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Bakso bola tenis tennis ball-sized bakso, either filled with hard-boiled egg as bakso telur or filled with tetelan which includes pieces of spare beef meat and fat or urat (tendon). Bakso cirawang: bakso made of cartilage, tapioca, and garlic. It is from Garut. [12] Bakso cuanki: a famous bakso in Bandung, West Java
Mie bakso is an Indonesian noodle soup dish consists of bakso meatballs served with yellow noodles and rice vermicelli. This dish is well known in Chinese Indonesian , Javanese and Malay cuisine . Mie bakso is almost identical with soto mie , only this dish has meatball instead of slices of chicken meat .
Bakso (肉酥), bak-so is the Hokkien pronunciation for 'shredded-meat'), beef or chicken meatballs, usually served in a bowl of broth and other ingredients. Bakso ikan , meatball made of fish. Just like bakso , bakso ikan served in a bowl of broth and other ingredients.
Mi bakso – bakso meatballs served with yellow noodles and rice vermicelli in beef broth. Mi cakalang – skipjack tuna noodle soup. Mi celor – a noodle dish served in coconut milk soup and shrimp-based broth, specialty of Palembang city, South Sumatra. [23] Mi kari – soup curry noodle dish. Mi koclok – chicken noodle soup from Cirebon ...
Bakso Malang: bakso literally means meatball. Bakso Malang has more accompaniments, beside the meatball (mostly beef) itself. For example, offal, siomay dumplings (fried or steamed), tahu (tofu, fried or steamed, filled with meat), sound (mung bean threads), and yellow egg noodles.
Kwetiau ayam is usually served with a separate chicken broth, boiled chinese cabbage, and often wonton (Indonesian: pangsit) either dry crispy fried or moist soft in soup, and also bakso (meatballs). While Chinese variants might use pork fat or lard, the more common Indonesian kwetiau ayam uses halal chicken fat or vegetable oil to cater to ...
Bakso vendor using pikulan. There are two methods of street food selling in Indonesia: mobile (traveling) as a food cart and stationed, such as in a food booth.Food hawkers on pushcarts or bicycles might be travelling on streets, approaching potential buyers through frequenting residential areas whilst announcing their presence, or stationing themselves on the sides of packed and busy streets ...
Batagor (abbreviated from Baso Tahu Goréng, "fried bakso [and] tofu") is a Sundanese dish from Indonesia, and popular in Southeast Asia, consisting of fried fish dumplings, usually served with peanut sauce. [1]