The Not-So-Perfect Kamote Cue: Nothing Was Wasted

in Hive Food5 days ago

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‎I planned to make a kamote cue for our merienda. My hubby really loved sweet potatoes, but only when they're coated in caramelized sugar.

‎Boiled kamote is okay, but kamote cues are his favorite.

‎As I checked the ingredients, it was complete. So I decided to make it.

Ingredients:


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‎• 3 large sweet potatoes (kamote), peeled & cut into 1/2-inch
‎• 1/3 cup sugar
‎• 3/4 cup water
‎• pinch of salt
‎• oil for deep-frying (enough to submerge the sweet potatoes)

Cooking process:


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‎• I started by peeling the sweet potatoes. But as I peeled them, the skin left a dark brown-to-green smudge on my hands. It looked messy, so I suggest using plastic gloves or a plastic bag to avoid this kind of stain.


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‎• After peeling, I sliced each kamote into about a half-inch, not too thin, not too thick. Then place it into a bowl of water with a pinch of salt so they wouldn't turn dark while I prepared the pan.


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‎• After that, I poured oil into the pan, enough for deep-frying, waited for it to heat up, then carefully added the sweet potato slices.


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‎• After a few minutes, I sprinkled in the sugar, but it wasn't brown sugar. On this part, I expected that, as the kamote fried, the sugar would slowly melt, caramelize, and coat each piece beautifully.

Result:


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‎The sugar didn't melt. 🥹 It just clung to sweet potatoes like tiny crystals. 🫣

‎Instead of turning into syrup, it remains rough and grainy.

‎Actually, I tried waiting for it, thinking it just needed more time. But nothing changed.

‎So yeah, I realized the problem. I used the wrong kind of sugar.

‎Kamote cue needs brown sugar because it melts faster and turns into that sticky glaze.

‎The one I used stayed dry and grainy no matter how long it fried.

‎--

‎So that's what happened.

‎Next time, I know what to do... use BROWN SUGAR!!

‎--


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‎Well, it may not have looked like the glossy kamote cue I see in street stalls, but it was still so good.

‎We brewed some coffee and brought the plate upstairs. The sugar was grainy, but that didn't mean it wasn't sweet.

‎The kids loved it. And didn't care that it wasn't "perfect".

‎My hubby kept munching too. And we finished everything on the plate.

‎In the end, nothing was wasted.

‎Next time, I already know what to change and how to do it right.

‎Until my next cooking...

Thanks for the visit! Have a lovely day. Buh-bye. 💗🌸

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Naks sipag ahh, @jocabanero4 HAHA...

😂😂😂 Kelangan ei 😁😁

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