Homemade Kaya Jam with Pandan Leaves
- 3 tbsp coconut jam
- 2 or more egg yolks
- 1 bunch dried leaves pandan leaves, if using
- 1 canned coconut milk (preferably low in fat)
- 10 or more egg yolks
- 400 grams your choice of sweetener (sugar, maltitol, etc.)
- to taste pandan leaves
- The short-cut version: Add water or milk and the pandan leaves in a pot and simmer until the leaves soften.
- Add the leaves and the simmered liquid in a blender, and blend.
- Pour the mixture in a pot and simmer until it reduces, strain, and squeeze to make a condensed extract (or you could simply use the simmered liquid).
- Combine the coconut jam, the pandan leaves extract, and egg yolks, stir the mixture well, and simmer for a while over low heat, stirring occasionally.
- It looks just like kaya jam.
- Note: When adding the egg yolks, you might want to strain them once to loosen them up and remove any stringy bits.
- The authentic version: Whisk the coconut milk, egg yolks, and sugar with a handheld electric mixer, and pour the mixture through a strainer.
- Add plenty of pandan leaves to the mixture, pour it into a pot and turn on the heat.
- Once it comes to a boil, reduce the heat down to very low, simmer for a while, and continue stirring with a spatula to prevent it from forming any lumps.
- If you continue simmering over high heat, the yolks will harden and it will lose its creamy texture.
- So, simmer over low heat and gradually heat the mixture.
- This will take several minutes, but hang in there and continue stirring while simmering.
- Remove the pandan leaves after simmering.
- Most kaya jam recipes call for whole eggs, but it's easy to mess up.
- The jam becomes crumbly, turning out looking a whole lot different than the one's sold at stores.
- In my opinion, store-bought kaya jam uses only egg yolks (I even once checked the ingredients list, and powdered egg yolks was listed).
- I also find store-bought kaya jam to be too sweet, so I reduced the sweetness significantly to create this elegant jam.
- You can make a big batch of this jam and store it in the freezer.
- Sterilize the jar before pouring the jam in.
- The most popular way to enjoy this jam is to spread it on toast and top it with a tad of salted butter.
- If you make kaya jam with just coconut milk, sugar, and pandan leaves, the jam will turn into a nice green color, and it will be aromatic, flavorful, and delicious!
- !
- Frozen pandan leaves are sold at Asian specialty stores.
- I purchased dried pandan leaves online.
- I found this store-bought kaya jam to be delicious, so it's the taste I tried recreating.
- The taste of the kaya jam differs depending on the manufacturer.
- This jam was good too.
- All the others weren't quite as good, and none of them suited my palate...
- Kaya jam is also called Sri Kaya jam.
coconut jam, egg yolks, coconut milk, egg yolks, your choice
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/302371-homemade-kaya-jam-with-pandan-leaves (may not work)