Baking Soda Manju
- 200 grams Cake flour
- 30 grams Sugar
- 4 grams Baking soda
- 15 ml Sake
- 30 to 40 ml Water
- 300 grams Tsubu-an
- 10 Muffin cups
- 1 Egg (medium)
- To make the tsubu-an, refer to.
- I partially thawed a stock I had in my freezer.
- https://cookpad.com/en/recipes/143833-homemade-tsubu-an-chunky-sweet-azuki-bean-paste
- Sift together the cake flour and baking soda, add the sugar, then mix thoroughly with a whisk.
- Add the beaten egg and sake to the mixture from Step 2.
- Adding a little water at a time, knead until the mixture forms a dough about the firmness of your ear lobe.
- Form into a ball.
- With a tightly wrung out kitchen towel, wrap the dough, and let it sit for about 30 minutes.
- Stretch the dough out into a log, then cut it into 10 even pieces with a pastry scraper or knife.
- Until you wrap them around the anko, keep moist under the kitchen towel.
- Do not let them dry out.
- Roll out the individual pieces of dough into roughly 10 cm ovals, place the tsubu-an in the middle and wrap.
- Lightly press the surface of the dough into shape.
- With the seam facing down, place the manju onto muffin cups.
- Prepare a steamer, and once it starts to steam, place the manju inside.
- Steam for about 15 minutes.
- This is how they should look after steaming.
- The tsubu-an wasn't quite centered in these...
- In regard to the amount of baking soda, some require 3 to 4 g per 100 g of flour, and some only 1 to 1.5 g.
- The baking soda I use says to use 6 to 8 g per 200 g of flour, but it becomes bitter if you put too much.
- When I used 4 g, the manju rose sufficiently.
flour, sugar, baking soda, sake, water, cups, egg
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/149139-baking-soda-manju (may not work)