Coconut-Lemongrass Tapioca With Caramelized Citrus
Published Dec. 15, 2021

- Total Time
- 50 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½teaspoon kosher salt (Diamond Crystal)
- 1cup/190 grams small pearl tapioca
- 2(13½-ounce) cans full-fat coconut milk
- 1stalk lemongrass (about 2¼ ounces), tough outer part discarded, roughly chopped and smashed
- 1(1-inch) piece ginger, scrubbed and thinly sliced (14 grams)
- ¼cup maple syrup, plus more for drizzling
- 1lime
- 3½pounds/1½ kilograms mixed citrus fruits, such as oranges, blood oranges, tangerines and pink grapefruit
- ¾cup/138 grams granulated sugar
- ¼cup crushed pistachios (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
In a small pot, bring 3 cups of water to a boil and add ¼ teaspoon of salt. Add the tapioca pearls and simmer gently over medium-low heat, stirring frequently until the tapioca is softened and almost all the way translucent, 12 minutes.
- Step 2
Reduce the heat to low, cover the pot and allow the tapioca to steam and cook through completely, 4 minutes. Transfer to a bowl, cover it and refrigerate until ready to serve. You can prepare the tapioca up to 3 days in advance and store it in the refrigerator.
- Step 3
Wash out the pot and pour in the coconut milk. Add the lemongrass, the ginger and 1 tablespoon maple syrup. Bring up to a simmer over medium heat. Remove from heat and zest the lime into the milk. Allow the infused milk to steep while you prepare the fruit and the caramel.
- Step 4
Remove the tops and bottoms of the citrus by cutting the ends with a sharp knife so each fruit sits flat on your work surface. Cut the citrus peels off into strips, running your knife down the length of the fruit and carefully removing the white pith as you slice. Cut each fruit crosswise into ½-inch-thick rounds and remove any visible seeds.
- Step 5
Make a caramel: Heat a large (12-inch) skillet over medium. Add the sugar and cook, stirring frequently, until the sugar melts and forms a light golden syrup, 5 to 7 minutes. Cook the syrup until deep golden brown, about 2 minutes more, lowering the heat slightly if necessary to avoid scorching. Stir in the remaining 3 tablespoons maple syrup, squeeze in the juice of the lime and add remaining ¼ teaspoon of salt. Remove from heat and carefully add the fruit, a couple of pieces at a time, swirling the pan to coat the pieces in syrup. The hot syrup may bubble and splatter, so be careful here. If the caramel forms hard clumps around the citrus slices, return the skillet to heat over medium-low and continue to cook, swirling the caramel around the citrus pieces, until any hard clumps dissolve, 2 minutes.
- Step 6
Using a fine mesh sieve, strain the coconut milk into a medium bowl, pressing down on the aromatics in the sieve before discarding.
- Step 7
To serve, scoop a few spoonfuls of the tapioca into shallow bowls. Ladle the infused coconut milk over the top, add several slices of citrus and spoon in some of the caramel glaze. Drizzle with some maple syrup and garnish with the crushed pistachio, if using.
Private Notes
Comments
I agree with Lovett Smith. Would have been better making tapioca pudding with of the infused milk and then spooning the caramelized citrus over. Also impossible to clean the glop of a tapioca mess.
Made this for Christmas dinner as an exotic dessert. Was "interesting" and relatively tasty but way too much effort for the result. (A Crème brûlée cheesecake would have given twice the impact for half the effort.) The tapioca was simply a tasteless gelatinous blob--pretty similar to glue or cornstarch. But glad I tried it.
I'm not familiar with cooking tapioca so after reading a few recipes I decided to use large pearl tapioca. I soaked them for a few hours (vs overnight as the package indicated) and then followed the recipe which produced large, silky tapioca pearls. I infused the milk earlier so I could serve the pearls immediately after cooking them and it turned out beautifully. Don't refrigerate the pearls or they'll get hard and clumpy. Beautiful and elegant dessert that feels extra special.
Had to leave my first comment because I really think this recipe is so underrated by the other comments. It’s not too sweet (the ultimate compliment from an Asian person) and is reminiscent of mango sago in texture. It is definitely a lot of effort if, like me, you’re not used to multi-tasking or making caramel. But the results are very delicious. I would actually double the aromatics in the coconut milk. The pistachios are crucial for texture. The entire thing was devoured and one of my friends helped himself to 4 servings!
Idk why this didn’t work for me - the lemongrass was too overwhelming in the coconut milk and the grapefruit didn’t caramélise well :( ah well onto the next
I’ve made this twice now and it is so special. My kitchen is a mess and it took over two hours, but worth it all for the flavor, beauty and texture of this dish. My guests were floored. This works for me as a Sunday afternoon treat, not a dessert; I could never handle making a meal to go with it because of the time, space and attention required.
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