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Ikan bakar is an Indonesian and Malay dish, prepared with charcoal-grilled fish or other forms of seafood. Ikan bakar literally means "grilled fish" in Indonesian and Malay.Ikan bakar differs from other grilled fish dishes in that it often contains flavorings like bumbu, kecap manis, sambal, and is covered in a banana leaf and cooked on a charcoal fire.
Indonesian Sundanese meal; Ikan bakar (Grilled fish), Nasi timbel (Rice wrapped in banana leaf), Ayam goreng (Fried chicken), Sambal (Chili sauce), Tempe goreng (Fried tempeh), Tahu goreng (Fried tofu), and Sayur asem (Sour vegetable soup); the bowl of water with lime is for hand washing called Kobokan.
Sambal pari, also known in English as stingray sambal or spicy banana leaf stingray [1] and by the Malay name ikan pari bakar (barbecued stingray fish), is a Malaysian/Singaporean seafood dish. Prepared by barbecuing stingray, it is served with sambal paste atop. Sambal pari can be easily purchased at hawker centers in both Malaysia and Singapore.
Maluku dishes, ikan kuah kuning (fish in a yellow soup), papeda, ikan bakar, and sambal colo-colo. The Maluku Islands' cuisine is rich with seafood, while the native Papuan food usually consists of roasted boar with tubers such as sweet potato and taro. Various types of ikan bakar (grilled fish) or seafood are eaten with spicy colo-colo condiment
Ikan bakar, grilled/barbecued fish with either chilli, kunyit or other spice-based sauce. Ikan mas panggang, barbecued common carp dish, a specialty of Jambi. Ikan pari bakar, barbecued stingray dish. Ikan patin, large catfish cooked in various ways such as gulai and asam pedas, a speciality of Riau, Sumatra and Pahang.
A dish composed of rice, chicken, egg, tofu, and served with a sweet-salty coconut milk gravy. Nasi bakar: Nationwide Rice dish A traditional steamed rice seasoned with spices and ingredients and wrapped in banana leaf secured with lidi semat (small needle made of central rib of coconut leaf) and later grilled upon charcoal fire. Nasi bali
Although it has a similar name, it should not be confused with another Javanese dish, pecel, which is a vegetable dish served in peanut sauce. Pecel lele is not served in peanut sauce, but with sambal terasi (ground chili with shrimp paste sauce) instead. However, some recipes might add a little bit of ground peanuts into their sambals.
Madurese dishes add petis ikan which despite the name (ikan=fish) is made using shrimp. The Madurese-style satay is probably the most popular satay variants in Indonesia. Some of its popular dishes include chicken satay, [1] mutton satay, Madurese soto, goat soup and peanut sauce.