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  2. Balado (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balado_(food)

    The ingredients are quite similar to sambal hot chili paste. However, unlike sambal, which is often treated as a separate dipping condiment, balado chili sauce is usually mixed and stir fried together with its main ingredients and treated as a dish. Balado is suitable to be served with various types of seafood, such as fried prawns, squid, fish ...

  3. Sambal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sambal

    Sambal goreng ati (with cow's or chicken liver, potato, and sometimes petai). An Indonesian dish. Sambal goreng teri kacang (with anchovy and peanuts). An Indonesian dish. Sambal goreng kering tempe (with tempeh). An Indonesian dish. Sambal goreng krecek (with cow or water buffalo skin cracker). A Javanese dish. Sambal goreng ati, fried liver ...

  4. Daun ubi tumbuk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daun_ubi_tumbuk

    The leaves are cooked in a fried spice paste consisting of a minimum of chilis and shallots, but usually some or all of ginger, galangal, candlenut, garlic, lemongrass, and other spices, along with coconut milk and ikan teri or anchovy. Daun ubi tumbuk is frequently cooked with cempokak, a small bitter aubergine.

  5. Tumpeng - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumpeng

    Tumpeng in a cone. The cone-shaped rice is surrounded by assorted Indonesian dishes, such as urap vegetables, ayam goreng (fried chicken), ayam bakar (grilled chicken), empal gepuk (sweet and spicy fried beef), abon sapi (beef floss), semur (beef stew in sweet soy sauce), teri kacang (anchovy with peanuts), fried prawn, telur pindang (boiled marble egg), shredded omelette, tempe orek (sweet ...

  6. Soto (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soto_(food)

    Soto Banjar – spiced with star anise, clove, cassia and lemongrass, and sour hot sambal, served with potato cakes. [14] Soto Banjarnegara or soto Krandegan – a beef soto in a yellow coconut milk soup and eaten with ketupat. [16] Soto Banyumas, sroto Banyumas or sroto Sokaraja – made special by its peanut sambal, usually eaten with ketupat ...

  7. Krechek - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krechek

    Krechek or krecek (Javanese: ꦏꦿꦺꦕꦺꦏ꧀) or sambal goreng krechek is a traditional Javanese cattle skin spicy stew dish from Yogyakarta and Central Java, Indonesia. [1] Traditionally it is made from the soft inner skin of cattle (cow or water buffalo), however, the most common recipe today uses readily available rambak or krupuk ...

  8. Krupuk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krupuk

    According to culinary historian Fadly Rahman, krupuk had existed in Java since the 9th or 10th century. [2] It was written in the Batu Pura Inscription as krupuk rambak, which refers to crackers made from cow or buffalo skin, that still exist today as krupuk kulit ("skin krupuk") and are usually used in a Javanese dish called krechek.

  9. Nasi ambeng - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasi_ambeng

    Nasi ambeng (from Javanese ꦤꦱꦶ ꦲꦩ꧀ꦧꦼꦁ 'nasi ambêng') is an Indonesian fragrant rice dish that consists of—but is not limited to [2] —steamed white rice, chicken curry or chicken stewed in soy sauce, beef or chicken rendang, sambal goreng (lit. fried sambal; a mildly spicy stir-fried relish commonly made with firm tofu, tempeh, and long beans [3]) urap, bergedel, and ...