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Gulai kepala ikan kakap merah, red snapper's head gulai; Gulai jariang, jengkol stinky bean gulai; Dendeng batokok, thin crispy beef; Dendeng balado, thin crispy beef with chili; Paru goreng, fried cow lung; Ayam bakar, grilled spicy chicken; Ayam goreng, fried chicken with spicy granules; Ayam pop, Minang style chicken, boiled/steamed and ...
Gulai kepala ikan kakap merah, red snapper's head gulai. Gulai limpo, gulai of cow spleen. Gulai sumsum, gulai of cow bone marrow. Gulai tunjang, gulai of cow foot tendons. Gulai talua, boiled eggs gulai. Gulai udang, shrimp gulai. Ikan bilih, fried small freshwater fish of the genus Mystacoleucus.
Gulai kepala ikan kakap merah', red snapper's head gulai; Gulai jariang, jengkol stinky bean gulai; Dendeng batokok, thin crispy beef; Dendeng balado, thin crispy beef with chili; Paru goreng, fried cow lung; Ayam bakar, grilled spicy chicken; Ayam balado, chicken in chili; Ayam goreng, fried chicken with spicy granules; Ayam lado ijo, chicken ...
Almost any kind of meat, poultry and seafood can be made into woku dish. The most common and popular are ayam woku (chicken woku) [3] and kakap woku (red snapper woku). [4] Woku belanga is a woku variant cooked in a belanga or any kind of saucepan, while woku daun is a woku dish cooked and wrapped in banana or young coconut leaves.
Gulai is a Minangkabau class of spicy and rich stew commonly found in Indonesia, [4] Malaysia and Singapore.The main ingredients of this dish are usually poultry, goat meat, beef, mutton, various kinds of offal, fish and seafood, as well as vegetables such as cassava leaves, unripe jackfruit and banana stem.
Pindang kakap: Indonesian style red snapper pindang, cooked with pindang method in light yellowish soup containing spices including turmeric, ginger, chili peppers, galangal, lemon basil, lemongrass, and bilimbi. [30] Pindang kepala ikan manyung or pindang gombyang: Pindang that uses the head of ikan manyung or ikan jambal .
Tempoyak patin, pangasius fish served in fermented durian sauce.. Spices are also generally included although not as liberally as its same-island counterpart. Palembang cuisine is noted by its preference to the sour and sweet flavour, [3] as evidences in pindang fish soup, funky-smelled tempoyak-based dish made from fermented durian, and also kuah cuko spicy sweet vinegar sauce of pempek fishcake.
The sauce is often used as a condiment and flavouring for stir-fried dishes such as tahu tauco (tofu in tauco sauce), kakap tahu tausi (red snapper with tofu in soybean sauce), in soup such as swikee oh (frog legs in tauco soup) and pie oh (softshell turtle in tauco soup), or stir fried with kangkung (water spinach).