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  2. Banana chip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana_chip

    In North Maluku, popular with pisang mulu bebek is a duck mouth-shaped banana chip. It is served with sambal, fried peanut, and fried anchovy. [10] In Lampung, banana chips is combined with chocolate powder called kripik pisang coklat. [11] Usually unripe green bananas are thinly sliced, soaked in lime and salt water solution, and deep fried as ...

  3. Zombi Kampung Pisang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zombi_Kampung_Pisang

    Zombi Kampung Pisang (English: Kampung Pisang's Zombies) is a 2007 Malaysian Malay-language horror comedy film directed by Mamat Khalid. The whole story happens in one night, taking place in a village named Kampung Pisang (" Banana Village" in Malay ) and its surroundings.

  4. Tapioca chip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tapioca_chip

    A close-up view of seasoned tapioca chips. Tapioca chips are a snack food made from thin wafers of deep-fried cassava root. It is commonly found in South India, and Sri Lanka, as well as in Indonesia where it is known as kripik singkong (cassava chips), and in Malaysia known as 'kerepek ubi'.

  5. Kripik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kripik

    Kripik is closely related to krupuk since it is popularly considered a smaller-sized krupuk.In Indonesia, the term krupuk refers to a type of relatively large cracker, while kripik or keripik refers to smaller bite-size crackers; the counterpart of chips (or crisps) in western cuisine.

  6. Pisang cokelat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pisang_cokelat

    Pisang cokelat (chocolate banana in Indonesian) or sometimes colloquially abbreviated as piscok, [1] is an Indonesian sweet snack made of slices of banana with melted chocolate or chocolate syrup, wrapped inside thin crepe-like pastry skin and being deep fried. [2] Pisang cokelat is often simply described as "choco banana spring rolls". [1]

  7. Krupuk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krupuk

    According to culinary historian Fadly Rahman, krupuk had existed in Java since the 9th or 10th century. [2] It was written in the Batu Pura Inscription as krupuk rambak, which refers to crackers made from cow or buffalo skin, that still exist today as krupuk kulit ("skin krupuk") and are usually used in a Javanese dish called krechek.

  8. Rempeyek - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rempeyek

    Rempeyek or peyek is a deep-fried savoury Indonesian-Javanese cracker [1] [3] made from flour (usually rice flour) with other ingredients, bound or coated by crispy flour batter.

  9. Pisang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pisang

    Pisang is a village development committee in Manang District in the Gandaki Zone of northern Nepal. At the time of the 2011 Nepal census it had a population of 307 people living in 105 individual households. The village is located in the Marshyangdi River valley, directly south of Pisang Peak, north of Annapurna II, and west of Paungda Danda.