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The specific lemper filled with seasoned shredded chicken is called lemper ayam (lit: chicken lemper). [1] The meat filling is rolled inside the rice, in a fashion similar to an egg roll ; this is in turn rolled and wrapped inside a banana leaf , oil paper, plastic sheet, or tinfoil to make a packet ready for serving.
Burasa, rice dumpling cooked in coconut milk wrapped in banana leaf, served with serundeng. Serundeng can be mixed with meat in dishes such as serundeng daging (beef serundeng), [8] sprinkled on top of other dishes such as soto soup, ketupat [6] or covered all over ketan (sticky rice).
Rendang ayam: chicken rendang. Rendang ayam goreng: fried chicken rendang. [151] The popularity of this rendang skyrocketed mainly due to the "rendangate" controversy in 2018. [152] [153] Rendang daging or Rendang Rembau: dark, woody coloured meat rendang. Traditionally made using water buffalo meat. These days, beef is commonly used instead.
Se'i may be derived from a variety of meats, with pork (se'i babi), beef (se'i sapi) or game animals such as venison (se'i rusa) as common offerings. Today, the most popular se'i meat is pork. [2] Se'i uses thin, sliced cuts of meat utilizing a mixture of salt and spices and smoked. Texturally, it is comparable to bacon, albeit thicker.
Semur is an Indonesian meat stew (mainly beef) braised in thick brown gravy.It is commonly found in Indonesian cuisine. [1] The main ingredients in the gravy are sweet soy sauce, shallots, onions, garlic, ginger, candlenut, nutmeg, and cloves (and sometimes with black pepper, coriander, cumin, and cinnamon).
Bakso ayam: chicken bakso; Bakso babi: pork meatball; Bakso bakar: grilled and skewered bakso, prepared to satay; Bakso beranak: big meatball filled with small meatballs; Bakso bola tenis tennis ball-sized bakso, either filled with hard-boiled egg as bakso telur or filled with tetelan which includes pieces of spare beef meat and fat or urat ...
Lamprais, also spelled "lumprice", "lampraise" or "lumprais", is a Sri Lankan dish that was introduced by the country's Dutch Burgher population. [1] [2] Lamprais is an Anglicised derivative of the Dutch word lomprijst, [3] which loosely translated means a packet or lump of rice, and it is also believed the dish has roots in the Indonesia dish lemper.
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