November 16, 2011

Coconut Pandan Chiffon Flan Bundt Cake

I've been thinking for weeks now of what bundt to bake to celebrate National Bundt Day with Mary, The Food Librarian. She has been posting a bundt every single day for thirty days leading up to this food holiday. I've even gone through her archives and round-up from the previous years. Last minute inspiration while thinking about my last year's Ube Chiffon Flan Bundt led me to bake a Coconut Pandan Chiffon Flan Bundt Cake.

Pandan is a tropical plant widely available and used in cooking in Southeast Asia. My Lola always told me to place a pandan leaf in the water when cooking rice to make it special; I would be the one told to cut a leaf off our plant in the backyard. I didn't mind since I know I'm in for something special - just the lovely scent that fills the house as it cook is just heavenly.

I have not had luck finding a pandan plant here in US but the leaves can be found in the frozen section of most Asian stores. Some stores will have fresh leaves once in a while so that's when I stock up. Pandan's flavor matches perfectly with coconut, a popular Filipino dessert is Coconut Pandan Gelatin with strips of young coconut and green cubes of pandan gelatin.

Taking those flavors and putting it in a cake form with added leche flan (and caramel) puts this cake over the top! The smooth, creamy coconut leche flan along with light and airy coconut pandan chiffon cake are like yin and yang textures but with both flavors in harmony.

There are plenty of steps in making the cake but don't let that deter you. I promise it's all worth it!


Coconut Pandan Chiffon Flan Bundt Cake

For Coconut Flan:
1 cup sugar
1/4 cup water
7 egg yolks
1 cup unsweetened coconut milk
1 cup sweetened condensed milk
1 tsp vanilla
pinch salt

For Coconut Pandan Chiffon Cake:
240g (2 cups) all-purpose flour
300g (1 1/2 cups) granulated sugar
15g (1 TBSP) baking powder
5g (1 tsp) salt
7 pandan leaves, chopped into 1-inch pieces
3/4 cup unsweetened coconut milk
125ml (1/2 cup) vegetable oil
7 large eggs, separated
1 tsp. vanilla extract
few drops pandan essence
1/2 tsp. cream of tartar
  1. Make the caramel. Mix sugar and water together in a small saucepan and stir until sugar dissolves. Bring mixture to boil in medium-high heat until golden brown in color. Immediately pour into bundt pan, swirling caramel around until it covers the bottom and sides of pan. (Bundt pan will become hot from caramel, wear protective mitts!) Set aside to cool.
  2. Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Bring a pot full of water to boil needed for bain marie.
  3. In a bowl, stir egg yolks. Add both milks and vanilla extract and salt. Stir to combine completely. Strain mixture to rid of yolk solids and set aside while you prepare the chiffon cake.
  4. In a large bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt; set aside.
  5. Place pandan leaves and coconut milk in a blender and puree until all leaves are finely shredded and mixture looks green. Strain through several layers of cheesecloth, squeezing out all the liquid.
  6. Add oil, egg yolks, vanilla and pandan essence to the pandan-coconut mixture. Stir thoroughly to combine. Add to flour mixture and whisk until smooth.
  7. In another large bowl, beat egg whites and cream of tartar using an electric mixer until stiff peaks form. With a rubber spatula, gently fold beaten egg whites into batter, a third at a time, just until incorporated. Set aside.
  8. Pour leche flan mixture into the caramel-lined bundt pan.
  9. Spoon the chiffon cake batter into the bundt pan. DON'T WORRY, THE CHIFFON CAKE BATTER WILL STAY FLOATING ON TOP OF LECHE FLAN. Fill only up to 2 inches from top of pan -- batter will rise as the cake bakes. *You will have leftover chiffon batter, enough to make 6 cupcakes; something to tie you over while your bundt cake chill overnight. :)
  10. Pour boiling water into a bigger roasting pan - this is your bain marie. Place the bundt pan in and bake for 45-50 minutes. Check doneness of cake by inserting toothpick.
  11. Take out of oven and let cool completely.
  12. Cover top with plastic wrap and place in refrigerator to chill at least 4 hours, preferably overnight.
  13. To serve, invert onto a plate and enjoy!
 

10 comments:

Phuoc'n Delicious said...

What a genius idea! I love flan and chiffon cake; so what a bonus to have both in one.

Betty Ann @Mango_Queen said...

What an awesome cake! You make it look so fabulous. I love the caramel dripping down...omg, it's irresistable. Would love to try baking this, but I don't think I'll measure up to how good you do yours! Thanks for sharing. I will bookmark this and muster the courage soon, Caroline! Happy Thanksgiving, my friend!

Annapet said...

This is just beautiful, Carol! I think pandan is in your future ;-).

Anonymous said...

Oh. Em. Gee!that looks so good. I bet it tasted great too

chef_d said...

What a delicious looking bundt cake...love the addition of flan...yummy!

SKIP TO MALOU said...

my aunt and i made custard cake last week and it's similar to this.. only yours is more creative fusing pandan into your chiffon. maybe i should try it with ube??? thanks for the inspiration carol
malou

cusinera said...

Caroline, have I gone to heaven yet??? This looks so delicious, will definitely try this one...pandan with leche flan...I need to cook this!!!!

Sara said...

Wow, this is a totally gorgeous bundt! Love the two layers...that flan looks super delicious. :)

Unknown said...

The cake looks lovely.

Unknown said...

I used your recipe last thanksgiving and it was a true hit...I tried it two more times and the flan did not set correctly and it oozed intobthe middle of the mold. What did I do wrong??

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