Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Dish names usually combine the main ingredient followed with "balado", for example: Ayam balado (chicken balado) [4] Bada balado (anchovies balado) Baluik balado or belut balado (eel balado) Cumi balado (squid balado) [5] Dendeng balado (dendeng balado, thinly sliced dry fried beef) [6] Kantang balado or kentang balado (potato balado) [7]
The dish is traditionally prepared with the ayam kampung chicken, native to Indonesia. Apart from the cooked chicken, the dish is most commonly served with rice and is paired with a sambal and a vegetable lalab, typically consisting of cucumbers, basil leaves, and cabbage. [7]
Frying ayam goreng. Some versions of ayam goreng are neither coated in batter nor flour, but seasoned richly with various spices. [4] The spice mixture may vary among regions, but it usually consists of a combination of ground shallot, garlic, Indian bay leaves, turmeric, lemongrass, tamarind juice, candlenut, galangal, salt, and sugar.
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.
The Ayam Kampong (older spelling) or Ayam Kampung is the chicken breed reported from Indonesia and Malaysia. [1] The name means simply "free-range chicken" or literally "village chicken". In Indonesia and Malaysia, the term ayam kampung refer to indigenous chickens that are raised using traditional free range production techniques by almost ...
The famous recipe is Gurame goreng kipas, which is deep fried gourami with flesh spread like a fan. Various Ikan Asin, or salted fishes, which are mostly seafood dishes such as peda, jambal, pari , ikan asin bulu ayam, teri , and cumi asin (cuttlefish); also fresh water gabus . Bakakak hayam: A Sundanese-style grilled chicken
' Java noodles '), also called as mi jawa or bakmi jawa in Indonesia, or mee Jawa in Malaysia is a traditional Javanese style noodle, [1] commonly found in Indonesia and Malaysia. The dish is made of yellow noodle, chicken, vegetables, egg and spices. The recipe however, is slightly different between mie jawa in Indonesia and mee Jawa in Malaysia.
Indo cuisine is a fusion cooking and cuisine tradition, mainly existing in Indonesia and the Netherlands, as well as Belgium, South Africa and Suriname.This cuisine characterized of fusion cuisine that consists of original Indonesian cuisine with Eurasian-influences—mainly Dutch, also Portuguese, Spanish, French and British—and vice versa.