This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my privacy policy.
FREE EMAIL BONUS:
5 Secrets to 20 Minute Dinners!
Tips, tricks, and recipes for dinner in a hurry!
Whenever I go home to Malaysia, I would always stuff myself crazy with all sorts of kuih (local sweet or savory cake). One of my favorite is or kuih, or yam cake made of yam (in the US, yam is referred as taro). I have never attempted making kuih in the US though.
Today, I have invited a fellow Penangite Su-Yin Koay of Bread et Butter to share the savory and mouthwatering or kuih recipe. Bread et Butter is a beautiful blog with many recipes: Malaysian, Chinese, baking, and all sorts of goodies.
You can also find culture guide articles bout Malaysia, Penang, etc. Please welcome Bread et Butter to Rasa Malaysia and do visit her wonderful food blog. Now I could only wish that I have some or kuih for my tea break today!
I was very excited when Bee asked me if I would like to write a guest post for her blog–I mean, this was Rasa Malaysia, one of my favourite food blogs out there!
She’s taught me so much about Malaysian and Chinese cooking, and it is truly an honour to have a chance to do this.
One of the things I’ve always enjoyed eating is yam cake (“or kuih” in Hokkien, where “or” = yam, “kuih” = snack or cake). It is a popular snack amongst the Malaysian and Singaporean communities, and is basically a steamed kuih made from yam pieces, dried prawns and rice flour.
It is then topped with deep fried shallots, spring onions, chillis and dried prawns, and usually served with a chilli dipping sauce.
I grew up eating my grandma’s or kuih, and I remember thinking how it would be so cool if I knew how to make it. However I would always be at school when she made or kuih, so I never really learnt how it was made.
And if I were being perfectly honest, I was only really interested in eating it… it also didn’t help that there was always a ready supply of it.
Of course, this changed when I came to England. I have yet to find a restaurant here that serves decent or kuih, which is highly disappointing. So I decided to ask my grandma for her or kuih recipe so I could have a go at making it myself.
And you know what – I don’t know why I never tried making this before, because it is actually pretty simple! Sure, there’s a bit of prep work involved in dicing the yam, but apart from that it’s quite a breeze.
The best part of her recipe is that it uses rice bowls as a measure. How brilliant is that? The ratio that’s used is 2 bowls water: 1 bowl flour: 1½ bowls yam.
Of course, this means nothing is perfectly accurate in terms of weight, but some degree of variation actually doesn’t alter the final product too much.
It also does not matter what size your bowl is, as long as it’s a Chinese style rice bowl (i.e. not a wide and shallow cereal bowl, for instance). Just follow the 2:1:1½ ratio and you’re sorted.
How Many Calories per Serving?
This recipe is only 44 calories per serving.
What Dishes to Serve with This Recipe?
For a wholesome meal and easy weeknight dinner, I recommend the following recipes.
Yam Cake Recipe (Or Kuih)
Ingredients
For the kuih:
- 1½ bowls yam (diced into 1-2cm cubes)
- 1 bowl rice flour
- 2 tablespoons wheat starch
- 2 bowls water
- ½ - ¾ bowl dried shrimps (heh bee – I used ¾ bowl because I cannot express how much I love an abundance of it in or kuih)
- 5 shallots (finely chopped)
- 1 teaspoon five-spice powder
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon white pepper
For the topping:
- deep fried shallots (I buy mine ready fried from Chinatown)
- spring onions (sliced finely)
- red chillies (sliced finely)
- dried shrimps (heh bee, chopped finely and fried (optional – you can just put more heh bee in the actual cake))
Instructions
- Heat a pan over medium high heat, and fry the onions and dried shrimps until they become aromatic. This should take about 3-5 minutes.
- Add the cubed yam to the pan, and fry it with the onion and dried shrimp mixture until it browns.
- In a separate bowl, mix the rice flour, wheat starch and water, and stir until it forms a smooth paste. Take care to ensure there are no lumps in the mixture.
- Add the flour mixture into the pan slowly, and stir until everything forms a thick paste.
- Add the salt, pepper and five spice powder, and mix well.
- Pour the mixture into a heatproof bowl/plate and steam over high heat for 45 minutes, or until cooked.
- To serve, sprinkle with deep fried shallots, chopped spring onions, sliced chillies and chopped dried shrimp. Some chilli sauce on the side is also highly recommended.
- * The wheat starch helps to make the kuih softer in texture. If you can’t find this, you can substitute it with an equal quantity of corn starch.
Hi, what can i replace if i don’t have 5 spice in hand?
Skip.
What can I replace the heh bee with as my son cannot eat prawns?
Heh bee is a must in or kuih.
Try replacing with Chinese sausage instead like luobuo gau (radish cake instead of yam). Cut sausage into small pcs and fry, the rest as per recipe. Hope it helps those allergic to prawns.
Delicious recipe. Just follow exactly the instruction. I have made it twice. Turn out perfect. Thanks so much
Awesome thanks for trying!
Awesome recipe. Follow exactly ur recipe n it works yummy yummy. Tq Bee for d recipe.
Thanks!
Can check from u your measuring bowl is which type ?
US measuring cup/bowl.
How to check if yam cake is cooked?
It’s cooked when a tooth pick inserted into the middle and it comes out clean.
Tq! :)
I wish I didnt read the comment as many said it was watery etc, so I reduced my water and the yam cake turned out pretty dense. But still taste really good, bring back the childhood memory ?
P.S. You need to stir the flour mix into the shrimp/taro mixed while the pan still hot, so the flour still kinda being cooked while you stir them. By doing so, it will reduce the liquid.
HI Jessy, awesome, thanks for trying!
Hi. I followed your measurement using rice bowls. But they turned up watery and soft. I tried to reduce the water to 1.5 bowls, also same. Any idea why?
I don’t know why, it worked for me.
Hi, I used glutinous rice flour instead of rice flour (coz the store only stocked the former and I thought it was the same). The result is a super soft and sticky yam… MOCHI. Could this be the issue faced by Jin?
Glutinous rice flour is not rice flour. Just like glutinous rice is not white rice. This recipe works if you follow the recipe exactly and doesn’t replace ingredients.
Same here. It’s watery and doesn’t firm up even after steaming for 1 and 1/2 hr.
This recipe works. If it doesn’t firm up, it means your measurement is probably off.
Hi dear…i tried ur yam cake recepi….its simply delicious……ur instructions simple and easy to follow up….Thank you Bee…..God bless u. ?????❤
Thanks for trying.
Hi Rasa Malaysia
can you update your recipe with modern measurement instead of bowl – no idea of your bowl measurement?
Thanks
Yoke
This recipe was contributed by another food blogger.
Hi Bee, can I know if these much of ingredients can fit into a 8×8 pan? Just want to gauge how much servings this will provide. Thanks!
I think so I can’t remember anymore it’s a very old recipe.