The Mercury News

Shanghai Steamed Rice Cake

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Serves 8

INGREDIENT­S

1 cup rice flour

¼ cup glutinous rice flour

¼ cup water

½ cup date sugar or ¼ cup cane sugar

Nuts and dried fruits, like walnuts, pumpkin seeds, dates, cranberrie­s or apricots

DIRECTIONS

Place both the rice flour and glutinous rice flour in a large mixing bowl. Gradually add water to the bowl and start mixing in a circular motion with your fingers to blend until the mixture holds together and can be shaped when you press it.

Transfer the moist flour to a sieve and sift it, shaking the sieve, into a fine moist powder. Take your time and fight the urge to force the flour through the sieve. It should be fluffy.

Return the sifted flour to the bowl and add sugar. Mix until fully incorporat­ed.

Prepare an 8-inch diameter bamboo steamer: Cut two 8-inch rounds of parchment paper.

Fit one into the bottom of the steamer. Place a steaming rack in the center of a large pot and add water until it reaches ¾ of the rack height. Bring water to a boil. Pour the rice flour-sugar mixture into the bamboo steamer, evenly spreading it until it’s packed into the steamer. Smooth and flatten the top of the cake using a spatula or a knife. Slice the cake into eight even portions; this helps the cake steam into individual slices, rather than one whole cake. Decorate the top of the cake with dried fruits and nuts. Cover the top with the second round of parchment paper.

Cover with lid and steam for 20 minutes on high, then turn down to simmer for 5 minutes. Remove from steamer and serve.

— Kathy Fang, chef and owner of Fang restaurant, San Francisco

 ?? KATHY FONG ?? Shanghai steamed rice cake, or song gai, has a soft texture and is commonly eaten during Lunar New Year.
KATHY FONG Shanghai steamed rice cake, or song gai, has a soft texture and is commonly eaten during Lunar New Year.

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