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Brenebon or sayur kacang merah – red kidney bean soup, served in broth made from boiled pig's trotters, beef or chicken. [10] Sayur asem – uses tamarind as a main ingredient, along with vegetables, chayote, bilimbi and melinjo [7] Sayur bayam or sayur bening – spinach and corn in clear soup flavoured with temu kunci.
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. Fried shallots and celery can be added to sayur sop. Sayur sop is comfort food commonly served with steamed rice, tempeh and corn fritter.
Sayur lodeh is a popular Indonesian vegetable soup prepared from vegetables cooked in coconut milk, [1] and is most often associated with Javanese cuisine. [2 ...
Several variations exist, including sayur asem Jakarta (a version from the Betawi people of Jakarta), sayur asem kangkung (a version which includes water spinach), sayur asem ikan asin (includes salted fish, usually snakehead murrel), sayur asem talas (with taro and its leaves), and sayur asem kacang merah (consists of red beans and green beans in tamarind and beef stock).
Sup kambing or sop kambing (Indonesian and Malay for 'goat soup') is a Southeast Asian mutton soup, commonly found in Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is prepared with goat meat , tomato, celery, spring onion , ginger, candlenut and lime leaf, its broth is yellowish in colour. [ 1 ]
Miso soup (味噌汁 or お味噌汁, miso-shiru or omiso-shiru, お-/o- being honorific) is a traditional Japanese soup consisting of miso paste mixed with a dashi stock.It is commonly served as part of an ichijū-sansai (一汁三菜) meal, meaning "one soup, three dishes," a traditional Japanese meal structure that includes rice, soup, and side dishes.
Sarawakian cuisine is a regional cuisine of Malaysia.Similar to the rest of Malaysian cuisine, Sarawak food is based on staples such as rice.There is also a great variety of other ingredients and food preparations due to the influence of the state's varied geography and indigenous cultures quite distinct from the regional cuisines of the Peninsular Malaysia.
A seller at an angkringan, preparing tempeh with wrapped nasi kucing visible in the foreground. Nasi kucing is often sold at a low price (sometimes as low as Rp 1,000 for nasi kucing [5] and Rp 4,000 for sega macan [4]) at small, road-side food stalls called angkringan, which are frequented by working-class people, or wong cilik, including pedicab and taxi drivers, students, and street ...