Loh Han Guo aka Buddha’s fruit is available in most Chinese medical shops and comes in several sizes. The thin shell cracks easily and was told that it is this shell that contains the flavour of Loh Han Guo. For this dessert, try to request for sweet ones from the shop owner. If using sweet ones, no sugar is needed to cook this wonderful dessert.
The original recipe uses fresh sea coconut [hoi tay yeah] which is obtainable from the wet market stalls but sometimes it is not available as it has a short shelf life. Here, I used canned sea coconut aka Toddy Palm in sweet syrup. I didn’t add in the syrup as the soup tasted sweet enough with the other ingredients. Using canned sea coconut makes preparing this dessert an easy task.
Recipe Source – adapted from At Home With Amy Beh 2 [modified]
Ingredients
[serve 7-8]
1 whole Buddha’s fruit [Loh Han Guo] – rinsed and lightly cracked
8 red dates – rinsed, seeded and slit
30 gm dried longan flesh – rinsed
1500 ml water
1 canned sea coconut [net weight 230 gm] – omit the syrup if the soup is already sweet
[serve 7-8]
1 whole Buddha’s fruit [Loh Han Guo] – rinsed and lightly cracked
8 red dates – rinsed, seeded and slit
30 gm dried longan flesh – rinsed
1500 ml water
1 canned sea coconut [net weight 230 gm] – omit the syrup if the soup is already sweet
- Put loh han guo, red dates and water in a pot. Bring to boil and simmer for 10-15 minutes.
- Add in dried longan flesh and continue to simmer for 15 minutes.
- Add in sea coconut flesh. Taste to adjust. If it is not sweet enough, add in some of the syrup otherwise omit it.
- Serve dessert hot, warm or chilled.
If using fresh sea coconut – remove the hard shells, tear off the membrane and cut into thin slices. Add rock sugar to taste.
I'm submitting this post to the Best Recipes for Everyone May 2015 Event (Theme: My Favourite Desserts) organized by Fion of Xuanhom's Mom and co-hosted by Aunty Young
I submitting this post to Cook Your Books Event #23 [May 2015] hosted by Joyce of Kitchen Flavours
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