ingredients:
3 slices of meat grilled stingray
300 grams of tempeh, cut according to taste
2 tablespoons oil, for frying
2 large red chilies, sliced
1 cm galangal, crushed
1 stalk lemongrass, crushed
2 bay leaves
2 lime leaves
1 cm ginger, crushed
400 ml coconut milk from 1 coconut
3 pieces of tomatoes, sliced
Softened seasoning:
2 large red chilies
2 red onions
1 clove of garlic
1 cm kencur
1 tsp salt
1 teaspoon pepper
1 tsp sugar
How to make
Rinse and drain stingray
Heat oil, saute the ingredients are mashed with spices sliced, galangal, lemongrass, bay leaves, lime leaves and ginger until fragrant.
Put grilled stingray and tempeh, and cook until the sauce menyusust.
Put tomatoes, cook for a while and lift.
Saturday, April 18, 2015
Grilled Fish Recipe Gurame
Grilled Fish Recipe Gurame
Materials
ingredients:
2 tail carp @ 750 g
2 limes
4 tablespoons cooking oil
Ground spices:
4 spring onions
2 cm ginger
1 tsp salt
Seasoning topical:
6 tablespoons soy sauce
3 cloves garlic, crushed
3 red onions, puree
2 tablespoons cooking oil, mix all ingredients
sambal:
8 curly red chilies
10 pieces of cayenne pepper
1 tsp salt
1 tomato red
1 tsp sugar
How to make
Clean the fish, slice the fish left the right side. Marinate the fish with lemon juice.
Apply smooth flavor in fish and let the spices to infuse for 15 minutes.
Turn on the charcoal until it reaches a high temperature, grilled fish until cooked while occasionally smeared seasoning dauber.
Sambal: chili stir fry all the ingredients, except sugar and salt, until wilted. Puree with sugar and salt.
Serve alongside grilled fish sauces.
Materials
ingredients:
2 tail carp @ 750 g
2 limes
4 tablespoons cooking oil
Ground spices:
4 spring onions
2 cm ginger
1 tsp salt
Seasoning topical:
6 tablespoons soy sauce
3 cloves garlic, crushed
3 red onions, puree
2 tablespoons cooking oil, mix all ingredients
sambal:
8 curly red chilies
10 pieces of cayenne pepper
1 tsp salt
1 tomato red
1 tsp sugar
How to make
Clean the fish, slice the fish left the right side. Marinate the fish with lemon juice.
Apply smooth flavor in fish and let the spices to infuse for 15 minutes.
Turn on the charcoal until it reaches a high temperature, grilled fish until cooked while occasionally smeared seasoning dauber.
Sambal: chili stir fry all the ingredients, except sugar and salt, until wilted. Puree with sugar and salt.
Serve alongside grilled fish sauces.
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
Nasi goreng or Indonesian fried rice
Nasi goreng or Indonesian fried rice
is one of the most requested recipes on Rasa Malaysia. I have received
many emails from readers requesting for a nasi goreng recipe. For those
who are anxiously awaiting a nasi goreng post, wait no more as I have
gotten just the perfect nasi goreng recipe for you.
Adapted from James Oseland’s Cradle of Flavor coobook—a bible for authentic Indonesian and Malaysian/Singapore cuisines—this nasi goreng is the Javanese version of fried rice. As Jim indicated in his cookbook, a truly authentic nasi goreng Indonesia is plain and simple, consisting of leftover rice stir-fried with a flavoring paste. Ingredients such as shrimp, meat, and vegetables are rarely, if ever, added to it.
While nasi goreng is available in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore, the Indonesian version is my favorite. Topped with a fried egg (a distinctive note of Indonesian’s version), nasi goreng is a meal that is both hearty and gratifying. Making nasi goreng also reminded me of my fond memories while traveling in Indonesia—a country with vibrant and colorful culinary traditions which I intend to explore more in the near future.
Adapted from James Oseland’s Cradle of Flavor coobook—a bible for authentic Indonesian and Malaysian/Singapore cuisines—this nasi goreng is the Javanese version of fried rice. As Jim indicated in his cookbook, a truly authentic nasi goreng Indonesia is plain and simple, consisting of leftover rice stir-fried with a flavoring paste. Ingredients such as shrimp, meat, and vegetables are rarely, if ever, added to it.
While nasi goreng is available in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore, the Indonesian version is my favorite. Topped with a fried egg (a distinctive note of Indonesian’s version), nasi goreng is a meal that is both hearty and gratifying. Making nasi goreng also reminded me of my fond memories while traveling in Indonesia—a country with vibrant and colorful culinary traditions which I intend to explore more in the near future.
INDONESIAN TRADISIONAL FOOD GO PUBLIC --AGEL FOOD
1. Nasi Goreng
As one of the country’s signature dishes, nasi goreng
is definitely Indonesians’ favorite. A plate of stirred fried rice
complemented with eggs, prawns (chicken, salted dried-fish, goat meat,
or anything of your choice), chilli, and veggies will surely make your
mouth water. Don’t forget the kerupuk.
2. Mie Goreng
Fried noodles is also on top of Indonesian’s favorite list. Mie goreng is usually served with the same complementary ingredients as nasi goreng. The taste is competitive!
3. Mie Ayam
If you’re starting to notice that mie
is a popular dish here, it’s because it is! This another variation of
noodle dish is served with chicken broth soup. It is usually topped with
sweet seasoned chicken, scallion, kai choy, and dumplings.
4. Bakso
Bakso is Indonesian meat balls
served in chicken broth soup, rice vermicelli or yellow noodles
(depends on your liking), sprinkled with fried shallots, celery, and of
course sambal.
FOOD INDONESIAN FENOMENAL AND GO PUPLIC, ANGEL FOOD
1. Sambal
While technically more of a condiment, the chili-based sauce known as sambal is a staple at all Indonesian tables.Dishes are not complete unless they have a hearty dollop of the stuff, a combination of chilies, sharp fermented shrimp paste, tangy lime juice, sugar and salt all pounded up with mortar and pestle.
So beloved is sambal, some restaurants have made it their main attraction, with options that include young mango, mushroom and durian.
Try the sambal at Pedas Abis (Waroeng Spesial Sambal; Jl.RM.Said No.39 Solo) or fresh sambal mata at Le Seminyak (Pacific Place, level 5; +62 (0)21 5140 0610)
2. Satay
These tasty meat skewers cook up over coals so hot they need fans to waft the smoke away.Whether it’s chicken, goat, mutton or rabbit, the scrappy morsels get marinated in turmeric, barbecued and then bathed in a hearty dose of peanut sauce.
Other nations now lay claim to sate, but Indonesians consider it a national dish conceived by street vendors and popularized by Arab traders.
Each vendor seeks distinction, but "sate madura" –- served with rice cakes (ketupat) and diced cucumber and onion -– is distinguished by its boat-shaped street carts.
For legendary satay that dates to the 1950s, try Sate Ragusa (Jl. Veteran 1 No. 10) and cleanse the palate after with Ragusa’s signature spaghetti ice cream.
3. Bakso
A favorite among students, this savory meatball noodle soup gained international fame when U.S. President Barack Obama remembered it as one of his favorites during a visit to Jakarta last November.It takes on many forms; meatballs –- springy or rubbery, the size of golf balls or bigger -– are made from chicken, beef, pork or some amorphous combination of them all. Sold mostly from pushcarts called kaki lima, bakso comes garnished with fried shallots, boiled egg and wontons.
For an authentic experience, grab a plastic stool near any sidewalk bakso stand or slurp away indoors at Bakso Lapangan Tembak Senayan, near Senayan City Mall.
4. Soto
This traditional meat soup comprises a broth and ingredients that vary across the archipelago.Common street versions are made of a simple, clear soup flavored with chicken, goat or beef. In Jakarta, home of the indigenous Betawi, soto Betawi garners fame with its sweet, creamy, coconut-milk base.
Top it with crispy shallots and fried garlic, and as much or little sambal as your taste buds can take.
For stylish street food in air-conditioned bliss hit up Kafe Betawi (Jl. MH. Thamrin No. 1, Grand Indonesia; +62 (0)21 2358 0501). Or for an East Javanese version, try Soto Madura (Jl. Juanda No.16).
5. Nasi goreng
Considered Indonesia’s national dish, this take on Asian fried rice is often made with sweet, thick soy sauce called kecap (pronounced ketchup) and garnished with acar, pickled cucumber and carrots.To add an element of fun to your dining experience, try nasi gila (literally :crazy rice") and see how many different kinds of meat you can find buried among the grains –- yes, those are hot dog slices.
For a perfect oil-slicked entrée head to Menteng Plaza (Jl. HOS Cokroaminoto), where a gaggle of kaki limas and buskers provide entertainment.
6. Gado-gado
Literally “mix-mix,” the term gado-gado is often used to describe situations that are all mixed up -– Jakarta, for instance, is a gado-gado city.As a food, however, it is one of Indonesia’s best-known dishes, essentially a vegetable salad bathed in the country’s classic peanut sauce.
At its base are boiled long beans, spinach, potato, corn, egg and bean sprouts coupled with cucumber, tofu and tempe.
Gado-gado gets sweeter as you travel eastward through Indonesia -- but Jakartans swear by the cashew sauce at Gado-Gado Boplo (Jalan Panglima Polim 4; +62 (0)21 724 8334).
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