Christine Glutinous Rice Balls with Peanuts & Sesame Seeds 糖不甩
Ingredients:
- 100 gm glutinous rice flour (mochi rice flour)
- 100 ml lukewarm water
- water (room temperature), to adjust
- 20 gm peanuts
- 10 gm sesame seeds
Ginger syrup:
- 1 cup water
- 2 to 3 slices old ginger
- 1 piece brown sugar in pieces (片糖 about 50 gm)
Method:
- Heat a bit of oil in frypan. Wipe with a kitchen paper as you don’t want the peanuts too oily. Fry peanuts on medium-low heat, turning consistently, until lightly brown evenly. Let cool. Put peanuts in a plastic bag and pound/crush them into smaller pieces with a rolling pin. Fry sesame seeds in frypan until aromatic. Set aside.
- Place glutinous rice flour in a large bowl. Add warm water bit by bit. Knead flour along the way, and some flour crumbs would be created. Then add a bit of water at room temperature. Continue to knead until the surface is not sticky.
- Roll out the dough on a clean surface and stretch into a long strip, about 1 inch in thickness. Divide into 6 equal parts. Roll each part into a small ball with your palms.
- Fill a little saucepan with 1 cup of water and bring it to boil. Add ginger and brown sugar. When it boils again, reduce heat and simmer for 10 minutes to infuse more ginger flavour and thicken the syrup.
- Heat some water in another saucepan or wok to cook glutinous balls on medium-high heat. Place the balls in boiling water. Immediately stir the water, make sure each ball doesn’t stick to the bottom. Cook until the balls float onto the surface of water. Drain them and transfer to ginger syrup. Simmer for another 10 minutes on low heat. Turn occasionally to make sure all surfaces of balls could absorb syrup well.
- To serve, spoon out glutinous balls on a platter or divide them in serving bowls. Drizzle more syrup. Sprinkle peanuts and sesame seeds.
Notes:
- If you don’t eat peanuts, you can replace it with roasted almond. It tastes very good too.
- Many people find glutinous balls would turn to be quite mushy if cooked too long in water. The secret to get the best, soft and chewy glutinous balls is to add warm water first, then cold water when kneading your dough. It’s easy and simple.
- My mum used to cook this dessert on Chinese New Year’s Eve. She also liked to wrap a little piece of brown sugar (片糖) inside each glutinous ball. It makes each ball taste even better.
- The amount of water in this recipe is just a rough guideline. As you knead your dough, just add water bit by bit as you go. If you feel the dough is too dry, add more water, or vice versa add more flour if you feel it’s too wet, until you get the right consistency you like.
http://en.christinesrecipes.com/2010/02/glutinous-rice-balls-with-peanuts.html