Thai Mango Sticky Rice Recipe: Authentic Thai Street Food Style! (2024)

In this Thai mango sticky rice recipe, you’ll learn how to make authentic Thai street food style coconut sticky rice with mango.

Let’s get startedmaking this recipe!

Thai Mango Sticky Rice Recipe: Authentic Thai Street Food Style! (1)
Mango, sticky rice, coconut cream
Thai Mango Sticky Rice Recipe: Authentic Thai Street Food Style! (2)
Juicy mango!

What is Thai mango sticky rice?

NOTE: If you want to get straight into the recipe as fast as possible, scroll down to the video and recipe box below. But for a more in-depth explanation about this Thai dessert, keep reading this entire post.

In Thai it’s called khao neow mamuang (ข้าวเหนียวมะม่วง), khao neow (ข้าวเหนียว) means glutinous sticky rice, while mamuang (มะม่วง) means mango in Thai.

Within Thai cooking, sticky rice is the staple starch of northern and northeastern Thai cuisine (Isaan), and it’s also commonly used in all sorts of Thai desserts.

For Thai mango sticky rice, the sticky rice is steamed, mixed with thick coconut cream and sugar, paired with perfectly ripe yellow sweet mango, served with some extra coconut cream on the top to make it even better, and finally often some crispy yellow mung beans are sprinkled on the very top.

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Ingredients for khao neow mamuang

Ingredients you’ll need:

For the sticky rice

  • 1 kg. Thai sticky rice (ข้าวเหนียว)
  • 800 ml. coconut cream (หัวกะทิ) – If you can’t get fresh coconut milk, this is my favorite type in the box.
  • 150 g. sugar (น้ำตาลทราย)
  • 1 tsp. salt (เกลือ)

For the mango

  • Sweet yellow mangoes (มะม่วงนำ้ดอกไม้)
  • 100 g. yellow mung beans (ถั่วเหลือง) – optional

For the coconut cream topping

  • 200 ml. coconut cream (หัวกะทิ)
  • 1/3 tsp. salt (เกลือ)

Really good quality coconut cream (or canned or box coconut milk) and really juicy sweet mangoes are the key to making this Thai mango sticky rice recipe.

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Start with the sticky rice

Sticky rice

Thai sticky rice sweetenedwith sugar and coconut cream is a popular base for many different Thai desserts, and it’s highly important for this mango sticky rice recipe.

If you have anAsiansupermarket available, look for Thai sticky rice, or Thai glutinous rice, or sometimes it’s called Thai sweet rice (it’s much different from regular jasmine rice, and different from Chinese sweetrice).

To make sticky rice, you can use myThai sticky rice recipe. Howeveryou’ll want to pre-rinse it even more thoroughly to remove all the outer starch on each grain of rice before steaming it.

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Soak and wash the rice thoroughly to remove all starch

I washed the rice about 6 times to begin with, lightly rubbing the rice together to scratch off most of the starch. And then I allowed the rice to soakin water for 6 hours. This is the one stepwhere it’s best to think ahead before you start this mango sticky rice recipe so you have time to soak the rice.

Once you’ve rinsed the rice six times, when you add water again, the water shouldbe clear, not milky from the starch. If it’s milky, rinse it a few more times.

Once your sticky rice has soaked for about 6 hours, drain it, and it’s time to steam it.

You can use any kind of steaming method you’d like, but just make sure the sticky rice is placed somewhere above steam in a pot, and covered.

I used the Thai / Laos traditional basket steamer and steamed the sticky rice for about 15 minutes.

While your sticky rice is steaming, you can get started on the coconut cream sugar mixture.

For this recipe you’re only going to want to usecoconut cream, which in Thai is called hua kati(หัวกะทิ). It’s the richest and mostbutter thick coconut milk, so it’s higher in fat and just an amazing thing.

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Heat the coconut cream

In a medium sized sauce pan, add 800 ml. of the coconut cream, and stir it in circular motions, just in one direction (make sure you just stir in one direction or the coconut cream could start to curdle).

Immediately add 150 g. sugar, and 1 tsp. of salt, and keep stirring gently on the heat, making sure the sugar completely dissolves.

As soon as the coconut cream comes to a boil and the sugar is fully dissolved, turn off the heat.

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Mix the coconut cream with the hot steamed sticky rice

Your sticky rice should still be steaming hot, and dump the whole lump of sticky rice into a heat proof mixing bowl.

Take the coconut cream sugar mixture, and start by first adding a couple spoons and delicately mixing it into the sticky rice.

Keep adding more spoons (spoon by spoon) and stirring, but you want to gradually add the coconut cream so that it remains sticky but doesn’t get mushy.

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Keep stirring, adding the coconut cream slowly

You’ll use all the coconut cream, but add it little by little and mix, until it’s all soaked up by the sticky rice.

When you’re finished, you should almost have a sticky grain pudding like texture, and the rice should be shining and glistening because of all that healthy coconut fat.

At thispoint the sticky rice is already to be eaten, make sure you taste test it, it should be a bit sweet, and very rich and coconut-y tasting, with just a hint of a saltiness to bring out the taste of everything.

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Cover your sticky rice or it will get crusty

When you make this mango sticky rice recipe, if you’re not planning to eat the sticky rice immediately, it’s best to cover it in a plastic bag or plasticwrap so that it doesn’t get dried out or crusty.

Normally in Thailand this type of sticky rice is not refrigerated or it willdamage the texture and taste, so it’s usually eaten within a few hours of being prepared. It will still work to refrigerate it, but it won’t be nearly as good.

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Mung beans for topping

Toppings

Finally, these are both optional, but they are commonly accompanied with mango sticky rice in Thailand: extra coconut cream and crispy mung beans.

For the extra coconut cream, take the remaining 200 ml. of coconut cream, put in a pot on medium heat, add a pinch of salt, and stir gently until it boils. Then put into a bowl to serve alongside your sticky rice mango.

For the yellow mung beans (you buy yellow mung daal), put a wok or frying pan on the stove on low heat, and dry fry the mung beans for a few minutes, stirring them continuously until they start to turn slightly golden and get more crispy.

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Let’s quickly talk about Thai mangoes

Mangoes

Mango sticky rice wouldn’t be complete without mango, and for this mango sticky rice recipe you’ll need perfectly ripemangoes that are silky in texture (not the stringy mangoes).

In Thailand there are a number of varieties of mango used for khao neow mamuang (ข้าวเหนียวมะม่วง), but one of the most common is called mamuang nam dokmai(มะม่วงนำ้ดอกไม้) – literally translated to flower water mango.

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Peel the mango and slice it into bite sizes strips

When it comes to Thai food and specifically Thai desserts, presentation and beauty are hugely important.

And so vendors that sell mangoes or serve mango sticky rice take ultimate care in their mangoes, making sure they are not bruised, but are beautiful and yellow.

Most of the time in Thailand, the mango is peeled from the stem side, slicing off long strands of the skin towards the pointy end. Once the first half is peeled, it’s then sliced off the seed, so you’re left with a mango steak from one side of the mango, and that’s then cut into big bite sizes slices (might be easier explained in the video below).

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Assemble your mango sticky rice

Combining it all

Once you have all your components for this Thai mango sticky rice recipe ready, it’s time to dish out a plate.

Put some coconut sticky rice down on the base of a plate or bowl, slice on a fresh mango, sprinkle on some crispy mung beans, and finally serve the extra coconut cream on the side.

The recipe for sticky rice might make in total about 10 – 15 portions, and you can really add as much or little mango to each plate as you have, or as you like.

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Mango sticky rice recipe (ข้าวเหนียวมะม่วง)

Mango sticky rice recipe (วิธีทำ ข้าวเหนียวมะม่วง)

If you have a few minutes, first watch the video below:

(Or watch it on YouTube here:https://youtu.be/H_R108b6ZQg)

Time:The sticky rice is best soaked in water for about 6 hours, but after that, this recipe only takes about 30 minutes to make.
Recipe size:The rice makes about 10 – 15 portions, and it would probably be best to use about 1/2 mango per portion
Cooking utensils:Steamer, pot, wok / frying pan
Flavors: Sweet

5.0 from 20 reviews

Thai Mango Sticky Rice Recipe

Thai Mango Sticky Rice Recipe: Authentic Thai Street Food Style! (16)

Prep time

Cook time

Total time

Mango sticky rice, known in Thai as khao neow mamuang (ข้าวเหนียวมะม่วง), is one of the most famous Thai desserts. To make it yourself, all you have to do is cook sticky rice, mix it with coconut cream, and serve it with ripe juicy mangoes.

Author: Mark Wiens

Recipe type: Thai

Cuisine: Thai

Serves: 10 - 15 portions

Ingredients

For the rice:

  • 1 kg. Thai sticky rice (ข้าวเหนียว)
  • 800 ml. coconut cream (หัวกะทิ)
  • 150 g. sugar (น้ำตาลทราย)
  • 1 tsp. salt (เกลือ)

For the toppings

  • 200 ml. coconut cream (หัวกะทิ)
  • ⅓ tsp. salt (เกลือ)
  • Sweet yellow mangoes (มะม่วงนำ้ดอกไม้)
  • 100 g. yellow mung beans (ถั่วเหลือง)

Instructions

  1. Rinse the sticky rice 6 - 10 times, making sure most of the starch gets removed and you're left with clear water. Then soak the rice submerged in water for about 6 hours.
  2. Using a steamer basket or other type of steamer, steam the sticky rice for about 15 minutes until fully cooked, then set aside.
  3. In a pot, add 800 ml. coconut cream on medium heat, and stir in one circular direction gentry. Add 150 g. sugar and 1 tsp. salt, and keep stirring and cooking until fully dissolved. When the coconut cream mixture comes to a boil, turn off the heat.
  4. Put the fresh sticky rice into a mixing bowl, and begin to slowly add in the coconut cream and sugar mixture. You'll combine all of it, but add it spoon by spoon and work it slowly into the rice. Once all combined you should be left with shimmering sticky rice that's almost a grainy pudding in texture. Your sticky rice is ready, cover it with plaster so it doesn't get crusty.
  5. In a separate sauce pan add the other portion of coconut cream and salt, and stir on low heat. Bring it to a boil, then turn off the heat, and set aside in a bowl. This will be served alongside the mango sticky rice as a topping.
  6. In a wok or frying pan, using low heat, dry fry the yellow mung beans for a few minutes until they turn golden crispy. Again, set this aside as a topping.
  7. For the mango, first peel the skin, then cut off the meat from either side of the mango seed, and slice the mango into large bite sized pieces.
  8. On a plate, first add a portion of sticky rice, top it with mango, sprinkle on some mung beans, and serve the extra coconut cream on the side.
  9. Enjoy!

Notes

When it's mango season in Thailand, you'll find mango sticky rice available all over the streets - it's one of the most popular desserts - and it's also pretty easy to make. Enjoy this street food style recipe!

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Thai mango sticky rice!

Conclusion

Khao neow mamuang (ข้าวเหนียวมะม่วง), yellow juicy mango with sweet coconut sticky rice, is one of the most incredible Thai desserts.

When it’s mango season in Thailand, you’ll find delicious ripe mangoes all over Bangkok, and you’ll discover countless street food carts and stalls at markets that sell sticky rice and mango.

If you can get some ripe yellow mangoes, sticky rice, and coconut cream, you can make this authentic Thai mango sticky rice recipe at home!

Let me know if you have any questions in the comments below.

Also, be sure to check out more authentic recipes here.

Thai Mango Sticky Rice Recipe: Authentic Thai Street Food Style! (2024)

FAQs

Is mango sticky rice a street food? ›

When it's mango season in Thailand, you'll find mango sticky rice available all over the streets - it's one of the most popular desserts - and it's also pretty easy to make. Enjoy this street food style recipe!

What makes Thai sticky rice sticky? ›

Glutinous rice is distinguished from other types of rice by having no (or negligible amounts of) amylose and high amounts of amylopectin (the two components of starch). Amylopectin is responsible for the sticky quality of glutinous rice.

Why do Thai people eat mango sticky rice? ›

Mango sticky rice is a traditional Thai dessert, which consists of sweet rice with coconut milk and is served with fresh mango. It is believed that people eat the dish during the humid months to keep themselves cool.

What is the best Thai rice for sticky rice? ›

In the present time, most Thai and Lao sticky rice is imported from Thailand, so to be sure that you get the right type of rice, look for “sweet rice” or “glutinous rice” on the package, along with any kind of indication that this rice has been imported from Thailand, including the word ข้าวเหนียว.

Do Thai people eat mango sticky rice? ›

In Thailand

Khao niao mamuang (Thai: ข้าวเหนียวมะม่วง), which translates to Mango sticky rice, is a traditional Thai dessert that typically consists of sticky rice cooked with coconut milk and served with fresh sliced mangoes on top.

Is sticky rice inflammatory? ›

Also called glutinous rice, it is evident that sticky rice is very high in starch. It is the excess release of starch during steaming that sticky rice gets that glue-like texture to them. Sticky rice health benefits include increased bone density, decreased inflammation, improved heart health, etc.

Do you have to soak Thai sticky rice? ›

Soak Your Sticky Rice At Least 4 Hours!

And you really do have to soak it. One time I tried cooking Thai sticky rice without soaking the sweet rice because I forgot to soak it earlier in the day, and dinner was in an hour, and I really wanted Thai sticky rice to go with our Larb.

What country eats the most sticky rice? ›

The staple food of the Lao is sticky rice (Lao: ເຂົ້າໜຽວ, khao niao, pronounced [kʰȁw. nǐa̯w]). Laos has the highest sticky rice consumption per-capita in the world with an average of 171 kilograms (377 lb) of sticky rice consumed annually per person.

How do you eat mango sticky rice in Thailand? ›

In Thailand, sticky mango rice is often served on a banana leaf, adding a natural and aromatic touch to the presentation. It's also common to sprinkle toasted sesame seeds or mung beans over the dish for added texture and flavor.

Do you eat Thai sticky rice hot or cold? ›

Mango sticky rice is served warm, at room temperature, or chilled, and it is usually eaten with a fork or spoon. It is sometimes eaten with the fingers.

Is Thai sticky rice the same as Thai glutinous rice? ›

Sticky rice, which is also known as "glutinous"* or "sweet" rice, is an essential ingredient in northern and northeastern Thai, as well as Lao, cuisine. It's used in countless sweet and savory applications, for dishes like coconut sticky rice with mango, or to make toasted rice powder for dipping sauces like jaew.

What is the difference between Japanese sticky rice and Thai sticky rice? ›

When comparing Thai sticky rice and Japanese sticky rice, you'll see quite a difference between the grains. Thai sticky rice is whiter and less opaque than Japanese rice. Thai sweet rice grains are also slightly longer than their Japanese comparison.

What is sticky rice called in the grocery store? ›

Sticky rice is also called sweet rice, because of its distinct taste that is subtly sweeter than other types of rice. However, even if it has a hint of sweetness, the sweet taste will not overpower the flavor of the food that will be served alongside it.

Where did mango sticky rice originated? ›

The sweet treat can be found in various countries in South-East Asia, but is particularly associated with Thailand and Laos. Although the precise origin of the dish isn't clear, historians who have traced back traditional Thai food recipes suggest mango and sticky rice may date back to fourteenth-century Siam.

What type of cuisine is sticky rice? ›

Normally in Chinese cooking, long-grain sticky rice is used for savory dishes and short-grain sticky rice for desserts. This is because the texture of long-grain sticky rice is firmer and less sticky than short-grain sticky rice so it tastes better in savory dishes.

What are considered street foods? ›

Street foods are ready-to-eat foods and beverages prepared and/or sold by vendors or hawkers especially in the streets and other similar places. They represent a significant part of urban food consumption for millions of low-and-middle-income consumers, in urban areas on a daily basis.

What is Vietnamese sticky rice street food? ›

Vietnamese sticky rice with mung beans and crispy fried shallots (Xoi xeo) Vietnamese sticky rice with mung beans is especially popular in the Northern and Central regions. Steamed sticky rice is covered with steamed minced mung beans, which is then topped with chicken fat, salted shredded pork, and fried shallots.

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