Kanom is a Thai word referencing snacks, although if you tell someone you love kanom Thai they will understand you to mean Thai sweets. Kluay or gluay, depending on your transliteration, means banana. Hence kanom kluay is a sweet made with banana and, furthermore, one that is fast and easy to throw together at home.
One of the greatest things about Thailand is the proliferation of dairy free desserts, but every now and again, for reasons unknown, a sugar recess manifests. Kanom kluay is candy middle ground, a bridge between my favourite highly-sugared Thai sweets and snacks that a diet devotee would deem acceptable (seeds? Come on).
In Thailand nam wa bananas, probably the most prolifically grown banana in the country, would be the fruit of choice. Due to availability outside of Thailand my recipe uses typical European supermarket Cavendish bananas.
📖 Recipe
Kanom Kluay ขนมกล้วย (Thai steamed banana cake)
Equipment
- steamer
Ingredients
- 1 ripe banana Cavendish
- 80 millilitres coconut cream ⅓ cup
- 30 grams granulated sugar 2 tablespoons
- 20 grams rice flour 2 tablespoons
- 8 grams tapioca starch 1 tablespoon
- ¼ teaspoon fine salt
- 3 tablespoons fresh shredded coconut
Instructions
- Bring a steaming apparatus to the boil. Place steaming bowls inside to preheat for 5-10 minutes.
- Mash the banana to a pulp in a medium sized bowl. Add the coconut cream, sugar, rice flour, tapioca starch, and salt. Mix until sugar is dissolved and all ingredients are uniformly combined into a smooth batter.
- Alternatively use a blender to liquidise all of the ingredients mentioned in the previous step.
- Remove the lid from your steamer and use a tea towel to blot out any water that has collected in the bottom of the bowls. Add about 1 tablespoon of batter to each. Cover the steamer and steam for 15-20 minutes.
- When the kanom are finished steaming, either sprinkle the coconut over them and serve as is or spoon them out of the bowl into the coconut and roll to coat.