Pandan Chiffon Cake

Pandan Chiffon Cake

Pandan chiffon cake is one of my comfort foods from Malaysia. The fragrance of pandan, the softness of the cake, the sweetness of the coconut milk are all very much a part of Malaysia to me. There’s something wonderful about taking a bite of cake and having all these flavors and textures combine and then just as you’re savoring it, you’re left with only the memory of the light fragrant delight until the next bite, and the next.

First Failures

As a student in Hawaii, I missed pandan chiffon cake so much that I asked for a recipe and then proceeded to bake it with no experience and a very vague recipe. Of course, it didn’t turn out. My failures with chiffons started with that first pandan chiffon cake.

When I was new to baking, I would look at recipes for chiffon cakes and sponge cakes and attempt them without any real understanding of what made them work. All my early attempts at both these cakes were dismal failures. They would rise really tall in the oven and then I’d get all excited. But when I opened the oven, they would fall flat!

I avoided making these cakes for a long time after that. As a matter of fact, I still have some aversion to making sponge cakes to this day (weird huh?). But after reading Beranbaum’s Cake Bible and trying out the orange chiffon cake from that book, I’ve had great success and have been more confident of baking chiffon cakes since.

Chiffon Cake Tricks

The secret to chiffon cakes, as it turns out, is that they need a lot of volume. You have to make sure you beat the egg whites really well! Also, when you separate your egg yolks from the whites, be very sure that there is not even one bit of yolk in the whites. If that happens, your whites will not whip up to stiff peaks.

Whipped Egg Whites

Whipped Egg Whites

Some of the other tricks I learnt about baking chiffon cakes come from different books and magazines:

  • From America’s Test Kitchen, I learnt that it’s better to overbeat the whites than to underbeat. Really stiff egg whites will give chiffon cakes better volume.
  • From Beranbaum, I learnt that using more whites than yolks help with the structure of the cake.
  • I also learnt that inverting the cake as soon as it’s done and leaving it to cool for several hours in that position helps the cake to hold its shape.
  • From my cooking forums, I learnt that you must not grease your chiffon cake pan (and yes, you need a chiffon cake pan, don’t ask me how I know) so that the cake will not fall.

I hope that all that I’ve learnt will help you if you’re new to baking chiffon cakes.

Try It Out

I adapted this recipe from Baking Mum and she has told me that she has another recipe that is better but I haven’t had a chance to try that other one out so I will post on this one first. I did double her recipe as my chiffon cake pan is really large (plus it’s so good that even doubled, my family wolfed it down in no time at all).

If you have never used pandan (screwpine leaves), you have to give it a try. The leaves don’t really taste like much but the leaves impart a wonderful aroma and fragrance to whatever you cook or bake. The leaves are also used as food coloring (though the paste I use is artificially colored as pandan leaves will not turn that bright a green) in a lot of desserts in Malaysia.

Fresh pandan juice is normally the better choice for any application but being that it’s so hard to get that here, I chose to use pandan paste instead. It’s quite easy to find at most Asian grocery stores (and cheap to boot!).

Pandan Chiffon Cake

Ingredients
150g bleached all-purpose flour
2 tsp baking powder
150 ml coconut cream/milk
8 egg yolks
10 egg white
200g castor sugar, separated
3 Tbsp corn oil (or vegetable oil)
1 tsp vanilla essence
a pinch of salt
1 tsp cream of tartar
1 tsp pandan paste

Method
1. Preheat oven to 350 F (175 C).
2. Sift flour and baking powder.
3. In your mixer, cream egg yolks and 140g sugar until it is creamy and thick.

IMG_7110

4. Add in sifted flour and baking powder, vanilla essence, coconut milk, corn oil, and pandan paste into the egg yolk mixture. Mix well.
5. In another clean dry bowl, whisk egg whites (start on slow speed until foamy then increase speed to medium). When egg whites are whisked to soft peaks, add the remaining 60g sugar, cream of tartar and a pinch of salt. Continue to whisk until stiff peaks form.
6. Fold the egg whites into the flour mixture. Start by adding 1/3 egg whites into flour mixture and using a balloon whisk, incorporate it into mixture to lighten the mixture. Mix the remaining 2/3 egg whites in taking care to fold gently to keep volume. I find that using a balloon whisk to incorporate in a “sweep and knock out and turn bowl, repeat” method works best. (Does that make sense? I should’ve taken a video…next time ok?)
7. Once incorporated, (don’t worry if there are a few streaks of white left) pour into the chiffon cake pan and bake 45-65 mins, or until an inserted cake tester comes out clean.
8. When cake is baked, invert it immediately and cool down for 2-3 hours (I normally have a bottle of wine that I use as my holding “tool” for the inverted pan). Once cooled, use a knife to cut around the sides and bottom before removing.

Pandan Chiffon Cake

Pandan Chiffon Cake

Enjoy!

Cheers, Annie

41 thoughts on “Pandan Chiffon Cake”

  1. >Look yummy… I am eager to see your recipe at ur blogspot. This is the first pandan chiffon cake that I have made in the past years that tastes really so good. It was perfect on the first try. Excellent. This is a die must try recipe. I am looking for a recipe that uses evaporated milk instead of coconut milk healthier baking. Anyone have such a recipe. My mummy loves to eat pandan chiffon cake and my whole family loves it. Thanks for a lovely share.

  2. >Hi! My Dad loves pandan cake, as do I. Do you know what icing would go well with it? I want to ice it just so it'll take a nice photograph for his birthday :p

    Thanks~

    Jasmine

  3. >@Anonymous – sorry, I don't have enough information to answer that. Are you still having that issue?

    @Alima – you're very welcome! Thanks for the kind words.

    @Jasmine – I suppose a light cream frosting would do. Post a pic when you're done!

  4. >Hihi!

    Hope this is not a silly qn. How do I get pandan juice from pandan leaves? Pound it and squeeze out the juice?

    Es

    1. My grandma used to grind the leaves in mortar and pestle with a little bit of water until it became a paste then add more water to loosen it and sieve the pandan juice out using a Muslim cloth

  5. Thanks for sharing your pandan recipe,i’ve love the scent of pandan and i really love to try your recipe.How could i incorporate the pandan juice in your recipe,i could not find pandan paste here in my area, we only have here pandan essence and lots of pandan leaves.thanks my mom really like me try this ……

    1. Meg,

      No, you can’t use a bundt pan. The bundt pan is non-stick and the chiffon needs a non-stick surface to climb up. Use a chiffon or angel cake pan.

  6. Hi!

    We don’t really have pandan paste here, but we have a lot of the leaves. How much juice would I have to make for it to equivalent 1tsp pandan paste? Also, how many actual leaves and around how much water should i add when pureeing the leaves?

  7. Dear Annie,
    I had tried your pandan chiffon cake recipe. It’s the first time I made the cake..it worked well..delicious, so moist and easy to make. I used juice of natural “daun suji” and “daun pandan” to substitute the pandan paste..mix with the other liquid but totally the same liquid volume. Thanks

  8. Hi Annie,

    Thank you for the recipe. I have made this cake many times, and this recipe has never failed me. Thank you for sharing.

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