, called coppa kiribath, appears in the "Ceylon Daily News Cookery Book," which has been continuously reprinted since it was first published in Colombo in 1929.Barley sattu could be called Nepali granola, the way Narayan Somname prepares it. Somname, a Nepali chef working in Japan, sent the recipe to a friend, Bijay Niraula, who is president of the Himalayan Arts and Cultural Council of the Pacific Asia Museum in Pasadena. Somname mixes powdered hulled barley grains with raisins, cashews, coconut, sugar candy, cinnamon and cardamom."Sattu can be eaten with both cold or hot milk," Niraula says. "It can also be mixed with plain yogurt." Powdery rather than crunchy, sattu is handy food for travelers and campers. The labor involved in pounding the grains to a powder, as is done in Nepal, would discourage most cereal lovers from trying this dish. However, the recipe works well with barley flour from a natural foods store.Adding raisins, nuts, coconut and spices also breaks with Nepali tradition. There, sattu is frugal food, eaten plain or mixed with water. But Somname's fancy version is a lot more palatable and just might find a place on an American breakfast table.

Provided by Barbara Hansen

Categories     BREAKFAST, DESSERTS

Time 1h30m

Yield Serves 6 to 10

Number Of Ingredients 10

Nonstick cooking spray
2 cups semolina
2 (13 1/2-ounce) cans coconut milk
Water
1 (5-ounce) can evaporated milk
2 eggs, beaten
1 1/2 cups sugar
4 ripe, soft bananas, mashed
1 cup (2 sticks) butter or margarine
1 tablespoon poppy seeds

Steps:

  • Heat the oven to 350 degrees. Coat a 9-inch square baking pan with nonstick cooking spray and set the pan on a foil-lined baking sheet.
  • Roast the semolina in a dry skillet over medium heat, stirring, until the color changes, 10 minutes. Combine the coconut milk, enough water to fill 1 coconut milk can, evaporated milk, eggs, sugar and bananas in a large pot and heat over medium heat until barely simmering, about 4 to 5 minutes. Slowly pour in the roasted semolina, mixing well to avoid lumps. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until thick. Addthe butter or margarine while stirring.
  • Pour the batter into the pan and bake until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean and the top is evenly golden brown, 1 hour. Sprinkle the top with the poppy seeds. Place under the broiler and broil 2 minutes. Cool to room temperature, cover and let stand overnight. Cut into diamonds to serve. Refrigerate any leftovers. Reheat to room temperature before serving.

BURMESE SEMOLINA CAKE (SANWEI MAKIN)



Burmese Semolina Cake (Sanwei Makin) image

Here's a Southeast Asian slice with a crispy crust and soft fudgy centre. Burmese Semolina Cake (Shwegyi Sanwei Makin) is filled with toasty coconut flavour, perfect as a quick snack or dessert.

Provided by Wandercooks

Categories     Dessert

Time 1h10m

Number Of Ingredients 10

170 g coarse semolina
200 g brown sugar
400 ml coconut cream
400 ml water
2 eggs (whisked)
4 tbsp butter
pinch salt
poppy seeds
white sesame seeds
desiccated coconut

Steps:

  • Preheat oven to 160˚C / 320˚F and a deep baking dish greased with butter or coconut oil.
  • Pop the semolina in a large saucepan over a low to medium heat and dry fry until golden brown (around 5 to 10 minutes). Keep stirring and avoid leaving it unattended or it may burn or cook unevenly.
  • Once it's toasty, add in the brown sugar, coconut cream, water, eggs, butter and salt and mix well. You might need a whisk to break up any clumps. The batter will be quite thin at this stage so don't worry.
  • Bring the mixture to a boil over a medium high heat and stir continuously. It will start to thicken quickly. Once bubbles start rising through the mixture you can reduce the heat down to low and continue to stir until the mixture thickens and starts to pull away easily from the side of the pan (around 8-10 minutes).
  • Once thickened, transfer the batter into baking dish and smooth the surface with an icing spatula or the back of a spoon.
  • Sprinkle with poppy seeds, sesame seeds or desiccated coconut and pop in the oven. Bake for around 30-40 minutes until the top is dark golden-brown and the cake has set.
  • Slice into squares and serve warm or at room temperature.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 3290 kcal, Carbohydrate 365 g, Protein 47 g, Fat 195 g, SaturatedFat 155 g, Cholesterol 449 mg, Sodium 630 mg, Fiber 15 g, Sugar 214 g, ServingSize 1 serving

SAKINA'S BANANA CAKE WITH WITH SEMOLINA



Sakina's Banana Cake With With Semolina image

This is my Aunt Sakina's recipe. It is an excellent banana snack cake which uses semolina instead of flour but you wont even know the difference it is so light and fluffy and jam packed with banana and flavour. Do give it a try you wont be disappointed! It makes a huge 9x13-inch pan cake and can be halved successfully. It does not require icing. Lovely for tea-time.

Provided by muffin207

Categories     Dessert

Time 2h30m

Yield 6-8 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 11

250 g butter or 250 g margarine
2 cups sugar
4 eggs
2 cups semolina
1/2 teaspoon mixed spice
1 teaspoon ground cardamom
2 teaspoons baking powder (not soda)
2 cups coconut
1/2 cup warm milk
6 -8 bananas, mashed (used 8 if your bananas are smallish)
poppy seed, for sprinkling

Steps:

  • Preheat oven to 180°C.
  • Grease a 9x13-inch baking dish.
  • Beat butter and sugar until light and fluffy.
  • Beat in eggs one at time.
  • Add semolina and let mixture stand for one and half hours.
  • This step is very important. After standing stir rest of ingredients in until well blended.
  • Pour into you baking dish, sprinkle with seeds and bake for 20-30 min or until a skewer comes out clean.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 1111.3, Fat 56.9, SaturatedFat 39.2, Cholesterol 232.9, Sodium 428.5, Carbohydrate 142.7, Fiber 10, Sugar 83.4, Protein 15.5

BURMESE SEMOLINA CAKE (SHWE GYE) WITH RUM RAISINS



BURMESE SEMOLINA CAKE (SHWE GYE) WITH RUM RAISINS image

Categories     Cake     Dessert     Bake     Kid-Friendly

Yield 12 pieces

Number Of Ingredients 12

2 cups semolina or cream wheat
2 cups white sugar
2.5 cups Coconut Cream
1/2 tsp salt
2 eggs beaten
3 cups water
1/2 cup corn oil
1/2 cup raisins
1 cup rum
1/4 cup brown sugar
2 tbl spoons white poppy seeds (optional)
Honey to drizzle(optional)

Steps:

  • Pre-heat oven at 350 degrees F. Stew raisins in rum and brown sugar over low heat until all the alcohol is absorbed. Toast semolina over medium heat in a large pot for 2 minutes, and careful not to burn. Mix semolina, sugar, coconut cream, salt, eggs, water and oil together over medium heat. Mix and stir continuously until it thickens. Add raisins and stir. Mixture should be extremely thick and hard to stir (your arm should get tired after a few minutes). You can stir from anywhere from 5 minutes to 1 hr. My mother's recipe is to stir for 1 hr. Bake in 9 inch buttered baking dish for 1 hr until golden brown on top, and sprinkle poppy seeds and honey if desired.

BANANA SHWE GYE CAKE - {BURMESE SEMOLINA CAKE} RECIPE



Banana Shwe Gye Cake - {Burmese Semolina Cake} Recipe image

Provided by á-170456

Number Of Ingredients 10

Nonstick cooking spray as needed
2 cups semolina
2 cans coconut milk - (13 1/2 oz ea)
Water as needed
1 can evaporated milk - (5 oz)
2 eggs beaten
1 1/2 cups sugar
4 ripe soft bananas mashed
1 cup butter or margarine - (2 sticks)
1 tablespoon poppy seeds

Steps:

  • Heat the oven to 350 degrees. Coat a 9-inch square baking pan with nonstick cooking spray and set the pan on a foil-lined baking sheet. Roast the semolina in a dry skillet over medium heat, stirring, until the color changes, 10 minutes. Combine the coconut milk, enough water to fill 1 coconut milk can, evaporated milk, eggs, sugar and bananas in a large pot and heat over medium heat until barely simmering, about 4 to 5 minutes. Slowly pour in the roasted semolina, mixing well to avoid lumps. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until thick. Add the butter or margarine while stirring. Pour the batter into the pan and bake until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean and the top is evenly golden brown, 1 hour. Sprinkle the top with the poppy seeds. Place under the broiler and broil 2 minutes. Cool to room temperature, cover and let stand overnight. Cut into diamonds to serve. The cake will be moist, not fluffy. Refrigerate any leftovers. Reheat to room temperature before serving. This recipe yields 6 to 10 servings. Each of 10 servings: 609 calories; 315 mg sodium; 95 mg cholesterol; 38 grams fat; 27 grams saturated fat; 64 grams carbohydrates; 9 grams protein; 1.50 grams fiber.

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