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It is commonly known as tempoyak in the Malay Peninsula, Borneo, and Southern Sumatra region (South Sumatra, Jambi, Bengkulu and Lampung provinces). It is known as pekasam in Aceh and asam durian in the Minangkabau region of West Sumatra. [8] The word asam which translates to "sour" describes its fermentation process. Tempoyak, made from ...
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.
Nasi lemak's closest analogue is probably the Sumatran nasi gemuk (lit. "fatty rice"), commonly found in the Indonesian cities of Jambi and Palembang. It is arguably that the difference is only due to dialects variant, in which the term lemak in Johor and Riau Malay dialect is synonymous with gemuk in Jambi and Palembang Malay dialect. [31]
Nasi minyak (Palembang Malay for "oily rice") is an Indonesian dish from Palembang cuisine of cooked rice with minyak samin and spices.This rice dish is commonly associated with Palembang city, the capital of South Sumatra province. [1]
Indonesian cuisine is a collection of various regional culinary traditions that formed in the archipelagic nation of Indonesia.There are a wide variety of recipes and cuisines in part because Indonesia is composed of approximately 6,000 populated islands of the total 17,508 in the world's largest archipelago, [1] [2] with more than 600 ethnic groups.
Nasi gemuk is a rice dish cooked with coconut milk and pandan leaf which is one of typical dish of Jambi and Palembang, Indonesia. [1] [2] [3] Aromatic spices used include lemongrass and daun salam (Indonesian bay leaf). [4] This food can be found throughout the province of Jambi and also in the city of Palembang. [5]
Lontong cap go meh is actually not a single dish but more of a meal set with several side dishes, served in similar fashion to nasi campur or nasi Bali.It is a combination of several Javanese favourite dishes—each often prepared and cooked separately—and combined in a single plate prior to serving.
Pempek sambal, a variant from neighboring city of Jambi. Pempek is easy to find in Jakarta and other Indonesian cities, from the food-courts in malls and shopping centers to traveling pempek vendors on carts. The cheaper pempek version sold by traveling vendors on carts generally use less fish and more tapioca, resulting in a rather bland flavour.