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Bubur ayam (Indonesian and Malay for "chicken congee") is a chicken congee dish served in Southeast Asia. It is rice congee with shredded chicken meat served with some condiments, such as chopped scallion, crispy fried shallot, celery, tongcay or chai poh (preserved vegetables), fried soybean, crullers (youtiao, known as cakwe in Indonesia and cakoi in Malaysia), both salty and sweet soy sauce ...
Kue semprong, the Asian egg roll, the love letter, sapit, sepit, kue Belanda, or kapit [1] is an Indonesian traditional wafer snack (kue or kuih) made by clasping egg batter using an iron mold (Waffle iron) which is heated up on a charcoal stove. It is commonly found in Indonesia, [2] Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei
Tinutuan is a congee made from rice, pumpkin, and sweet potato or cassava cooked up into a pulp. [4] It is then mixed with corn kernels and various leafy vegetables such as gedi (Abelmoschus manihot), kangkung (water spinach), kemangi (lemon basil), melinjo (Gnetum gnemon), and bayam (). [5]
Roti telur, with an egg (telur) stuffing; Roti jantan, roti telur with two-egg stuffing; Roti bawang, with onion (bawang) stuffing; Roti telur bawang, with eggs and onions; Roti boom (or bom; 'bomb bread'), a smaller but thicker roti, with the dough wound in a spiral; served with sugar and margarine, or with curry.
Kwetiau ayam, kuetiau ayam or sometimes kwetiau ayam kuah (Indonesian for 'chicken kway teow') is a common Chinese Indonesian dish of seasoned flat rice noodles topped with diced chicken meat . It is often described as a kwetiau version of the popular mie ayam (chicken noodles), and especially common in Indonesia , and can trace its origin to ...
Opor ayam is also a popular dish for lebaran or Eid ul-Fitr, usually eaten with ketupat, sambal goreng ati (beef liver in sambal), and sayur labu siam (chayote cooked in coconut milk). Opor ayam is a food that is very well known in Indonesia. This cuisine has been widely known in other regions, almost all parts of Indonesia.
Bubur cha cha, also spelled as bubur cha-cha or dubo jiajie, is a Betawi and Malay dessert and breakfast dish in Indonesian cuisine, Malaysian cuisine, Singaporean cuisine and Phuket cuisine (Thailand) prepared using pearled sago, sweet potatoes, yams, bananas, coconut milk, pandan leaves, sugar and salt.
In the Colonial era, kerak telor was a privileged food and was served in big parties for the colonial government or rich Betawi.According to the gastronomy expert, Suryatini N. Ganie, kerak telor was created in order to make glutinous rice more tasty and satisfying. [1]