Bánh da lợn

Steamed layer cake from Vietnam
  •   Media: Bánh da lợn

Bánh da lợn, bánh da heo (lit.'pig skin cake'),[1] or bánh chín tầng mây (lit.'nine-layer cloud cake') is a Vietnamese steamed layer cake made from tapioca starch, rice flour, mashed mung beans, taro, or durian, coconut milk and/or water, and sugar. It is sweet and gelatinously soft in texture, with thin (approximately 1 cm) colored layers alternating with layers of mung bean, durian, or taro filling.

Typical versions of bánh da lợn may feature the following ingredients:

  • Pandan leaf (for green color) with mung bean paste filling
  • Pandan leaf (for green color) with durian filling
  • Lá cẩm (leaf of the magenta plant, Peristrophe roxburghiana; imparts a purple color when boiled) with mashed taro filling

In modern cooking, artificial food coloring is sometimes used in place of the vegetable coloring.

A cake called kuih lapis, which is made in Malaysia and Indonesia, is similar to bánh da lợn. In the Philippines, a similar dessert and variant of kutsinta is simply called Vietnamese kutsinta and the Khmer of Cambodia call it num chak chan (នំចាក់ចាន់).

  • Bánh da lợn green leaf cake
    Bánh da lợn green leaf cake
  • Bánh da lợn green leaf cake with durian flavor
    Bánh da lợn green leaf cake with durian flavor

See also

References

  1. ^ The "d" in "da" is pronounced like a "z" in northern Vietnamese pronunciation and like a "y" in southern Vietnamese pronunciation.

External links

  • Photo of bánh da lợn (the green cake in the center)
  • Photo of bánh da lợn
  • Alice's Guide to Vietnamese Banh
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