Glutinous rice, also called sticky rice, or mochi rice, is a type of short-grained Asian rice that is especially sticky when cooked. Glutinous rice does not contain dietary gluten and thus should be safe for gluten-free diets. It is called glutinous in the sense of being glue-like or sticky and not in the sense of containing gluten.
Glutinous rice can be used either milled or unmilled (that is, with the bran removed or not removed). Milled rice is white in colour, whereas the bran can give unmilled glutinous rice a purple or black colour. Both black and white glutinous rice can be cooked as grains or ground into flour and cooked as a paste.
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- Stir together the evaporated milk, egg, oil and sugar in a mixing bowl. Sift in glutinous rice flour and baking powder and blend thoroughly.
- Divide half of the rice batter into 8-10 paper muffin liners, spoon in some poppy fix and add in a few of raisins. Finally cover with the rest of rice batter. Sprinkle with some poppy seeds.
- Bake in a preheated 190C/375F oven for about 30 minutes. Take out the muffins and brush the tops with a thin layer of oil. Return to the oven and continue to bake for another 10 minutes.
wow...muffins from glutinous rice flour! I have to try this. I met my friend last week and she couldn't enjoy my desserts cos they were made from wheat flour which she can't take cos of the gluten. I told her I will make something non-gluten that she can eat. Hope to try this soon. Thanks for sharing. Love all the photos...beautiful photography.
ReplyDeleteOh I never knew we could use sticky rice flour for baking. Must try!!
ReplyDeletenever would have thought of this! this is so creative, Angie!
ReplyDeleteInteresting! You always come up with the most unique, amazing combinations. I bet they taste really good. Your photos are so sharp!! Very well taken!
ReplyDeleteI have never had this, but looks so so healthy and delcious, i love that there is such a lot of seasame inside them.
ReplyDeleteHappy Newyear.
Very delicious, looks fantastic.
ReplyDeleteVery pretty.. they looks wonderful.
ReplyDeleteThose muffins look wonderful - I love the yummy poppy center!
ReplyDeleteThe poppy seed topping and glutinous rice filling look delicious!
ReplyDeleteYummy and delicious......
ReplyDeleteExcellent click..Looks sooo yummy!!!
ReplyDeleteWow muffins frm glutinous rice! this is a first for me.....must try..adding to my ever long list but its a must try.And beautiful too!:)
ReplyDeleteNener had these muffins,lovely ingredients,looks yummmmmmm
ReplyDeleteA thumb up for your brilliant idea.
ReplyDeleteton gâteau doit être délicieux bravo
ReplyDeletebonne journée
These look so beautiful, and the idea is very original. I hope you made me one!
ReplyDeleteThis is new to me..Looks splendid..:-)
ReplyDeleteThose muffins look absolutely fabulous!!! I love poppy seeds.
ReplyDeletethe texture of these looks really interesting (and yummy)
ReplyDeleteSounds great, but I have no idea what poppy fix is. I need to see if I can get glutinous rice around here, you'd be surprised what I can't find.
ReplyDeleteyummy yummy
ReplyDeleteI want my share mommy!
looks gorgeous.
Beautiful and elegant muffins..
ReplyDeletewow, the texture looks amazing! I have to try this!
ReplyDeleteWhat a cool center...so original and so tasty. And I love the tops of the muffins, as well!
ReplyDeleteNow that one opened muffin looks like a happy face, so these must be great! :D
ReplyDeleteYour food as I say is amazing, and the close ups are great!
Those look wonderful! We used rice flour for baking in Colombia and love it.
ReplyDeleteThese look great! But what is poppy fix? Could I make it with poppy seeds and sugar?
ReplyDeleteThe poppy center looks fantastic, how ingenious!
ReplyDeleteYour idea is simply divine. Do you know if the muffin hardens the next day or once it is cooled? I'd appreciate your feedback
ReplyDeleteI've never eaten anything like these Angie. They look so good! I would love to try them! I still haven't found poppy seeds anywhere.
ReplyDeletegotta have one of those...
ReplyDeleteThis is intriguing! I have never heard of glutinous rice muffin. Sound yummy!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful and inventive, I love it!
ReplyDeleteThese are perfect for a lazy afternoon tea ! So nice and fragrant
ReplyDeleteThank you, guys, for all your feedbacks and encouragement. :-))
ReplyDelete@ Joy, Bob: To make the poppy filling, bring 150ml milk to a boil, remove and stir in honey (4 tbsp), almond meal (50g) and ground poppy seeds (125g), and 1 large egg. If it's too runny, stir 1-2 tbsp of butter or margarine. Flavour the mixture with vanilla or almond extract if desired.
@ Tuty: The muffins taste the best when they are warm, but still very good even they are cold. They will become slightly hard and chewy the next day. That's part of the reason I just baked 10 muffins each time.
Thanks so much for sharing this bake version glutinous recipe! This is the very first time I came across something like this. Well done, Angie!
ReplyDeleteInteresting to use glutinous rice! I am sure all the gluten intolerants must be jumping for joy with this recipe as it looks delicious!!
ReplyDeleteWow, creative!
ReplyDeleteMade muffins with glutinous rice flour. I haven't tried before. They look moist and yummy!
I would have never thought to make something like this. They look great, especially with the poppy seeds! Think I could make them lemon-flavored?
ReplyDeleteOh wow, this looks delicious! I'll have to try this soon!
ReplyDeleteThis is the first time I read of glutinous rice muffins. It looks great. I will try it one day :) Thanks Angie for sharing another wonderful recipe :)
ReplyDeleteSuch an interesting combination of flavours in this muffin. I don't think I've ever come across anything like this before.
ReplyDeleteThankyou for the Poppy Mix recipe. It is not too hard to try!
ReplyDeleteGlutinous rice?! YAY! I love that! I actually love glutinous rice included into baked goods to have that dense, chewy texture...yum!
ReplyDeleteI have never tried using glutinous rice before. The muffins look delicious and I'd love to have one with my coffee right now.
ReplyDeleteThis is something unusual. So need to grind the glutinous rice to make into powder? Will need to try it out one day.
ReplyDeleteWOW! Very creative using glutinous rice. Already bookmarked this. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteI noticed your blog via The full-timed housefly. You have a wonderful blog, I never know to use glutinuus rice flour to make muffin, really amazing !! I will book mark this and follow u..
ReplyDeleteJust a fabulous post for the celiac kid! thank you soooo much!!!
ReplyDeleteAngie, the muffins look so yummy!! Hey, since not much vigorous is involved in making muffins ... I'm wondering about the texture of these ... Not chewy, right? Should be fluffy like most other muffins, right?
ReplyDeletePei-Lin
This is a very special muffin!!! I do have chinese glutinous rice flour at home I think, can i use that?
ReplyDeleteAngie, I have to compliment you on the really nice photos of the poppy seed muffinsThe muffins really popped out on my screen. Nice.
ReplyDeleteThe muffins look delicious. I especially like the idea of the raisins being a filling. Thanks for explaining glutinous rice too-that was helpful.
interesting and delicious combination! very creative! :)
ReplyDelete@ Dodol & Mochi: It's slightly chewy when it's warm and even more chewy when it's turned cold.
ReplyDelete@ Cheah: I bought the glutinous rice flour from the Asian store here in Cologne.
@ Janet: I believe so. As I got mine from the local Asian store. They shall be the same.
Again, THANKS!
Muffins look fabulous! Love the second pic!
ReplyDeleteCake looks Fantastic.I can't take my eye's from picture
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year! I love glutinous rice but this is one of the very few I've seen that has a texture closer to wheat baked goods rather than the steamed kind. Fantastic!
ReplyDeletei have to try this....am in love with poppy seeds at the moment, and these look so...sticky. and delicious.
ReplyDeletethanks for stopping by my blog. i really enjoy yours!
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