Here's something you don't see every day on an American menu: Kueh Lapis, an eggy, Malay/Indonesian layer cake that's so time-consuming to make that it's hard to find in the U.S.
Think of it as the red-velvet cake equivalent of Southeast Asia -- it's a signature dessert and it's a pity you don't see it more often in American restaurants and bakeries.
Tonight, the Hubbs and I lucked out at a pre-theater dinner, however -- the moment we saw kueh lapis on the menu at Bali Nusa Indah in Midtown Manhattan, we knew we had to order it. (Note: Other items on the menu were a little disappointing -- the nasi goreng (fried rice), for example, was so bland it brought to mind the less-than-successful first stabs at fried rice my class-mates made in high school home economics classes way back when.)
The kueh lapis, however, was perfectly decent -- even if it was dressed up for Americans with a scoop of ice-cream and a layer of palm sugar sauce (better known as gula melaka in Malaysia/Singapore).
In Asia, the cake is thinly sliced, sometimes toasted lightly, and eaten on its own. After all, when you consider how tedious the process is, why let other trimmings get in the way of the star of the show? The baking process involves spreading a thin layer of batter -- made with condensed milk, golden syrup and a medley of spices such as cloves, cinnamon and cardamom -- in the pan, baking it for 10 minutes, taking it out of the oven, spreading another layer of batter and ... you get the picture.
That could explain why you don't see kueh lapis in restaurants in the U.S. more often. But hey, considering the fact that some kueh lapis recipes call for 25 egg yolks, that may not be an entirely bad thing.
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