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However, other cuts of pork meat or offal may also be used in similar soy sauce-based recipes. Derivatives of this recipe that substitute the use of pork belly include sengkel babi kecap, which uses pig trotters, and sekba, which is a Chinese Indonesian pork offal stew that may also include pork liver, nose, tongue, ear, tripe, and intestines.
Worcestershire sauce, known as salsa inglesa ('English sauce') or salsa Perrins ('Perrins sauce'), is very popular in El Salvador. Many restaurants provide a bottle on each table, and the per capita annual consumption is 2.5 ounces (71 g), the highest in the world as of 1996.
Sweet soy sauce is also a popular dipping sauce, mixed with chopped shallot and bird's eye chili and served as a dipping sauce for tahu goreng (fried tofu). Steamed rice topped with fried egg and drizzled with sweet soy sauce was a popular meal among Indonesians in the 1990s and 2000s, especially children.
Swikee oh, kodok oh or swike kuah tauco, frog legs in fermented soybean sauce soup. Swikee goreng mentega, stir fried frog legs in butter or margarine with Worcestershire sauce; Swikee kecap, stir fried frog legs in sweet soy sauce; Swikee saus tomat, stir fried frog legs in tomato sauce; Swikee asam manis, fried frog legs in sweet and sour sauce
In Indonesia, soy sauce is known as kecap (old spelling: ketjap), which is a catch-all term for fermented sauces, and cognate to the English word "ketchup". [53] The most popular type of soy sauce in Indonesian cuisine is kecap manis or sweet soy sauce. The term kecap is also used to describe other condiments and sauces of a similar appearance ...
Kecap inggris (Worcestershire sauce) – fermented sauce made of anchovies and spices. Lengkare – savoury and sweet shrimp paste, similar to terasi . Mayones (mayonnaise) – thick cold condiment or dressing commonly used in sandwiches , salads or fritters , such as selat solo , bistik jawa and gorengan .
Ketchup and mustard on fries Various grades of U.S. maple syrup. A condiment is a supplemental food (such as a sauce or powder) that is added to some foods to impart a particular flavor, enhance their flavor, [1] or, in some cultures, to complement the dish, but that cannot stand alone as a dish.
The recipe follows the production of Indonesian kecap manis (sweet soy sauce). Historically, soy sauce production is linked to Chinese influence in the archipelago. However, Indonesian Javanese version of soy sauce has its own twist, which is a generous addition of thick liquid palm sugar (gula jawa) with consistency of molasses. [5]