Ipoh white coffee
Coffee drink from Ipoh, Malaysia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coffee drink from Ipoh, Malaysia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ipoh white coffee (Chinese: 白咖啡, Tamil: ஒயிட் காபி) is a popular coffee drink which originated in Ipoh, Perak, Malaysia, resulting in Ipoh being named one of the top three coffee towns by Lonely Planet. The coffee beans are roasted with palm oil margarine, and the resulting coffee is served with condensed milk.[1]
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2020) |
Place of origin | Ipoh, Malaysia |
---|---|
Region or state | Southeast Asia |
Associated cuisine | Malaysia |
Serving temperature | Hot or cold |
Main ingredients | Coffee powder, condensed milk |
This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2023) |
The term white coffee originates from the literal translation of its Chinese name, which was introduced in the 19th century by Chinese migrants who came to work in the local tin mines.[2] The coffee beans themselves are not actually white; the colour comes from the milk stirred into the end product.
In Malaysia, the original white coffee started in the Ipoh and was a drink made from beans roasted in margarine and served with sweetened condensed milk. This style of coffee continues to be popular throughout the country. However, white coffee in Malaysia often simply refers to how the drink is prepared and presented – with margarine.
Overseas visitors finding the margarine-roasted coffee beans unorthodox (due to their slight caramelized flavor) are often misled into believing that there is a type of coffee bean endemic to Malaysia called the "white coffee bean". The beans used are invariably imported beans roasted to a light color.
Local coffee manufacturers now mix instant coffee powder with non-dairy creamer or whitener and sugar, and market the 3-in-1 mixture as white coffee as well. The mixture is preferred by Malaysians at home or in the office as a convenient easy-to-prepare coffee drink. The advisability, however, of consuming instant coffee mixed with non-dairy creamer and sugar daily is slowly coming into question, with some manufacturers now taking the sugar out of the mixture, and marketing the 2-in-1 mixture as sugar-free white coffee.
Traditionally, Malaysian-style roasted black coffee, kopi O, is produced by roasting the beans with sugar, margarine and wheat.[3]
White coffee, on the other hand, is produced with only margarine and without any sugar, resulting in a less dark roast. Ipoh white coffee is also widely available in an instant version.[1] It is sometimes consumed after dinner.[4]
The generic term Ipoh white coffee in Chinese is Chinese: 怡保白咖啡; Jyutping: Ji4bou2 Baak6 Kaa1fei1. Chinese: 白; pinyin: bái; Jyutping: Baak6, commonly meaning 'white', has nothing to do with the colour in this instance, but is rather a reference to the way the coffee is roasted. In Chinese, bái also means 'without' or 'unadulterated'.[citation needed]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.