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Sup krim kepiting – a crab creamy soup. Sup udang pedas – hot and spicy shrimp soup, made of shrimp, dried shrimp, fishballs, mushroom, carrot, scallion, garlic and chili pepper. [14] Tekwan – surimi fishcake akin to pempek, bihun rice noodle, jicama and mushroom soup, specialty of Palembang.
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 ]
Haejang-guk [1] (Korean: 해장국; Hanja: 解酲국) or hangover soup [1] refers to every kind of guk or soup eaten as a hangover cure in Korean cuisine.It means "soup to chase a hangover" [2] and is also called sulguk (술국).
The origin of the dish can be traced to the Javanese people's tradition of Java.According to Javanese Kejawen beliefs, sayur lodeh is an essential part of the slametan ceremony and it is believed as tolak bala, to ward off possible danger and disaster. [5]
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.
Curry mee (Malay: mi kari; simplified Chinese: 咖喱面; traditional Chinese: 咖喱麵; pinyin: Gālímiàn; Jyutping: Gaa3 Lei1 Min6; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Ka-lí-mī) is a Maritime Southeast Asian spicy noodle soup garnished with various toppings.
Bihun goreng, bee hoon goreng or mee hoon goreng refers to a dish of fried noodles cooked with rice vermicelli in both the Indonesian and Malay languages. [1] In certain countries, such as Singapore, the term goreng is occasionally substituted with its English equivalent for the name of the dish.