Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Soto ayam, Indonesian counterpart of chicken soup.. This is a list of Indonesian soups.Indonesian cuisine is diverse, in part because Indonesia is composed of approximately 6,000 populated islands of the total 18,000 in the world's largest archipelago, [1] with more than 600 ethnic groups. [2]
Sop saudara is an Indonesian beef soup or buffalo soup specialty of Makassar city, South Sulawesi. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The soup is commonly served with steamed rice and ikan bolu bakar (grilled milkfish ).
Soto ayam is a traditional Indonesian dish with ingredients such as chicken, lontong, noodles, and rice vermicelli. Soto ayam is also popular in Singapore, [4] Malaysia [5] and Suriname, where it is made with slightly different ingredients and known as saoto. Turmeric is added as one of its main ingredients which makes the yellow chicken broth.
Kwetiau ayam, kuetiau ayam or sometimes kwetiau ayam kuah (Indonesian for 'chicken kway teow') is a common Chinese Indonesian dish of seasoned flat rice noodles topped with diced chicken meat . It is often described as a kwetiau version of the popular mie ayam (chicken noodles), and especially common in Indonesia , and can trace its origin to ...
Sayur sop is made up of carrot, cabbage, cauliflower, potato, tomato, broccoli, leek, mushroom, snap bean, macaroni and bakso or sausage, spiced with black pepper, garlic and shallot in chicken or beef broth.
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] Talua balado or telur balado (egg balado) [8] Taruang balado (eggplant balado) [9]
Lontong is an Bruneian dish made of compressed rice cake in the form of a cylinder wrapped inside a banana leaf, [1] [2] commonly found in Brunei, Malaysia, and Singapore.Rice is rolled inside a banana leaf and boiled, then cut into small cakes as a staple food replacement for steamed rice.
Nasi campur is a ubiquitous dish around Indonesia and as diverse as the Indonesian archipelago itself, with regional variations. [1] There is no exact rule, recipe, or definition of what makes nasi campur, since Indonesians and, by large, Southeast Asians commonly consume steamed rice, added with side dishes consisting of vegetables and meat.