Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Kue semar mendem, variant of lemper, instead wrapped with banana leaf, while the glutinous rice is filled with chicken, fish or meat floss, wrapped inside thin egg omelette. Kue serabi, pancake that is made from rice flour with coconut milk or shredded coconut as an emulsifier. Kue soes, a baked pastry filled with soft and moist cream.
Nasi liwet Sunda, a “one pot” dish consisting of rice, and seasoned with spices like galangal, lemon grass, and Indonesian bay leaves. To further enhance the flavour, usually parts of a salted fish added as well. [1]
Oncom can be prepared and cooked in various ways. It can be simply deep fried as gorengan fritters, seasoned and cooked in a banana leaf pouch as pepes, or roasted, seasoned, and mixed with steamed rice as nasi tutug oncom. [5]
Semar mendem which is lemper wrapped in thin omelette. A variant snack almost identical to lemper is called semar mendem. Both are glutinous rice filled with shredded seasoned chicken. Instead of banana leaf wrapping, semar mendem uses a thin omelette made from egg and flour as wrapper, hence rendering the whole package edible.
Tutug oncom (from Sundanese tutug oncom) is an Indonesian style rice dish, made of rice mixed with oncom fermented beans, [1] originally from Tasikmalaya, West Java. [2] It is usually wrapped in banana leaves and served with various side dishes.
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 ...
Seblak (Sundanese: ᮞᮨᮘᮣᮊ᮪) is an Sundanese savoury and spicy dish, originating from the Sundanese region in West Java, Indonesia.Made of wet kurupuk (traditional Indonesian crackers) cooked with protein sources (egg, chicken, seafood or beef) in spicy sauce. [1]
Cendol / ˈ tʃ ɛ n d ɒ l / is an iced sweet dessert that contains pandan-flavoured green rice flour jelly, [1] coconut milk, and palm sugar syrup. [2] It is popular in the Southeast Asian nations of Indonesia, [3] Malaysia, [4] Brunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Philippines, and Myanmar.