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Nasi goreng buah merah, Papuan fried rice with extract of buah merah (Pandanus conoideus) [59] Nasi goreng buah naga (red pitaya fried rice) [60] [61] Nasi goreng cakalang (with skipjack tuna), speciality of Manado [62] Nasi goreng cumi (with squid) [63] Nasi goreng daging asap (with smoked beef) [64]
Like many varieties of the Chinense species, the Naga Morich is a small-medium shrub with large leaves, small, five-petaled flowers, and blisteringly hot fruit. It differs from the Bhut Jolokia and Bih Jolokia in that it is slightly smaller with a pimply ribbed texture as opposed to the smoother flesh of the other two varieties.
A cup of Java coffee, Javanese kopi tubruk. This is a list of Indonesian drinks.The most common and popular Indonesian drinks and beverages are teh and kopi ().Indonesian households commonly serve teh manis (sweet tea) or kopi tubruk (coffee mixed with sugar and hot water and poured straight in the glass without separating out the coffee residue) to guests.
Pandanus conoideus is a plant in the Pandanus family from New Guinea.Its fruit is eaten in Papua New Guinea and Papua, Indonesia.The fruit has several names: marata, marita in Papua New Guinea local language, kuansu in Dani of Wamena [1] [2] or buah merah ("red fruit") in common Indonesian.
The Naga Mircha is a variety of ghost pepper grown in the Indian state of Nagaland, belonging to the nightshade family Solanaceae. [4] It is the first chilli or even the first of goods of any kind from Nagaland to be awarded a GI tag.
A typical Naga meal consists of rice, a meat dish, one or two boiled vegetable dishes including the leaves, and a chutney/pickle (Tathu). Rice is the main carbohydrate source in the Naga diet and this region produces a number of prized rice varieties, but rice is also imported into the region from other states.
Naga in Javanese language means "a big snake; a dragon". [4] It refers to a mythical green snake in the Old Java that brings fertility to the earth. The word is derived from a Sanskrit word naga. [5] Sari means "beautiful; fertile; patient" or "seed; flower". [4] Nagasari literally means "the seed of the dragon" or "the beautiful dragon". Since ...
The beans of other Parkia species (for example, Parkia javanica and Parkia singularis) are also popular as culinary ingredient in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, Laos, southern Thailand, Burma, and northeastern India, especially Assam, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram and Tripura (consumed mostly by the Tiprasa people).