Welcome to The Storied Recipe Podcast, a podcast about food, culture, and love. This recipe for Indonesian Butter Cookies with Pandan came from my podcast guest, M Aimee. Make sure you listen to her episode Christmas in Indonesia while you make these Pandan Cookies - Kue Semprit Keju (Cheese Spritzen Cookies)!
The ingredients for these Pandan Cookies from Indonesia (similar to a Filipino cookie named) could come straight from a basket in Chopped! An Indonesian adaptation of the classic Dutch cookie recipe, Spritz cookies, these combine tapioca starch, gouda cheese, coconut milk, and pandan leaves!
However, I knew I could trust my podcast guest, M. Aimee because she gave us one of the Top 5 recipes ever shared on The Storied Recipe: Mie Goreng, a gorgeous dish of sweet Indonesian noodles with shrimp, chicken, and lots of Asian greens. And M did not disappoint! As she says, these cookies are not "boringly sweet", but you will be going back for another bite... and another!
Jump to:
- Look, Flavor, and Texture
- M's Memories of Making Indonesian Cookies for Christmas
- Listen to M's Episode
- Follow The Storied Recipe in Your Favorite Player
- Ingredients & Substitutions
- What is Pandan - Variations and Substitutions?
- Instructions
- Other Pandan Cookies from Southeast Asia
- Equipment
- Storage
- More Christmas Around the World Episodes
- More Christmas Desserts Around the World
- Recipe
Look, Flavor, and Texture
Look:
- These are such fun and festive cookies because you'll use a piping bag or cookie press to shape them, just like their predecessors, Spritz cookies.
- You can decorate with jeweled colored dried fruits, chocolate chips, desiccated coconut, or cheese sprinkles.
- These will not have the green color of other Pandan cookies if you use the method with fresh pandan leaves or the small amount of Pandan powder called for in the recipe.
Flavor:
- Primarily of butter, yay!
- You'll get salt too, as M says salt and sweet is a popular combination in Southeast Asian cuisine.
- Pandan flavor - more on that below.
Texture:
- These cookies are hard and crumbly, but not dry. The egg yolk gives them a lovely crumble and the butter keeps them rich.
- With each bite, you'll have a little crunch of baked cheese
M's Memories of Making Indonesian Cookies for Christmas
My maternal grandfather was an avid cookie maker during Christmas time. I remember watching him making different types of cookies for Christmas since all of his grandchildren came to visit.
It was normally very humid in the kitchen as it was rainy season in December. There were always too many people in the kitchen in my paternal grandparent's house. Sometimes the helper helped us; one of the senior helpers had been with the family for years so she knew how to do it.
We relied on our old gas oven. My job was to sit in front of the oven with a tiny stool and wait. I recall our gas oven only operated automatically with actual fire from the bottom, so to make any cookies golden brown, we had to manually hold the ignition button for the top fire to turn on for however long you needed it. It could quickly turn to disaster as it got really hot rapidly, so I had to watch carefully.
Later on, when we moved to our own house, the kitchen was more spacious and comfortable, with a window in front of the stove which helped, but my job was still the same. Watching the cookie with my tiny stool while making sure the fire did not devour it before we did.
Listen to M's Episode
Follow The Storied Recipe in Your Favorite Player
Ingredients & Substitutions
- Tapioca Starch - I tried two different kinds and ultimately had the most success from this type from Amazon
- Mild gouda - M says they use a particular type of Kraft cheese in Indonesia that is not available in North America, so she replaced it with Gouda, a Dutch cheese. Do not use pre-shredded gouda as it will contain cornstarch
- Butter - The butter flavor is prominent so choose a high quality butter.
- Sweetened condensed milk - This is what M uses. Other recipes use a combination of milk powder and granulated sugar, icing sugar (confectioners' sugar), brown sugar, gula melaka (palm sugar), jaggery, or panela. (The last 2 are versions of evaporated cane sugar.)
- Salt
- Egg yolks
- Coconut milk - full fat is best
- Pandan flavoring (see below for options)
- Decorations: Diced dried fruits, coconut flakes, chocolate chips, grated cheese. Everyone uses something a little different. I used sugared cranberries, pomegranate arils, and chopped crystallized ginger for these shots.
What is Pandan - Variations and Substitutions?
- A tropical plant popular in Southeast Asian desserts
- Pandan powder / fresh Pandan leaves / Pandan extract / Pandan paste, replace with 1 tablespoon of vanilla
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 300°F/148.8°C.
- Make crunchy gouda crisps by finely shredding cheese over baking sheet covered with parchment paper and cooking until the cheese is golden and crispy.
- Cool down and chop.
- Toast the tapioca starch. If you are using fresh pandan leaves, you can knot the leaves and toast them with the tapioca to infuse the starch. Toast until the tapioca looks malleable like sand. Cool.
- Sift tapioca starch with salt and pandan powder.
- Cream butter and sweetened condensed milk.
- Add egg yolk one at a time.
- Add the crispy cheese, then gently add the tapioca starch.
- Pipe or press the cookie dough onto a sheet lined with parchment paper.
- Decorate if desired.
- Chill.
- Bake in the middle rack of preheated oven until the middle is completely dry. Do not undercook.
Other Pandan Cookies from Southeast Asia
- Traditional crinkle cookies from the Philippines like this recipe from Manila Spoon.
Equipment
- Parchment paper
- Baking sheet
- Electric hand mixer
- Cookie press or piping bags/tips for distinctive cookie form. I recommend a large open star tip because the cheese chips need to come through.
Storage
- Refrigerate or freeze the dough, well-wrapped, up to 7 days in the refrigerator or 3 months in the freezer.
- After baking, freeze the cookies for up to 3 months; well-wrapped and in airtight freezer bags.
More Christmas Around the World Episodes
- 161 Christmas in Indonesia with M. Aimee Tan
- 160 Christmas in Bruderhof with Diana Rutherford
- 159 Christmas in Ecuador with Sofia Alarcon
- Christmas Traditions Around the World (Podcast Interviews)
- 146 Christmas in Norway with Alexandra Taylor
- 145 Christmas in South Africa with Kate Jack
- 144 Christmas in the Valley of the Kings, France
- 143 Christmas in Alicante with Mar Lozano
More Christmas Desserts Around the World
- Traditional Mincemeat Tarts 3 Ways (British Christmas Pies)
- How to Make Povitica Bread with Walnut Cinnamon Swirl
- Best Vegan Frosted Cookies (Vegan Christmas Cookies)
- Zabaglione (Zabaione): Easy Italian Custard With Eggs
- Best Old Fashioned Butter Toffee (AKA English Toffee)
- South African Peppermint Crisp Tart (with Substitution Ideas)
- Easy Christmas Truffles: Chocolate Mint Balls from Norway
- Turrón de Jijona (No Cook Spanish Soft Almond Nougat)
Recipe
Indonesian Butter Cookies with Pandan, Cheese, and Coconut
Ingredients
- 340 grams Tapioca starch
- 150 grams mild Gouda
- 200 grams good Butter
- 200 grams Condensed milk
- 1/2 teaspoon Salt
- 3 Egg yolks around 50 grams
- 3 tablespoon Coconut milk
- 1 tablespoon Pandan powder / 3 pandan leaves/ replace with 1 tablespoon of vanilla
- Decorations: diced dried fruits
Instructions
Cue Up The Recipe
- Make sure you listen to M's episode on The Storied Recipe Podcast, Christmas in Indonesia, as you make her Indonesian Butter Cookies.
Make The Recipe
- Preheat oven to 300F.
- Grate the mild gouda cheese finely over a baking tray that has been lined with parchment. Cover the area as thinly as you can to make crunchy gouda crisps.
- Put it in the oven for 10-12 minutes until the cheese is golden and crispy. Note: avoid using pre-shredded cheese as they contain cornstarch.
- Cool down, and chop them / put in food processor to make them into a small bits so it will pass through your piping tip, but large enough so we can taste the texture in the cookies. Remove the crisp that is rubbery during this process. Set aside. You can make it a day in advance.
- In a large pan over low heat, toast the tapioca starch for about 5-6 minutes moving the starch around the pan to remove moisture - this process will help the cookies to have a better texture and prolong their shelf life. If you are using fresh pandan, you can knot the leaves and toast them with the tapioca to infuse the starch. Toast until the tapioca looks malleable like sand. Cool it down before use. Sieve tapioca with salt, pandan powder.
- Cream butter and condensed milk for 7-8 minutes on low speed with the paddle attachment until they are much paler in colour.
- Add egg yolk one at a time and incorporate well into the mixture before adding the next one.
- Add the crispy cheese and stir well, then add the tapioca in several batches mixing it gently in between.
- Line a baking sheet with paper.
- Pipe the cookie dough with an (open star or any other nozzle with larger opening. You can pipe them in a shape of stars/flowers and decorate the centre with dried fruits.
- Chill in the fridge for 15 minutes to get the butter firm up a little bit.
- Preheat the oven for 300 F
- Bake in the middle rack for 15-20 minutes depending on the size of your cookies, until the middle is completely dry. Note: this is not the gooey kind of cookie, in order for you to taste the crackly cheese, the tapioca batter needs to be completely cooked
- Let it cool down and store in an airtight container. Cookies are good for at least a month.
Hannah Neeper says
Such beautiful, festive, and tasty cookies!!