Eis cendol recipe

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Rating:

4/ 5 stars 25 Votes
  • Cuisine: Indonesian
  • Serves 5-6

Pronounced “ess-chen-doll”, this is a dessert or alternatively an aperitif consisting of fun and highly textural flour based cendol pieces (usually green) served with a selection of fruits depending upon taste and occasion, served with coconut milk, shaved ice and topped with sweet palm sugar syrup.

Ingredients

225g packet of mung bean flour (hon kwe)*
1 can of jackfruit in syrup, cut into small bite-sized pieces
1 can of tody palm, cut into small bite-sized pieces
Palm sugar, shaved finely and added to a small amount of warm water to make a sweet, dark coloured syrup
1 can of coconut milk
Ice cubes (shaved)
Pandan colouring, few drops

* If you cannot find mung bean flour then rice flour will suffice but it will be mildly different in flavour, and more like the Malaysian style of cendol than the traditional Indonesian version.

Preparation

Place some water in a large bowl and add plenty of ice to make a cooling bath.

Place a saucepan over low heat with about 100ml of hot water and slowly add the mung bean flour, stirring constantly.

Once the mixture is thick and paste-like in consistency, add a few drops of the pandan colouring (which acts also as a flavouring) and remove from heat.

Put the paste in a wide colander and push through the colander directly into the ice bath. The green flour mixture will slip through the colander and harden when it drops into the cooling bath. These cendol “green worms” are the key to Eis Cendol. They provide the main textural element and distinctive colouring of the beverage or dessert.

The cendol can be kept in cold water or a cool vessel containing some coconut milk.

To make the beverage, layer the ingredients in a tall, slender glass, starting with the cendol, then palm seeds and jackfruit.

Top with coconut milk, then shaved ice, and drizzle with palm sugar syrup.

Serve with a long, slender spoon and straw.


If you enjoyed this Eis cendol recipe then browse more Indonesian recipes, beverage recipes and our most popular hainanese chicken rice recipe.

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Comments (7)

   
14 Jan 2011 09:58 AEST
Kunang
Adelaide
Delicious sweetness
LOOOVE IT!!
Agree(0 people agree)
Disagree(0 people disagree)
14 Sep 2010 03:49 AEST
Marianna
Cremorne
Pandan colouring
Can anyone suggest where to buy Pandan colouring? I have tried Chinatown & Kingsford in Sydney but can only get the leaf and the essence? Can you use the essence and green food colouring?
Agree(0 people agree)
Disagree(0 people disagree)
24 Aug 2010 10:28 AEST
dick smith
some where.
man, I am never making this again!
it tasted soo bad. I am never making this ever again. ewwww. it was very bad. do not make it.
Agree(0 people agree)
Disagree(6 people disagree)
08 Jun 2009 09:41 AEST
mohomad
parammatta
goooooood
its realy good....i think it couldbe tasty..
Agree(0 people agree)
Disagree(0 people disagree)
29 Apr 2009 11:11 AEST
Pepy
Winnipeg, Canada
Wrong spelling
The spelling is wrong. The right one is "Es Cendol"
Agree(4 people agree)
Disagree(5 people disagree)
29 Apr 2009 08:13 AEST
Bill Parnell
Figtree NSW
eis chendol
If I had one last taste request in life it would be chendol as made on SBS Food Safari by Ben Mochtar... ambrosia of the gods bestowed on we unworthy earhlings!!!
Agree(1 people agree)
Disagree(0 people disagree)
31 Mar 2009 04:22 AEST
Mary
Burlington
Too sweet for me!
I found this too sweet.
Agree(0 people agree)
Disagree(7 people disagree)

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