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Bumbu kacang (peanut sauce) features in many Indonesian signature dishes, such as satay, [6] gado-gado, karedok, ketoprak, rujak and pecel, or Chinese-influenced dishes such as siomay. It is usually added to main ingredients (meat or vegetables) to add taste, used as dipping sauce such as sambal kacang (a mixture of ground chilli and fried ...
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]
The name "lothek" is derived from "luthik", a wooden spatula used to scoop the peanut sauce from a cowek (grinding bowl). [12] Pecel tumpang is a pecel smothered with tumpang (tempeh sauce). It is a delicacy of Kertosono District in Nganjuk. [13] Mie pecel or pecel mie, noodles with pecel sauce common in Central Java as well as Medan.
Asinan, cured brined preserved vegetables in thin peanut sauce with krupuk mie. Ayam kluyuk or koloke (咕嚕雞), chicken in sweet and sour sauce. Babi hong, pork belly cooked in various Chinese seasonings and sauces; including several types of soy sauces, oyster sauces and cooking wine. Babi kecap, pork belly in kecap manis (sweet soy sauce ...
Ayam/babi pongteh, a stew of chicken or pork cooked with tauchu or salted fermented soy beans, and gula melaka. It is usually saltish-sweet and can be substituted as a soup dish in Peranakan cuisine. Pork is more commonly used as this is a Peranakan version of the Chinese braised pork belly. Babi assam, a pork stew cooked with tamarind juice.
Saus kacang (peanut sauce) – sauce made from ground roasted or fried peanuts, commonly used in pecel, nasi pecel, satay, gado-gado or ketoprak. Saus tiram (oyster sauce) – oyster sauce with dark coloured. Saus tomat (tomato ketchup) – sweet and tangy sauce made from tomatoes, sugar, and vinegar, with seasonings and spices.
This variation of gado-gado cooks the peanut sauce and spreads it over the dish. [11] Some claim that cooking the peanut sauce makes the dish last longer. [11] It uses lettuce and tomatoes as some of the ingredients of the dish. [12] It also uses coconut milk in the peanut sauce, which is used to make the sauce look oilier and more tasteful. [12]
Chopped garlic and onion with salt, sugar, soy sauce, ang ciu Chinese cooking wine and oyster sauce are added for flavour. The liquid sauces are thickened using corn starch. [3] Cap cai can be made as a vegetarian dish, or mixed with meats such as chicken, liver or gizzard, beef, fish, shrimp or cuttlefish, and slices of beef or fish bakso ...