Sweet Rice Cakes Stuffed with Yellow Beans
Submitted by isabeau
Thai sweet rice cakes (khanom tom) stuffed with yellow mung beans, coated in coconut and sesame sugar. Chewy, sweet-savory dumplings with a unique double-coating finish.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
55 minCOOK
5 minREADY
60 minThese are khanom tom in Thai tradition: small, chewy rice flour dumplings filled with sweet yellow mung beans, boiled, then double-coated in shredded coconut and sesame-sugar. They’re a classic Thai dessert and a textural masterpiece, with the slightly chewy rice exterior contrasting against the soft bean filling and the crunchy sesame coating.
The rice flour dough is the trickiest part. Knead it until it reaches “the consistency of pie crust” as the directions describe: smooth, pliable, just slightly tacky. Add water in small splashes if it feels dry, or extra flour by the tablespoon if it’s too sticky. Glutinous (sticky) rice flour produces a chewier dumpling than regular rice flour, which is what you want.
The boiling step is fast. Four or five minutes is enough, and the dumplings tell you they’re ready by floating to the surface. Pull them with a slotted spoon the moment they bob up. Overboiled rice cakes turn gummy.
The double-coating sequence (coconut first while hot, sesame-sugar last) is what creates the dish’s signature finish. The hot exterior steams the coconut-salt slightly so it sticks, and the sesame-sugar coats over top for that final sweet crunch.
Serve hot for the best texture, but they keep in the fridge for 2 to 3 days.
Chef Tips
- Toast the sesame seeds until they smell nutty, not just lightly browned. Untoasted seeds taste raw.
- Cook mung beans until completely tender. Undercooked beans stay grainy and won’t smash into a smooth filling.
- Use unsweetened desiccated coconut for the savory coating. Sweetened coconut tips the balance too far.
- Work in batches. The hot coating step needs to happen immediately after boiling, so don’t pre-shape too many dumplings ahead.
Variations
- Sweeten the mung bean filling with palm sugar for a more authentic Thai flavor.
- Use black sesame seeds instead of white for visual contrast.
- Add a few drops of pandan extract to the dough for the classic green color and floral aroma.
Ingredients
Directions
Simmer the mung beans in 1 cup cold water for 20 minutes.
Drain and set aside.
Mix the coconut with the salt, sprinkle evenly on a plate and set aside.
In a small pot, over low heat, toast the sesame seeds until light brown.
Mix the seeds into the sugar evenly spread on the dish and set In a large bowl, mix the rice flour with ½ cup water and knead into a dough the consistency of pie crust. Mold into 1½ inch balls, then flatten with the palm of your hand to form patties ⅛ inch thick and 2 inch wide. Fill a large bowl half full with water and bring to a boil. Cook the rice cakes for 4 to 5 minutes or until they start to float. While still hot, coat each side of the cakes with the coconut-salt mixture. Place ¼ to ½ teaspoons of the mung beans into the centre of each cake. Fold the edges over and pinch closed to form a half circle. Dip each into the sesame seed-sugar mixture, coating both sides well. Serve hot or cold. They will keep in the refrigerator for 2 to 3 days.
Comments




Things don’t “simmer” in cold water.