Yuca sweet rice or Xôi Khoai Mì is another of my childhood favorite dishes. After
1975, my mom, I, and some of my siblings were forced out of our own house in
Saigon, We ended up residing on a small farm in Long
Thanh. However, this period time of my life was very tough and also for my
mother. Anyway, the farm stories for a city girl like me were interesting, but
today I just want to introduce this recipe with special memories. Yuca is one
of the root vegetables that are easy to grow, very fulfilling, and a friendly
meal for poor people. I met my cousin right after the communists took over
South Vietnam.
My cousin was a communist soldier, and the story that he told us about the yuca
plant was a big help to the North Vietnamese communist soldiers during the
Vietnam War. While the Communist soldiers were traveling from the North to the
South through the jungle, each of the troops had to plant the yuca after they harvested
them, so every time when the new troops were deployed to the South, yuca was
the food to feed them, and the yuca plantings served as a map through the Ho
Chi Minh trail. The way to plant yuca is to cut the main branch of the yuca
plant about 5 to 10 inches and stick them in the ground. The plant very much
does not need any more care. When the plant reaches to 5 feet tall is the time to
harvest them by pulling them out from the ground, and the yuca is the root of
this plant. The more the plant grows, the bigger the yuca root will be. When my
family was living at the farm, yuca was an everyday meal for us because we did
not have enough rice to make a whole pot of rice. My mom had to mix yuca with
rice to cook as it was then the normal way of life at the farm. I
remember that so many times we did not have anything else to eat with the
rice/yuca mixture, and the only way to make this meal tasty was to make
scallion oil for the topping. However, the yuca meal that remains forever in my
sweet memory with my mom when she had money and substituted the regular rice
with sweet rice and that made the meal a whole lot more like a treat to us. In
Vietnam, this
treat is a snack food that is sold by street vendors for breakfast or anytime of
the day. There are two ways to serve this recipe. One way is to serve it with
scallion oil on top and with some spicy soy dipping sauce, and the other way is
sweeter and prepared with fresh shredded coconut, roasted sesame seeds, and peanuts
for the topping. Thinking back about those days as an adult now, I feel that
each period of my life is very sweet no matter if rich or poor. Especially, as
a young kid, we do not feel as bad as we become adults. For simply eliminating
hunger pains, everything always tastes wonderful.
Ingredients:
Two cups sweet rice, soaked overnight
1 large or two small yuca, peeled, cut into big chunks, and soaked overnight
2 tsp salt
1/2 cup coconut milk
4 green onions, finely chopped
1/4 tsp salt
1/8 tsp sugar
1/4 cup oil
Directions:
Drain soaked rice, add 1 tsp salt into the rice, and mix well. Set aside.
Cut each of the yuca into quarters and remove the tough membrane in the
center. Cut into bite-size pieces, add 1 tsp of salt, and mix well.
In a steamer over high heat, add the cut yuca into the steamer and steam for
15 minutes or until the yuca is almost cooked. Pour 1/3 cup of coconut milk
into the partly cooked yuca and mix well.
Add rice into the yuca and mix them
well together.
Make a hole in the center of the steamer so the steam can
distribute evenly while steaming.
Cover with lid and steam over high heat for
another 15 minutes or until the yuca and rice mixture is cooked. Pour the rest
of the coconut milk on the cooked rice and mix well. Cover and steam for anther
5 minutes so the coconut milk will be absorb into the yuca-rice mixture.
While the yuca rice is steaming, place a small sauce pan over high heat. Add
oil, scallions, salt, and sugar. Cook for less than a minute and remove from
the heat.
Place the yuca rice on a serving plate, top with
scallion oil, and serve with soy dipping sauce.