Ingredients:
-winter melon
-sugar
-mali flavor
-alum
-limestone paste
-water


Prepping the Melon:
Peel the melon, remove seeds. Cut melon into chopstick size pieces, about 3-4 inches long. For every liter of water mix in 1/2 tsp limestone paste. Soak melon slices into limestone solution for 3 hours. Remove and wash. For ever liter of water mix in 3/4 tsp alum. Bring alum solution to a boil, turn off the heat, and remove the pot of water off the heating element. Add in melon slices; remove the melon when they appear transparent. Wash thoroughly.

Weigh the melon to determine the amount of sugar. Sugar should be ¾ the weight of the melon. Mix together melon and sugar, add mali flavor. Next morning drain the melon from the excess sugar (by now the sugar will have turned into a syrup). Follow instructions for “dry” version to complete the recipe.


Notes:
To make the Chinese version of this treat, simply cut melon into bigger (thicker) strips and omit mali flavor. Alum, and limestone paste is optional. For a faster method, simply cut melon, boil for a few mins, and soak in cold water until cooled. Weigh and determine sugar, then make into final product. Alum makes the melon transparent and white. Limestone solution helps gives it the crispy and plump texture. However, too much limestone paste in the solution will make the melon yellowish in color. Alum is acidic, thus make sure the melon is thoroughly washed after soaking in alum solution.

Comments (2)

On 10:24 AM , hoangtam/tt said...

lime stone and han the (borax) are two different things, they have different effects thus you cannot use lime stone in place of borax.

you can fine limestone paste at asian stores.

 
On 10:46 AM , hoangtam/tt said...

It’s not a matter of different opinions but rather a matter of science and experience. Chemically speaking han the and voi have different chemical formulas. This means they will produce different reactions and render different results. Try making banh duc with nuoc voi instead of han the...you'll see that the texture will be different. The one with nuoc voi will be chewy and the one with han the will be crispy…proving that voi cannot be used in place of han the to help make foods crispy. In this recipe nuoc voi is used to make the melon transparent not crispy. The melon is crispy due to the amount of sugar and method of producing the final product.