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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.
Soto Banjar – spiced with star anise, clove, cassia and lemongrass, and sour hot sambal, served with potato cakes. [14] Soto Banjarnegara or soto Krandegan – a beef soto in a yellow coconut milk soup and eaten with ketupat. [16] Soto Banyumas, sroto Banyumas or sroto Sokaraja – made special by its peanut sambal, usually eaten with ketupat ...
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Soto padang is a kind of clear, non coconut milked soto, which usually contains beef, onion, potatoes, and white vermicelli noodles as its main ingredients. [1] This soto is a culinary specialty originating from West Sumatra, Indonesia. [1] [2] [3] The meat used for the soto can be boiled and cut, [3] or it can be fried until crunchy. [1]
Indomie is an instant noodle brand produced by the Indonesian company Indofood, [1] the largest instant noodle manufacturer in the world with 16 factories. Over 28 billion packets of Indomie are produced annually, [citation needed] and exported to more than 90 countries.
Geprek Bensu is an Indonesia-based fast food restaurant chain primarily serving ayam geprek. As of December 2018, the chain had 110 franchises in Indonesia, employing an estimated 3,500 people. [ 1 ] The chain also operates in Hong Kong and Malaysia , [ 2 ] and plans to expand to Taiwan and the Netherlands .
Pecel ayam is made with chicken and coconut sauce cooked in salted tamarind water. The sauce requires grain coconut, garlic, onions, peanuts, cutchery, kaffir lime leaves, fried nutmeg, a sachet of shrimp paste and optionally for added spice, cayenne or chili. Basil leaf and lime juice may also be added. Sugar, salt, and MSG are also added. [2] [3]
Budu (Jawi: بودو; Thai: บูดู, RTGS: budu, pronounced) is an anchovy sauce and one of the best known fermented seafood products in Kelantan in Malaysia, the Natuna Islands (where it is called pedek or pedok), South Sumatra, Bangka Island and Western Kalimantan in Indonesia (where it is called rusip), and Southern Thailand.