Ube Halaya

Ube Halaya

Servings: 8 Total Time: 8 hrs 1 min Difficulty: Advanced
Authentic Filipino Ube Jam

Ube Halaya

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Prep Time 2 hrs Cook Time 1 min Total Time 8 hrs 1 min
Difficulty: Advanced Servings: 8 Best Season: Winter, Suitable throughout the year

Description

Ube halaya is a rich, creamy Filipino jam made from real purple yam, slow-cooked with coconut cream, milk, and just enough sugar to bring out its natural flavor. When done right, it is smooth, lightly sweet, and deeply comforting, not overly sugary or artificial.

Real ube starts with the tuber itself, which is primarily grown in the Philippines. Fresh, uncooked ube tubers are not imported into the United States due to strict agricultural regulations. These rules protect local crops by preventing soil-borne pests and plant diseases from entering the country. Because of this, most people in the U.S. do not have access to freshly harvested ube.

That is why, when Chef Maricel is in the Philippines, she makes ube halaya as often as she can. It is her chance to work with fresh ube - hopefully, when its at its peak, when the flavor is strongest and the texture is exactly how she remembers it growing up.

In the U.S., you will find ube in a few common forms:

  • Frozen grated ube, which is the closest option to fresh
  • Bottled or canned ube halaya, which is fully cooked and shelf-stable
  • Ube extract, often used for color and flavor

Frozen ube is preserved quickly after harvest, so it holds more of the natural flavor. Bottled and canned halaya are cooked ahead of time and sealed for longer shelf life, which makes them widely available year-round. These are convenient, but the flavor is often sweeter and less complex than fresh.

What makes this version special is that Chef Maricel makes everything from scratch. In the video, she does not just cook the ube. She builds every layer of flavor herself:

  • Fresh ube is boiled, peeled, and grated by hand
  • Coconut is squeezed to create fresh coconut cream
  • That cream is cooked down into latik
  • The process also produces coconut oil, which is used to grease the molds

Nothing is pre-made. Everything is built step by step.

This takes time.

  • Boiling and prepping the ube takes about 35 minutes
  • Extracting coconut cream and making latik takes additional time and attention
  • Cooking the halaya itself requires constant stirring until thick

From start to finish, you are looking at several hours in one day. If you include cooling, chilling, and setting the halaya before serving, the full process can stretch into the next day.

That time matters. It is what gives the halaya its texture, depth, and balance.

This is the version Chef Maricel grew up with and still makes today. Fresh ube is cooked down until thick and velvety, then finished with golden latik for texture and depth.

You can serve it on its own, spread it on bread, or use it as the base for cakes and desserts. Once you make real ube halaya this way, you will taste the difference right away.

Ingredients

Cooking Mode Disabled

UBE Halaya

Fresh Coconut Cream (Kakang Gata)

Latik (Toasted Coconut Curds)

Instructions

Prepare the Ube

  1. Boil whole ube with skin on for about 35 minutes, until fork tender
  2. Let cool slightly
  3. Peel the skin
  4. Grate finely using a grater or food processor
  5. In a large nonstick pan, add Coconut cream and Sugar

  6. Add the Ube
  7. Add grated ube to the pan
  8. Stir continuously
  9. Add Condensed milk and Evaporated milk
  10. Keep stirring constantly to prevent sticking
  11. Stir non-stop and cook to thickness
  12. Cook over medium heat
  13. Mixture will thicken and absorb liquid
  14. You are done when when It is thick, not soupy and It pulls slightly from the sides
  15. Texture feels like thick mashed potato
  16. Optional: Cook 10 to 15 minutes longer for a firmer set

  17. Prep the Mold by greasing with Coconut Oil. 

  18. Transfer hot ube mixture into mold
  19. Put Latik in Mold - this will become topping of the Halaya when removed from the mold. 

  20. Spoon the Halaya into the mold.

  21. Let cool at room temperature, then chill
  22. Unmold after chilling
  23. Unmold after chilling and Serve. Add some more Latik on top if you like. 

  24. Fresh Coconut Cream (Kakang Gata)
  25. What you are making
  26. Pure coconut cream from fresh coconut, first extraction only.
  27. Ingredients
  28. 2 to 3 fresh mature coconuts, shredded
  29. 4 cups warm water
  30. Steps

Add shredded coconut to a bowl

  1. Pour in warm water
  2. Squeeze by hand to extract liquid
  3. Strain through fine mesh or cloth
  4. Important:
  5. This is the first squeeze only, thick and rich
  6. This is what you use for ube halaya
  7. Latik (Toasted Coconut Curds)
  8. Steps
  9. Pour coconut cream into a pan
  10. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat
  11. Stir regularly
  12. What happens:
  13. Liquid reduces

Oil separates

  1. Curds form and begin to brown
  2. Finish
  3. Lower heat once solids form
  4. Continue stirring until golden brown
  5. Strain:
  6. Keep curds (latik)
  7. Save oil for greasing molds
  8. Use
  9. Sprinkle on top of ube halaya
  10. Adds texture and deep coconut flavor
Keywords: Filipino, Ube, Halaya, Jam, Fresh, Natural,
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