When you’re in Vietnam at a wet market, check out the sugar. There are piles of different kinds in various shades, from mahogany and caramel brown, to yellow to cream to white to clear. Some are in crystals whereas some are hard and have to be scraped and poked at with a knife. The photo on the right is from Saigon's Cho Lon market.
I’m not a sugar expert but Eating Asia's Robyn Eckhardt got me thinking about palm sugar – a small obsession of hers (read: an understatement!). She and her husband David Hagerman live in Malaysia and wherever they go in Southeast Asia, they look for artisanal palm sugar. She and Dave brought some to the U.S. for a recent tasting and I was the beneficiary of the leftovers!
What is palm sugar? In Vietnamese, đường means sugar. Palm sugar, called đường thốt nốt, is the boiled down sap gathered from the cut buds of sago or coconut palm trees; it may also be called đường tán. In the Vietnamese repertoire, đường cát trắng literally means “white sand sugar” and is the refined sugar that we know in the West. Đường phèn is crystal-like rock sugar, the stuff that makes Vietnamese soup broths rock (really!).
For people of my parents' generation, the white sand sugar is preferred because it is consistent in flavor, clean of impurities (you don’t have to pick unsavory bits out of it before using), and makes cooking easier, particularly baking. Refined sugar in Vietnam is a luxe ingredient as it costs more. On the other hand, cooks of my generation have greater access to affordable refined sugar and now we’re hungering for a bit of unexpected notes that can be savored in unrefined palm sugar. Older folks may laugh at us, but it’s the 21st century and better times allow us to mix things up in the kitchen.
Kinds of palm sugar: There are many types – the light yellow/pale brown hard stuff that’s used in Vietnam and Thailand, and the darker, smoky version preferred in Malaysia and Indonesia. Each has a unique complexity that is not found in refined cane sugar. The Viet and Thai palm sugar has delicate fragrance and sweetness. The Malay and Indonesian gula (sugar) is heartier and akin to mixing molasses with light brown sugar. Overall, Southeast Asian palm sugar isn’t intensely sweet, despite their pronounced character. Each one talks back to you in a unique flavor and tone.
Along with the ones I took from Robyn, I purchased more from local Asian markets in the San Jose area. In a personal tasting of the sugars in the photo on the right, sometimes I sensed coconut and other times an unusual fruity quality. All the sugars had aroma too. The uncommon fudgy dark one on the spoon could have served as dessert. Robyn’s selection was the three darker ones. I encourage you to get some next time you shop and start playing with it!
How to use palm sugar: Admittedly, sometimes I steal a bit of sugar and eat it. I don’t have a sweet tooth but the stuff tastes really good. But that’s not realistic. Palm sugar is usually solid or somewhat hard so you have to use a knife to shave or cut off pieces. Here are two suggestions for using palm sugar in Vietnamese cooking:
Caramel sauce. Though I’ve never tried it, I think you can caramelize the lighter Thai and Viet sugar. However, don’t do that with already dark Malay and Indonesian gula jawa/melaka/aren; (jawa means Java and melaka is Malacca, two areas known for producing quality palm sugar; aren refers to arenga, a species of a genus of small to medium palms.) Don’t use a dark gula type of sugar as a substitute for caramel sauce because they lack the bittersweet quality of caramel sauce.
A safe bet is to make caramel sauce with regular supermarket white cane sugar and then when you make your kho caramel sauce dishes, use palm sugar instead of regular white sugar to round out the flavors; sugar is usually added to the caramel sauce. Caramel sauce is tricky and can fail if there are impurities in the sugar. Stick with what you know works and then tweak with palm sugar.
How to buy palm sugar: Locate palm sugar at Chinese and Southeast Asian markets. Check the Thai food section and the Indonesian/Malaysian food section (usually tucked away somewhere). In the U.S., palm sugar is usually available as tube shapes formed by packing them in bamboo, mounds that resemble falsies of various sizes, cut slices, in jars, and as disks. Buy at the mid to upper end of the price range for better quality.
Storage tips: Store in a dry spot in airtight container or zip-top bag.
Additional information:
- Kasma Loha-Unchit – Thai cookbook author and cooking teacher
- Chez Pim - blog
- Wikipedia entry on palm sugar
Nate says
Wow, you so lucky to get some of Robyn's palm sugar. She didn't have any for us when we met her the day after her talk 🙁
We just used some gula melaka to make a green bean / tapioca sweet dessert soup.
Annie says
You are so lucky to inherit her leftovers. I'd die for some artisanal gula melaka right now. Sigh...
Andrea Nguyen says
Uh, sorry. Robyn didn't tell me she was meeting up with you post the tasting. The new Maxim market on De Anza (off 85) has a pretty good selection of gula jawa and gula aren -- more than what I've seen elsewhere.
When you compare how palm sugar is made with how regular white sugar is prepared, it's all relatively artisanal.
Robyn, are you still in the States?
Robyn says
Andrea I'm here, leaving tonight. Sorry Annie and Nate! Next time....
A couple of niggles (you did say I was obsessed) -- the sap is from the immature flower stalk ... for some palm sugars. Nipa palm flowers are allowed to bloom before the stalk is cut to collect the sap (the dark sticky sugar in the spoon is nipa palm sugar). And sugar is made from many palms ... palmyra (usually called sugar palm), aren, nipa, coconut, and others.
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prsi says
Can i store palm sugar in syrup form for a long time
Andrea Nguyen says
Prsi -- yes, you can store palm sugar in syrup for a long time in the refrigerator! I have a jar that's about 2 years old.
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