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Mie ayam biasa or mie asin common salty mie ayam, which are the common savoury or salty noodle which use salty soy sauce and chicken oil. Mie yamin or mie manis is the sweet variant. For the sweet noodles, the cook will put additional sweet soy sauce kecap manis , so the appearance will be a little bit brownish.
Mie Bangladesh or Bangladeshi noodles (Indonesian: mi meaning "noodle" [1]), also called nyemek noodles [2] is a dish of Indonesian cuisine. It is a variation on mi goreng and originated in the Indonesian city of Lhokseumawe, Aceh .
Mie ayam, chicken noodle, yellow wheat noodle topped with diced chicken meat, seasoned with soy sauce, and usually served with a chicken broth soup. Mie campur or bakmie campur , assorted meat noodle; yellow wheat noodle topped with an assortment of Chinese barbecue, such as Char Siew, crispy roast pork and sweet pork sausage.
Mie goreng jawa, Javanese-style of mie goreng (also known as mie goreng tek-tek by local) with drier and sweeter version due to addition of sweet soy sauce. [ 9 ] Mie hokkien , fried noodle dish, consists of egg noodles and rice noodles stir-fried with egg, slices of pork, prawns and squid, and served and garnished with vegetables, small pieces ...
Bakmi or bami is a type of wheat noodle with a slightly pale yellow colour. The most common type of bakmi in Indonesia is mi kuning or 'yellow noodles' made from finely ground wheat, sometimes enriched with eggs as mi telur (egg noodle) made into dough, ground and run through holes to create noodle strings.
Ifumi is an Indonesian crispy deep fried thick noodle dish, popular in Maritime Southeast Asia, served in a thick savoury sauce with pieces of meat or seafood and vegetables.
Mie nyemek jawa The third variant is the mie lethek jawa or mie nyemek jawa, both names in Javanese language denotes "moist" and "soft", which means the noodle is soft and moist, but not as soupy as Mie Godhog Jawa. [8] Its moist degree approximately between boiled noodle and fried noodle.
Hokkien mee can refer to five distinct dishes, with each being ubiquitous in specific localities in Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia. The dishes are all indigenous to the region and not known in Fujian itself, although they are all thought to have descended from lor mee (卤面), a staple of Fujianese cooking.