Easy Special Bibingka Recipe - Today's Delight (2024)

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Easy Special Bibingka Recipe is Today’s Delight, a Filipino baked rice cake made special with all the toppings. Bibingka is made by combining rice flour, egg, sugar and milk until smooth, then baked and topped with salted egg, cheese, butter and grated coconut. With only a few basic ingredients, you can make this easy bibingka recipe at the comfort of your home.

Easy Special Bibingka Recipe - Today's Delight (1)

Special Bibingka topped with salted egg, cream cheese and grated coconut.

In the Philippines, bibingka is abundant during Christmas time. It is commonly served after attending an evening mass called Simbang Gabi during Christmas Eve. In the old days, the process of making this rice cake was tedious. It was cooked in clay pots lined with banana leaves and pre-heated coals were placed below and above the rice cake. Now, I can easily make bibingka in less than an hour in the oven.

With all the food preparations going on during the holidays, this is my go-to bibingka recipe, quick yet delicious. Some people are working till December 24th and with limited time it is hard to make everything from scratch. This rice cake is easily available in the Philippines, but if you live abroad it is not the case. You're lucky if you live around Filipino stores or restaurants that sells it. If not, you have to make it yourself.

Easy Special Bibingka Recipe - Today's Delight (2)

Bibingka, a Filipino snack baked rice cake topped with salted eggs, cream cheese and grated coconut.

Most Filipino or Asian stores here in the States carry White King Bibingka mix, so I assume it is also available in other countries. I love using this mix especially if I am press for time. I don’t have to measure anything like flour, baking powder etc. One packet makes 2 regular pie size bibingka. You can elevate the taste of this mix by substituting water with milk and adding all the toppings you like. My mom taught me this. I was going through her recipes and she has a special bibingka recipe. Maybe one of these days, I’ll make it but for now I’ll make what I’m used to.

If you plan to take this to a gathering or potluck, you can use a baking pan or pyrex lined with banana leaves. I always make it with banana leaves as it gives extra flavor and the feel of an authentic bibingka. You can also use cup cake molds but that is too much work to line with banana leaves.

If you have never used this bibingka mix, try it and you might like it. Not much preparation involved and it is done in an hour.

Easy Special Bibingka Recipe - Today's Delight (3)

Special Bibingka, a Filipino baked rice cake.

Tips in Making this Easy Special Bibingka Recipe

  1. White King’s recipe uses water, instead use milk.
  2. If melting butter in the microwave, make sure to cover it with saran wrap with a little bit of opening. Microwave for 10 seconds at a time until melted. Melt at a lower power setting so it doesn't explode.
  3. Batter should be well blended until smooth with pancake consistency. I don’t strain it, if you like you could.
  4. Frozen banana leaves doesn’t have to be run through heat. Once you defrost the leaves they go limp. Wash and pat dry.
  5. Use ½ teaspoon of butter and grease both pan and banana leaves. Before placing banana leaves in pan, grease it first.
  6. Once you have banana leaves in pan, patch areas where there is a tear.
  7. I used a toaster oven and added 10 minutes more to baking time.
  8. Add toppings while batter top is still soft about 5 minutes into baking. Time can vary depending on your oven. Here’s an image showing toppings that did not settle into the batter, top was already hard, on the other hand if batter is too soft toppings can settle at the bottom. I made this on purpose so you can see what happens.

Easy Special Bibingka Recipe - Today's Delight (4)

Batter was already fully cooked when toppings were placed.

Recipe

Easy Special Bibingka Recipe - Today's Delight (5)

Easy Special Bibingka Recipe

Bibingka is a Filipino baked rice cake commonly abundant during Christmas time.

Print Pin Rate

Course: Dessert, Snack

Cuisine: Filipino

Prep Time: 15 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 20 minutes minutes

Total Time: 35 minutes minutes

Servings: 8

Calories: 310kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 250g pack White King Bibingka Mix
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 cup milk
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 4 tablespoons butter melted
  • 1 salted egg (sliced into 6)
  • 6 slices of cream cheese
  • ½ cup grated coconut
  • banana leaves (2 pieces that fits an 8 inch pan)
  • 2 teaspoons butter (to grease banana leaves and pan)

Instructions

  • Melt butter in a sauce pan or microwave.

  • In a big bowl, lightly beat eggs. Add milk, melted butter and sugar. Blend.

  • Add 1 pack of White King Bibingka Mix. Blend well.

  • Pre-heat oven at 450 degrees F.

  • Grease 2 8 inch pans and line with banana leaves. Grease both pan and banana leaves.

  • Pour batter into prepared pans.

  • Bake for 12 minutes or until done.

  • After about 4 to 5 minutes baking, top with salted eggs and cream cheese.

  • Remove from oven.

  • Lightly brush surface with butter and serve hot. Top with grated coconut, if desired.

If Using Toaster Oven

  • Pre-heat toaster oven for at least 4-5 minutes.

  • Bake for about 5 minutes. Then add salted eggs and cream cheese while top is still soft. Cover with foil and bake for another 8 minutes or until done. Brush surface with butter, serve hot and top with grated coconut.

Video

Notes

If using cup cake molds, fill ¾ full.

Nutrition

Calories: 310kcal | Carbohydrates: 16g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 13g | Saturated Fat: 9g | Cholesterol: 103mg | Sodium: 108mg | Potassium: 99mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 15g | Vitamin A: 384IU | Calcium: 50mg | Iron: 1mg

Easy Special Bibingka Recipe - Today's Delight (6)

Bibingka baked in an 8 inch pan in the oven.

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Easy Special Bibingka Recipe - Today's Delight (2024)

FAQs

What is the English term for bibingka? ›

The term can be loosely translated to "[rice] cake". It originally referred primarily to bibingka galapong, the most common type of bibingka made with rice flour. Other native Philippine cakes have also sometimes been called bibingka.

What is Royal bibingka made of? ›

Royal Bibingka is made with ground sweet rice flour, coconut milk and eggs. It's similarity to butter mochi is uncanny.

What is the difference between bibingka and Bebinca? ›

Aside from the name, both cakes are cooked with heat on top and bottom. But unlike the Philippine bibingka, the Goa bebinca is a layered dessert wherein each layer must be cooked first before the next one is added (like the way we cook our sapin-sapin). Their bebinca is made with flour instead of glutinous rice.

What is bingka in the Philippines? ›

Bibingka is a food in the Philippines and is one of the many varieties of rice cakes in Filipino cuisine. Its taste is usually slightly sweet, with a little bit of salty undertone for the contrast. Depending on the versions, this rice cake's texture can range from being spongy to being sticky.

What is bibingka Filipino slang? ›

Noun
  • bibingka (rice cake made from rice, coconut, and grated coconut, and wrapped in coconut leaves)
  • (vulgar, slang) female genitalia synonym ▲ Synonym: puke.

What does babinka mean? ›

babinka (plural babinkas) A rice cake made using rice flour, sugar and coconut milk and wrapped in banana leaves.

What is chinese bibingka? ›

CHINESE BIBINGKA | PAWA | MASI | sweetened peanut glutinous rice ball | HOW TO COOK |Pinoy Merienda| Ilocos Norte calls it CHINESE BIBINGKA, Cagayan calls it PAWA, and Cebu calls is MASI. Different names and forms but same ingredients.

What makes bibingka unique? ›

It is made with rice flour, coconut milk, and sugar, giving it a unique texture and sweet flavor. The batter is poured into a special clay pot or banana leaf-lined pan and then cooked over hot coals. This cooking method gives bibingka its distinctive charred edges and irresistible aroma.

What is the ranking of bibingka in the world? ›

MANILA, Philippines – Another year, another Taste Atlas list! For 2023, bibingka has made it yet again on the Best Cakes in the World list, landing in 16th place out of 50 international contenders. The well-loved Filipino kakanin moves down three spots from last year's 13th ranking.

What is the biggest bibingka? ›

The bibingka is set to break Korea's record in the “Guinness Book of World Records” for the biggest rice cake. Mandaue City's rice cake is 182 square meters in area with a diameter of 50 feet and thickness of three inches. Ten metal drums were used as ovens. Each drum can hold two pans of bibingka.

Why do we eat bibingka during Christmas? ›

There is no written record on how bibingka and puto bumbong came to be most associated with the Christmas season. However, in the article, culinary maven Glenda Barretto noted that the farmers needed to consume something quick and convenient. Originally, these rice cakes were enjoyed with salabat (ginger tea).

Are bibingka and biko the same? ›

What is the difference between bibingkang malagkit and biko? Both these Filipino kakanin are made with glutinous rice cooked in coconut milk and sugar. However, bibingkang malagkit is traditionally topped and baked with a sweetened coconut caramel while biko is garnished with latik or golden coconut curds.

What is the English of bibingka? ›

Definition for the Tagalog word bibingka:

A baked Filipino cake made with rice flour. May also include coconut milk, and egg.

What is the Philippines dessert? ›

Leche flan is the Filipino version of creme caramel or dulce de leche. It's a sweet, creamy, and delicious dessert that is served on its own, as a topping for halo-halo and other shaved ice treats, or as part of a more complex dessert.

What is english to Tagalog cake? ›

The Tagalog word for "cake" is "keyk."

What is the other name of Malagkit in English? ›

In the Philippines, glutinous rice is known as malagkit in Tagalog or pilit in Visayan, among other names such as diket in Ilocano.

Why is it called bibingka? ›

Arsenio Manuel also noted that bibingka may have Chinese roots and its name might have been derived from the Hokkien root word “bi,” which means uncooked rice. This is the same origin for some Filipino kitchen items like bihon (noodles), bilo-bilo (glutinous rice balls), and biko (another rice cake).

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