5 Ways to Use Cocoa Powder in Malaysian Recipes

5 Ways to Use Cocoa Powder in Malaysian Recipes

5 Ways to Use Cocoa Powder in Malaysian Recipes | Vive Chocolate
Recipes & Lifestyle · Malaysian Kitchen

5 Ways to Use
Cocoa Powder
in Malaysian Recipes

From teh tarik to kuih to savory mains — how our 100% Malaysian cocoa powder transforms everyday cooking into something extraordinary.

By the Vive Chocolate Team 8 min read Recipes · Malaysian Food · Cocoa Powder
Malaysian cuisine is one of the world's great food traditions. And cocoa powder — made right here from our own local cacao — belongs in it more than most people realise.

Most Malaysians grow up eating chocolate as an imported treat — a foreign flavour associated with European brands and Western occasions. What many of us don't realise is that some of the finest cacao in the world is grown right here in Malaysia, in the soils of Sabah, Pahang, and Johor. And the cocoa powder made from that cacao belongs in our kitchens, our everyday cooking, and our most beloved local recipes.

At Vive Chocolate, our cocoa powder is made from 100% Malaysian-grown cacao — minimally processed, with no additives, and with a depth of flavour that instantly upgrades anything it touches. Today we are sharing five inspired ways to bring it into your Malaysian kitchen, from morning drinks to festive kuih to a savoury main that will genuinely surprise you.

5
Malaysian-inspired recipes
100%
Malaysian-grown cacao
0
Additives or preservatives

Before You Start: Choosing the Right Cocoa Powder

Not all cocoa powders are equal. Natural (non-alkalized) cocoa powder like Vive Chocolate's retains more of the cacao's original flavour complexity and antioxidants. Dutch-processed (alkalized) cocoa is darker and milder but loses much of the natural character. For these recipes, we always recommend our natural Malaysian cocoa powder — the flavour difference is immediately noticeable.

The Recipes

5 Malaysian Recipes That Shine with Cocoa Powder

01
Morning Drink
Chocolate Teh Tarik

Teh tarik is Malaysia's most beloved drink — warm, frothy, deeply comforting. Now imagine that same creamy pull-tea experience with a rich cocoa base underneath the tea. This is not hot chocolate. It is something uniquely Malaysian: the chocolatey depth of real cacao meeting the bold character of Ceylon or Sabah tea, stretched and frothed into that iconic foam. It takes five minutes and it will absolutely become part of your morning ritual.

Ingredients (1 serving)
  • 1 tsp Vive Chocolate cocoa powder
  • 1 tsp sugar (or to taste)
  • 1 strong tea bag (Ceylon or Sabah tea)
  • 150ml hot water
  • 100ml full-cream evaporated milk
  • Pinch of salt
Method
  1. 1Brew the tea bag in hot water for 3 minutes. Remove and discard.
  2. 2Whisk in cocoa powder, sugar, and a pinch of salt until fully dissolved.
  3. 3Add evaporated milk and stir to combine.
  4. 4Pour back and forth between two tall glasses from a height to create the signature tarik foam.
  5. 5Serve immediately, hot.
💡 Vive Tip: Add a tiny pinch of cardamom or a drop of vanilla for an extra layer of warmth. Works equally well iced — just pour over a tall glass of ice after the tarik step.
02
🍮
Traditional Kuih
Cocoa Kuih Bingka Ubi

Kuih bingka ubi — the classic baked tapioca cake — is a Malaysian festive staple with its dense, chewy texture and natural sweetness. A tablespoon of cocoa powder added to the batter transforms it completely: giving it a beautiful dark colour, a gentle bitterness that balances the tapioca sweetness, and a depth that makes this traditional kuih taste like something entirely new while remaining unmistakably Malaysian.

Ingredients (8–10 pieces)
  • 500g grated cassava (ubi kayu)
  • 2 tbsp Vive Chocolate cocoa powder
  • 150ml coconut milk (santan)
  • 100g gula melaka, grated
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt
  • Butter or coconut oil for greasing
Method
  1. 1Preheat oven to 180°C. Grease a square baking tin.
  2. 2Squeeze excess liquid from grated cassava using a cloth.
  3. 3Whisk cocoa powder into warm coconut milk until smooth.
  4. 4Combine cassava, cocoa-coconut milk, gula melaka, eggs, vanilla, and salt. Mix well.
  5. 5Pour into tin and bake 45–55 minutes until set and slightly caramelised on top.
  6. 6Cool completely before slicing.
💡 Vive Tip: The gula melaka and cocoa combination is extraordinary — the palm sugar's caramel notes pair perfectly with the chocolate depth. Serve with a sprinkling of toasted coconut on top for texture.

Malaysian flavours and Malaysian cacao were always meant to find each other. It just took a little creativity.

— Vive Chocolate
03
🍚
Breakfast Favourite
Cocoa Overnight Oats with Pandan & Coconut

This recipe bridges Malaysian pantry staples — pandan, coconut milk, gula melaka — with the globally loved overnight oats format. The cocoa powder gives the oats a chocolatey richness from the very first spoonful, while pandan adds that unmistakably Southeast Asian green floral note. Prepared the night before, it is the most effortless nutritious breakfast you will ever make — and it tastes like a dessert.

Ingredients (1 serving)
  • 80g rolled oats
  • 1.5 tsp Vive Chocolate cocoa powder
  • 150ml coconut milk
  • 50ml water
  • 1 tbsp gula melaka, dissolved in 1 tbsp warm water
  • ½ tsp pandan extract (or 2 pandan leaves, blended)
  • Pinch of salt
  • Toppings: fresh mango, toasted coconut flakes, cacao nibs
Method
  1. 1Whisk cocoa powder into coconut milk until fully dissolved.
  2. 2Add oats, water, gula melaka syrup, pandan extract, and salt. Stir well.
  3. 3Transfer to a jar or container. Refrigerate overnight (at least 6 hours).
  4. 4In the morning, top with fresh mango, toasted coconut, and a handful of Vive cacao nibs for crunch.
  5. 5Eat cold straight from the jar.
💡 Vive Tip: The pandan and cocoa combination is genuinely special — green, floral, and chocolatey all at once. Prepare 2–3 jars on Sunday evening for a week of effortless healthy mornings.
04
🍰
Celebration Cake
Gula Melaka Chocolate Lava Cake

Chocolate lava cake is universally loved — but this version is unmistakably Malaysian. Gula melaka (palm sugar) replaces refined white sugar, adding deep caramel and toffee notes that pair beautifully with the cocoa. The result is a warm, molten-centred chocolate cake with a complexity that a standard lava cake simply cannot match. It looks impressively restaurant-quality but takes under 30 minutes from bowl to table.

Ingredients (4 individual cakes)
  • 100g Vive Chocolate dark chocolate bar, chopped
  • 3 tbsp Vive Chocolate cocoa powder
  • 100g butter, plus extra for greasing
  • 80g gula melaka, finely grated
  • 3 eggs + 3 egg yolks
  • 3 tbsp plain flour
  • Pinch of sea salt
  • Vanilla ice cream or fresh cream to serve
Method
  1. 1Preheat oven to 200°C. Butter 4 ramekins and dust with cocoa powder.
  2. 2Melt chocolate and butter together over a double boiler. Stir in gula melaka until dissolved.
  3. 3Whisk eggs and yolks into the chocolate mixture.
  4. 4Fold in cocoa powder, flour, and salt gently.
  5. 5Divide between ramekins. Bake 10–12 minutes — edges set, centre still soft.
  6. 6Rest 1 minute, invert onto plates, serve immediately.
💡 Vive Tip: These can be prepared up to 24 hours ahead and refrigerated unbaked. Just add 2 extra minutes to the baking time when cooking from cold. The gula melaka creates pockets of molten caramel inside — even more special than a standard lava cake.
05
🍖
Savoury Surprise
Cocoa-Spiced Beef Rendang

This is the recipe that always surprises people — and then immediately converts them. Cocoa powder has been used in savoury cooking for centuries in Mexico, where mole sauce combines cacao with chilli, spices, and meat to legendary effect. Malaysian rendang — with its rich coconut, galangal, lemongrass, and spice base — is a natural partner for cocoa. A single tablespoon of cocoa powder added to your rendang paste deepens the colour dramatically, adds an earthy complexity that rounds out the spices, and creates a richness that makes this already extraordinary dish taste even more layered and special.

Ingredients (4–6 servings)
  • 800g beef (chuck or shin), cut into chunks
  • 1 tbsp Vive Chocolate cocoa powder
  • 400ml coconut milk (santan pekat)
  • 4 stalks lemongrass, bruised
  • 6 kaffir lime leaves
  • 2 tbsp kerisik (toasted coconut)
  • 1 tbsp gula melaka
  • Salt to taste
  • Rempah paste: shallots, garlic, galangal, ginger, dried chillies, turmeric
Method
  1. 1Blend all rempah ingredients into a smooth paste.
  2. 2Fry rempah in oil until fragrant and oil separates (pecah minyak), about 10–15 minutes.
  3. 3Add beef and coat well in the rempah.
  4. 4Stir in cocoa powder — it will darken the paste immediately. Cook 2 minutes.
  5. 5Add coconut milk, lemongrass, and kaffir lime leaves. Bring to a boil.
  6. 6Simmer on low heat 1.5–2 hours, stirring occasionally, until beef is tender and gravy is very thick.
  7. 7Stir in kerisik and gula melaka. Season with salt. Cook until dry.
💡 Vive Tip: Do not add more than 1 tablespoon of cocoa — you want it to enhance the rendang, not dominate it. The cocoa should be a secret ingredient that people taste and can't quite identify, only knowing that the rendang is richer and more complex than any they've had before.
🍫
Related Reading
The Health Benefits of Dark Chocolate (Backed by Science) →

Final Thoughts

Malaysian Cacao Belongs in the Malaysian Kitchen

These five recipes are just a starting point. Cocoa powder is one of the most versatile ingredients in any kitchen — sweet or savoury, hot or cold, morning or evening. And when that cocoa powder is made from 100% Malaysian-grown cacao, processed without additives and with genuine care for quality, it brings something to your cooking that imported, commodity cocoa simply cannot: a flavour that is authentically, proudly ours.

We'd love to see what you create. Tag us on Instagram @vivesnack with your Malaysian cocoa creations — we feature our favourite community recipes every month, and your chocolate teh tarik or cocoa rendang might just be next.

Get Your Malaysian Cocoa Powder Today

100% Malaysian-grown cacao. No additives. Deep, natural flavour that transforms everything it touches — sweet or savoury.