Iconic Dishes: Love Letters and Other Sweet Snacks for Your Sweetheart (2024)

Features 2 minutes 14 February 2024

Love is in the air this Valentine’s Day, and what better way to a loved one’s heart than to offer and share sweet treats.

desserts History Local Malaysia sweet

Flowers and chocolates are de rigeur as gifts, but if you are lucky enough to be in Malaysia during this time of the year, why not take advantage of the various local sweets and snacks as romantic offerings.

Iconic Dishes: Love Letters and Other Sweet Snacks for Your Sweetheart (1)

Kuih Kapit or "Love Letters"

Kuih Kapit (Love Letters)

Kuih Kapit is also known by its more alluring name — “Love Letters”. The Malaccan-Nyonyas called these wafer-thin, crisp crepes “KuehBelanda” or “Dutch Cake”, pointing to its Dutch origins (Dutch: kniepertie), and quite likely introduced by Indonesian emigrants.

A well-madeKuih Kapit is light, crisp, and aromatic from being baked over open flames. It has a rich flavour redolent of the sugar, eggs, and coconut milk that are used in its batter.

Kapit” is the Malay word for “clamp” — a reference to the way the crêpes were made by pouring liquid batter onto one of a pair of patterned disc-shaped moulds, which are then clamped together before being placed over charcoal embers on an open brazier to bake.

Older Peranakans dubbed the pair of disc-shaped moulds “Baba” and “Nyonya”. Clamping them tightly together symbolises the union of the male and female entities, resulting in a sweet and delightful end-product — the Kuih Kapit itself.

On the other hand,Malaccan-Nyonyas prefer their Kuih Kapit shaped into rolls, resembling the Portuguese Barquilhos and Dutch Rolletjes, whereas Penang-Nyonyas prefer theirs folded twice over into triangles.

Whichever shape they take, these are truly delicious treats. What makes better Valentine’s Day gifts than some sweet “love letters”?

Iconic Dishes: Love Letters and Other Sweet Snacks for Your Sweetheart (2)

Sago Gula Melaka

Sago Gula Melaka

For many Malaysians, nothing beats Sago Gula Melaka as a sweet finalé to a romantic dinner. This popular Nyonya-Malay dessert consists of a sago pearl pudding, slathered with creamy coconut milk, and drizzled with thick, dark gula melaka (palm sugar).

Sago palm originated in a geographical area extending from the Moluccas islands to New Guinea. In parts of Southeast Asia, it became an essential source of carbohydrates. From here,British East India Company seaman brought sago back to their homeland as early as the 18th century. The British took to it so much, sago pudding (together with its tapioca counterpart) even became a school lunch staple during the baby boomer years.

A fun fact:Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management (published in 1861) included a sweet “Hasty Pudding” where sago was cooked with milk and sugar, and then served with cream and treacle, which echoed the sago-coconut-milk-gula-melaka dessert that we know in Malaysia today.

British-style sago pudding was introduced to British Malaya in the early 20th-century, where Hainanese chefs working under their colonial masters came up with a tropical version, substituting dairy milk with readily available fresh coconut milk, and treacle with gula melaka. The result was the much-loved dessert we are familiar with today.

Iconic Dishes: Love Letters and Other Sweet Snacks for Your Sweetheart (3)

Pineapple Tarts is various forms

Pineapple Tarts

Very few pastries are as alluring as meticulously-crafted Pineapple Tarts with buttery pastry and sweet, moist pineapple jam centres.

The Portuguese introduced the art of baking to the Malaccans during their 130-year rule, but modern-day Pineapple Tarts use short-crust pastry, more characteristic of Dutch baking. The Dutch not only supplanted the Portuguese in Malacca from 1641, but also dominated the territories that were to become Indonesia for four centuries, significantly influencing the culinary arts in the whole region.

Different regional and cultural variances of pineapple tarts can be found throughout Malaysia: traditionally, Malaccan-Nyonya make open-faced tarts with pineapple jam centres, decorated with latticed pastry strips on top. The Malaccan-Portuguese Eurasians similarly favour open-faced tarts, but topped theirs with small, three-pointed pastry stars to represent the Holy Trinity of their Catholic faith.

There are also the closed Pineapple Tarts that take on the shape of mini-pillow rolls, whilst others are painstakingly-shaped to resemble mini-pineapples.

Iconic Dishes: Love Letters and Other Sweet Snacks for Your Sweetheart (4)

Kuih Ee is the Nyonya take on Chinese Tang Yuan

Kuih Ee (Glutinous Rice Balls in Syrup)

Kuih Ee is the Nyonya take on the ChineseTang Yuan: chewy, glutinous rice balls served during auspicious occasions. The origins of Tang Yuan itself stretched all the way back at least a millennia to Tang Dynasty China. During a traditional Baba-Nyonya wedding ceremony today, the bride and bridegroom will tenderly feed each other glutinous rice balls as part of a ritual, symbolising their union in love.

Kuih Ee
is made from glutinous rice flour, hand-shaped into marble-sized little balls which are then gently boiled. The cooked KuehEe are then served in a sweet broth, lightly scented with pandan.Traditionally, Kueh Ee were either white (symbolising purity) or tinted red (signifying happiness), but modern-day renditions can come in all colours. The Chinese, on the other hand, serveTang Yuan in a sweet ginger broth.

Where to Get Some of These Sweet Snacks in Malaysia:





Penang Kuih Kapit at 48-B, Lorong Abu Siti, George Town, Penang

Iconic Dishes: Love Letters and Other Sweet Snacks for Your Sweetheart (5)

Written by Peter Yeoh

Peter Yeoh is a Penang-based food writer who contributes frequently to local and international publications. A sixth-generation Penangite, Peter relishes in discovering unknown, off-the-beaten-track food places, besides delving into the history and origins of dishes.

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Iconic Dishes: Love Letters and Other Sweet Snacks for Your Sweetheart (2024)

FAQs

What are Chinese love letters snack? ›

Love Letter

These pastries are made by pouring a thin layer of batter on an iron mold and baked over charcoal. It is then quickly taken off the heat and rolled up into a cylindrical shape. Also known as 'Kuih Kapit,' these delicate pastries are thought to be inspired by the traditional Dutch waffles.

How do you make a love letter extra special? ›

Here are five ways to make a letter a L-O-V-E letter.
  1. ONE: Create a special greeting. ...
  2. TWO: Get specific about your lover's qualities. ...
  3. THREE: Dive into your relationship. ...
  4. FOUR: Share a favorite memory in your love letter. ...
  5. FIVE: Express a hope.
Feb 9, 2022

Why are they called love letters? ›

The tale about why these treats were called “love letters” seemed to harken back to days when village girls were not allowed to meet with boys their own age without chaperons in the past, so they would roll secret love letters into wafer biscuits and pass them on.

How can I spice up my love letter? ›

Special Ways to Spice Up Your Letters to Loved Ones
  1. Handwrite your letter instead of typing it out. ...
  2. Get creative with the paper you use. ...
  3. Use stamps and other embellishments to make your letter stand out. ...
  4. Tell them why you love them or share a special memory that reminds you of them.
Mar 10, 2023

What does love letter snack mean? ›

Love Letter

Back in the day, these romantic pastries were often used by lovers to relay messages of affection and the consumption of the pastry would mean that the message is taken to heart. For individuals familiar with how love letter pastries are made, they would say that it's a labor of love.

What are love tokens in Chinese culture? ›

China has had love tokens since ancient times. Love tokens are gifts young couples give each other, to show their affections towards each other. Chinese culture values the meaning意(yì)义(yì) of the love tokens rather than the material objects.

What are Chinese red envelopes for? ›

At Lunar New Year, it's tradition to give the gift of a bright, beautiful red envelope (known as 紅包, hóngbāo) to your friends and family. But not just any old envelope. These are filled with money - and symbolize good wishes and luck for the new year ahead.

Why is kuih Kapit called love letters? ›

The story about why these treats are called “Chinese Love Letters” seemed to harken back to days when Peranakan girls were not allowed to meet boys their own age without chaperons, but some intrepid maiden inserted little slivers of notes into the folded kuih kapek and toss them over the wall for the heart-throb next ...

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