Buttery Kaya Buns Panda Kaya Centered Muffins (Original)
This twist on an old-school delight is sure to please both the younger and older generations
Kaya is a local analogy to Jam or Peanut butter here in Singapore. Made primarily from Eggs, Sugar & Coconut Milk, it's a staple and an all time favourite.
This little bottle of Pandan Kaya had inspired me to do something
unconventional tonight, something oozing with nostalgia and richness. (Bought this from JB. If you're particular, you can use any brand)
Combine
the flavours of smooth sweet coconut together in a encapsulating golden
crusted rich and moist buttery muffin, you get a winner.
I'm going to give away 3 little tips today!
1) Sour Cream is the Secret ingredient to Moist & Rich Muffins
- Put them in chocolate chip muffin recipes, blue berry muffin recipes or any of your favourite recipes and it is a DEFINITE game changer. I can't explain it scientifically but it makes your muffins fluffy and moist, and enhances the richness of the butter within the batter.
2) Good Quality Coarse Grained Sea Salt is Essential in Muffin Baking
- Salt is the ultimate balancing tool for both baking and cooking. Its like a support element that lifts the flavour of the other main ingredients. ( eg. Adding a touch of salt in to hot chocolate transforms the flavour in to something magical - Heston Blumenthal)
- The difference between normal table salt and using Coarse Grained Sea Salt is that the Coarse grained sea salt really cuts through in flavour but not overpowering when you eat the muffin compared to table salt which merely has no palatable effect in baked goods unless used in substantial amounts.
Use any good sea salt found in supermarkets or organic stores.
3) The Budget Piping Trick for Muffins
Always make a mess while spooning your muffin batter in to the moulds?
Piping bags are relatively expensive if you use the disposable ones.
Save that money for better ingredients.
Here's how to make use of unwanted plastic bags like these ( From NTUC to store fruits)
Line a deep container with the plastic bag like the one above
Using a rubber spatula, fill the bag with your batter
Lift the bag up, squeeze out the excess air, give it a twist at the top and a snip at the tip, and there you have your very own piping bag.
No mess, No washing of spoons, No sticky fingers
So Here's the Recipe
Buttery Pandan Kaya Centered Muffins makes 12
Ingredients
2 cups Top Flour/Plain All Purpose Flour, Sifted
185g Caster Sugar
1 tbsp Baking Powder
1/2 tsp Baking Soda (Bicarbonate of Soda)
1/2 tsp Good Quality Coarse Grained Sea Salt
2 Eggs
85g Unsalted Butter, Melted & Cooled
1 tsp Vanilla Extract
1tsp Almond Extract ( Optional, or you could substitute with extra Vanilla Extract)
250g Sour Cream, Chilled
1. Preheat Oven to 190 deg C
2. In a bowl, sift the flour, baking powder, baking soda. Add the salt and sugar. Mix evenly
3. In another bowl, whisk together the eggs, melted butter, vanilla extract, almond extract and sour cream till smooth and creamy.
4. Fold the Dry ingredients in to the Wet ingredients, half at a time. Do not overmix. The mixture will be slighty sticky and lumpy, its ok.
5. Pipe/spoon your batter in to moulds till 1/3 full.
6. Add a Generous (approx 1 1/2 tbspn) amount of Kaya/Jam in the centre of the muffin.
(You should put more than this, this was my first batch)
7. Pipe/Spoon the remaining batter up to the rim
8. Bake at 190 deg C for 20 mins ( turning the tray at the 10 min mark) or till a skewer comes out clean from the centre of the muffin.
9. Serve Warm, with a dollop of kaya, creme fraiche, or clotted cream on the side, and of course, Hot Milo (an Asian chocolately beverage)
Happy Baking:)
Thanks for reading and would surely appreciate any comments or suggestions to help improve my blog for you readers.
Cheers,
Darryl