Pumpkin Black Sesame Tang Yuan with Tapioca/Sago Pearls and Coconut Milk
Course: Chinese New Year, Dessert
Cuisine: Chinese
Prep Time: 45 minutesminutes
Cook Time: 15 minutesminutes
Total Time: 1 hourhour
Servings: 14large dumplings
Author: Marvellina
Soft and chewy pumpkin glutinous rice balls (tang yuan) are filled with nutty and lightly sweetened black sesame peanut filling served with tapioca pearls in a sweet coconut milk broth. They are such a treat and different from the conventional tang yuan in sweet ginger broth.
Bring 4 cups of water to a boil. Add tapioca pearls and let them boil for about 10 minutes. Stirring it every now and then to prevent the pearls sticking to the bottom of the pan. You will see the whitish spot in the middle but the small pearl this size should have cooked through. They should be soft and slightly chewy. Strain off the water and rinse the pearl in cold running water to wash off any extra starch. I like to submerge them in room temperature water to prevent stickiness, or you can stir in a bit of honey to sweeten and to prevent them from sticking to each other
Coconut broth:
Put coconut milk, sugar, and pandan leaves in a saucepan. Bring to a gentle simmer. Do not let it boil or the coconut milk will curdle. Just let is simmer until it's heated to warm and sugar is melted. Season with a very small pinch of salt. Set aside
Black sesame peanut filling:
Put the black sesame seeds and peanuts in a blender and process them until they are crushed into fine pieces. Add sugar and oil and stir to combine. There's no need to refrigerate this
Prepare the dough:
Mix glutinous rice flour with icing sugar. Stir to combine and set aside
Steam the pumpkin and then mashed while it's still hot. Set aside 100 gr of mashed pumpkin to be used in this recipe. You can freeze the rest for other use
Add this hot mashed pumpkin into the flour mixture and stir to combine with a spoon. When it's not too hot anymore, use your hand to knead into a dough. You may need to add a bit of warm water if the dough is too dry. You may not need to add any at all too, it depends on how moist or dry the pumpkin is
The dough should be soft and pliable. Divide into 14 equal pieces and keep them covered to prevent drying out. Work with one dough at a time
Fill and shape the tang yuan:
Get one dough and roll into a ball. Use your thumb to make an indentation, deep and wide enough for the filling. Add filling and then gather the edge of the dough to seal the ball
Roll it into a smooth round ball. It is very important to roll it smooth without any seams. Any cracks or seams are potentials for the filling to leak out when you boil it later, especially if you use the oozy black sesame filling. If at any point the dough is dry, dab with some water and it helps to roll the dough smooth. Continue with the rest until you run out of dough and filling. Keep them covered with a damp cloth or plastic wrap
Boil the tang yuan:
Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add the tang yuan. They will sink to the bottom at first. Cook until they float to the top and then cook for another minute. Use a slotted spoon to remove from the water and submerge in another bowl of fresh clean water. This is to prevent the tang yuan from being sticky
Serving:
Portion the cooked tang yuan into serving bowls. Add the tapioca pearls and then ladle the coconut broth over and serve
Video
Notes
You can replace mashed pumpkin with others such as mashed sweet potato, mashed purple sweet potato, mashed taro, etc. You may need to adjust the amount of liquid.