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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.
In some restaurants, roti canai (which is usually served with curry) might also be served with gulai. The gulai sauce found in Minangkabau, Acehnese, and Malay cuisine usually has a thicker consistency than the gulai sauce found in Java which is thinner, served in soup-like dishes containing pieces of mutton, beef or offal.
The word "mutabar" is the original name for the particular dish referred to in other languages and dialects as "murtabak." "Mutabar" is an amalgam of two words, "muta" (being the Keralite word for egg, a significant component of the dish) and "bar," an abbreviated form of the word barota, or "bratha roti" (the bread).
A Thai "โรตีกล้วยไข่ /rɒtiː klûaj kʰàj/": roti with banana and egg, drizzled with sweetened condensed milk Roti Telur and Teh Tarik in Malaysia. In Indonesia and Malaysia , the term encompasses all forms of bread, including Western-style bread, as well as the traditional Indian breads.
Roti tisu is a thinner and crispier version of the traditional roti canai or roti prata. It is as thin as a piece of 40–50 cm round-shaped tissue. Roti tisu is available at most local Mamak stalls in Malaysia and Singapore [1] and may be coated with sweet substances, such as sugar and kaya (jam), or eaten with condiments such as ice cream.
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.
Telur pindang or pindang eggs are hard-boiled eggs cooked in the pindang process, originating from Javanese cuisine, Indonesia, and popular in Malay as well as Palembang cuisine. The eggs are boiled slowly in water mixed with salt , soy sauce , shallot skins, teak leaf, and other spices.
Kaasstengels are not to be confused with Kaastengels, a Dutch brand of deep fried fingerfood. [citation needed] Kaastengels resemble spring rolls the size of a finger, filled with cheese.