Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Balinese Babi guling or roasted suckling pig Chicken betutu (two left) and duck betutu (four right) hanged in a restaurant in Ngurah Rai Airport, Bali. Betutu, steamed or roasted poultry (chicken or duck) highly seasoned. A specialty of Bali. Babi Guling, roasted suckling pig, famous in Bali.
Daun ubi tumbuk (Indonesian for "pounded cassava leaves") is a vegetable dish commonly found in Indonesia, made from pounded cassava leaves. In Indonesian , daun means leaf, ubi refers to cassava, and tumbuk means pounded.
Chicken betutu (two left) and duck betutu (four right) hanged in a restaurant in Ngurah Rai Airport, Bali. The term betutu is the Balinese word for a certain spice mixture which consist of shallots, garlic, turmeric, ginger, wild ginger, galangal, candle nuts, chili peppers, shrimp paste, and peanuts all finely ground using mortar and pestle.
Indonesian cuisine is a collection of various regional culinary traditions that formed in the archipelagic nation of Indonesia.There are a wide variety of recipes and cuisines in part because Indonesia is composed of approximately 6,000 populated islands of the total 17,508 in the world's largest archipelago, [1] [2] with more than 600 ethnic groups.
Dioscorea alata – also called ube (/ ˈ uː b ɛ,-b eɪ /), ubi, purple yam, or greater yam, among many other names – is a species of yam (a tuber). The tubers are usually a vivid violet - purple to bright lavender in color (hence the common name), but some range in color from cream to plain white.
Nasi bali: Nationwide, but especially popular in Bali Rice dish Balinese-style of mixed rice. The tastes are often distinctly local, punctuated by basa genep. Nasi bebek: Chinese Indonesian Rice dish, meat dish Made of either braised or roasted duck and plain white rice. Nasi bebek goreng Nationwide, but especially popular in East Java and Bali
Babi panggang Karo usually accompanied by clear pork bone soup, processed pork blood as dipping sauce, daun ubi tumbuk or mashed sweet potato leaves, and tuak or a drink of nira sap. [4] The three dishes are served with plain rice and a sambal andaliman, made from fresh Sichuan pepper. [5]
Balado is a type of hot and spicy bumbu (spice mixture) found in Minang cuisine of West Sumatra, Indonesia. [1] It has since spread through the rest of Indonesia and also Malaysia especially in Negeri Sembilan. [2]