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The wet krupuk is boiled or stir fried with scrambled egg, vegetables, and other protein sources; either chicken, seafood (prawn, fish and squid), or slices of beef sausages or bakso, stir-fried with spicy sauces including garlic, shallot, kencur, kecap manis (sweet soy sauce), and sambal chili sauce. [1]
Cenil, sometimes also called as cendil or cetil is a traditional snack made from tapioca dough and sugar, usually added with food colouring, and shaped into small balls or cubes, coated and consumed with grated coconut.
On the other hand, ayam goreng kecap has thicker sweet soy sauce and is often served with slices of fresh lime or a splash of lime juice. The main difference is probably its water content: although still quite moist, both ayam kecap and ayam goreng kecap are usually dryer and use thicker soy sauce, compared to semur ayam, which is more watery.
Cendol / ˈ tʃ ɛ n d ɒ l / is an iced sweet dessert that contains pandan-flavoured green rice flour jelly, [1] coconut milk, and palm sugar syrup. [2] It is popular in the Southeast Asian nations of Indonesia, [3] Malaysia, [4] Brunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Philippines, and Myanmar.
Perkedel are vegetable fritters from Indonesian cuisine. [1] Most common perkedel are made from mashed potatoes, [2] [3] yet there are other popular variations, such as perkedel jagung (peeled maize perkedel) and perkedel tahu (tofu perkedel) and perkedel ikan (minced fish perkedel).
Pempek tunu: charcoal-grilled pempek stuffed with ebi, sweet kecap sauce and chilli sauce. Pempek model (model iwak): tofu wrapped inside pempek dough. Similar to pempek kapal selam, but egg is replaced with tofu. Instead of served with cuko, it is served in shrimp soup. Pempek uyen/bujan: curly pempek made from taro and fish from Bangka.
The term kue pancong is usually associated with the Betawi cuisine of Jakarta. [1] The same snack (with some variation) is also referred to as kue pancung in parts of central Sumatra, [2] gunjing in South Sumatra, [3] bandros in Sundanese-speaking area, [4] gandos in Javanese-speaking area, [5] and buroncong in Makassar.