Food blogging is rewarding in many ways. Cooking for me is very relaxing and therapeutic, but more than that I love feeding people and looking at their happy faces while they taste my food. Having this blog is no easy thing, especially with crazy schedules at work but as much as cooking, I love clicking and updating recipes too! All of this means a lot more when I hear good, positive feedback about my recipes 🙂 Thank you to all you silent readers who motivate me to cook more! One more thing about food blogging is, you are bound to move out of your comfort zone. I have cooked with vegetables I have never used in my kitchen or tried cuisines that were once alien to me. In the end, I love this learning process.
Today’s recipe is Tang Yuan, a Chinese dessert made of Glutinous Rice Dumplings cooked in a Sweet Broth. Traditionally this dessert is a specialty during Chinese New Year or for any Chinese festival. I am no expert in Chinese traditions but having worked closely with my colleagues in China and Malaysia, I could immediately relate to the recipe when Lina set up this Chinese New Year Recipe Challenge. The name sounded fun so I ended up picking it up.
On the first glance, Tang Yuan was much closer to Paal Kozhukattai that we make at home and that got me intrigued about this dessert. I mostly followed the recipe from here but loved the idea behind using colored balls from here. Apparently, cooking different colored rice balls in a single pot of broth signifies togetherness. How wonderful is that?! 🙂
This recipe is very simple. Rice balls cooked in sweet syrup. Can it get any simpler than that? Traditionally glutinous (sticky) rice flour is used to make the dumplings which are cooked in sugar syrup mildly flavored with Pandan leaves. As I had trouble finding these ingredients, I used what I had in my pantry and I should say that it worked well. I used regular rice flour (the one I use to make Kozhukattai) and replaced Pandan leaves with fresh ginger. It was a delicious dessert, not too sweet but pleasant to have, served either warm or cold.
How to make Tang Yuan
📖 Recipe
Tang Yuan | Chinese Sweet Dumplings
MEASUREMENT
1 cup = 250ml, 1 tablespoon = 15ml, 1 teaspoon = 5ml
Ingredients
- ½ cup Rice Flour
- ¼ cup Cane Sugar ¼ cup
- 1.5 cups Water 1 ¼+ ¼( or less for making dough)
- 2" piece Fresh Ginger (pounded slightly)
- 2 -3 drops Red/Yellow Food Colors (optional)
Instructions
How I made -
- In a thick bottomed pot, add ¼ cup of cane sugar and slightly crushed ginger.
- To make sugar syrup, add 1 ¼ cups of water to the pot, mix it well.
- Bring the sugar syrup to a boil on low flame and keep boiling for another 3-4 mins until nice aroma comes up.
- Meanwhile, in a bowl add rice flour and add water little by little.
- Mix it well and let the dough come together.
- Knead it for 2-3 mins until the dough is smooth and pliable.
- Separate it into three equal parts of dough.
- Add yellow and red food colors to two balls of dough.
- Pinch a small piece of dough and make 1 cm sized balls out of the dough, making sure there are no cracks.
- Prepare equal rice balls with rest of the dough.
- Gently drop the rice balls in the sugar syrup and bring it to a slow boil.
- As the rice balls get cooked, they float over the top. Remove from heat.
- Remove the ginger pieces and serve this dessert either warm or cold.
Note –
- Do use sticky rice flour or glutinous rice flour if available.
- I used cane sugar for making the syrup, but regular white sugar can be used.
- Adjust the amount of sugar depending on the sweet preference. This dessert is slightly on the lower side of sweetness.
- Food colors are optional.
- Some versions of this dessert have rice balls stuffed with black sesame or peanuts. I kept it very simple and loved it as it is.
Tang Yuan Recipe with Step by Step Pictures
1. In a thick bottomed pot, add ¼ cup of cane sugar and slightly crushed ginger.
2. To make sugar syrup, add 1 ¼ cups of water to the pot, mix it well.
3. Bring the sugar syrup to a boil on low flame and keep boiling for another 3-4 mins until nice aroma comes up.
4. Meanwhile, in a bowl add rice flour and add water little by little.
5. Mix it well and let the dough come together.
6. Knead it for 2-3 mins until the dough is smooth and pliable.
7. Separate it into three equal parts of dough.
8. Add yellow and red food colors to two balls of dough.
9. Make 1 cm sized balls out of the dough, making sure there are no cracks. Prepare equal sized rice balls with rest of the dough.
10. Gently drop the rice balls in the sugar syrup and bring it to a slow boil.
11. Slowly boil the sugar syrup for 7-8 mins with rice balls.
12. As the rice balls get cooked, they float over the top. Remove from heat.
13. Remove the ginger pieces and serve this dessert either warm or cold.
Recipe Notes
- Do use sticky rice flour or glutinous rice flour if available.
- I used cane sugar for making the syrup, but regular white sugar can be used.
- Adjust the amount of sugar depending on the sweet preference. This dessert is slightly on the lower side of sweetness.
- Food colors are optional.
- Some versions of this dessert have rice balls stuffed with black sesame or peanuts. I kept it very simple and loved it as it is.
I would be delighted to know if you have tried this recipe, don’t forget to share your feedback and comments below. If you have any questions, you can e-mail me! I am also available on Facebook, Pinterest, Instagram and Twitter 🙂
Freda @ Aromatic essence
Sounds like such a fun dessert! Looks fabulous 🙂
lynne hoareau
Those are really cute CH 🙂 and I adore the all the colours. I enjoy simple 🙂 Have a lovely day. x
Jhuls
We have the same thoughts about food blogging and cooking. Cooking is very addictive, I must admit.? This treat sounds so delicious and I bet our friends at Fiesta Friday will love it! Thanks for sharing! Have fun at the party.
Zeba@Food For The Soul
Wow...this is fascinating and so colorful. Looks so pretty and I bet it taste delicious. Thanks for bringing it to Fiesta Friday.
The Girl Next Door
This looks so, so, so good! I'd love to try this out at home some time soon. 🙂 Great job!
BTW, would love to meet up with you some time. Would you be okay with that? We've been reading each other's blogs for quite some time now, and live in the same city, it seems ridiculous we haven't met yet. Do let me know.
Ai @Ai made it for you
This is so cute! I totally agree about food blogging pushing you to try new things?
Happy Fiesta Friday!!
chcooks
Thanks so much Ai 🙂
Liz @ spades, spatulas, and spoons
Very interesting, when I saw the first picture I thought they were cherry tomatoes! Look delicious.
chcooks
hahaha 🙂 now that you mention, they do look like cherry tomatoes 😀
Lina
They look so amazing and perfect and professional. Loved the pictures. Thanks for participating. You always take the risk and end up doing the best job ever! Pleasure to have you participate...
chcooks
Thank you so much for your kind words Lina 🙂 I love taking part in your challenges!
Lina
Thanks..
chcooks
🙂 🙂
Lili
They are so beautiful and yummy-looking! Love the colours and the fact they represent togetherness! 🙂
chcooks
Thanks much Lili 🙂
tentimestea
These tang yuan are so cute CH! I love the colours you chose; they look so fun floating in the syrup. I also love the symbolism behind the three colours together in the bowl. The step-by-step pictures are so pretty--and must have taken such a long time! Ah, the blogging is certainly rewarding, but it's also quite a bit of work 🙂
(Also, black-sesame filled tang yuan are my favourite! I recommend that if you try again 🙂 )
chcooks
Thank you so much T 🙂 Yes! Cooking is the only easy part of food blogging 😀 😀 I will surely give stuffed Tang Yuan a try very soon 🙂