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  2. Balinese cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balinese_cuisine

    Balinese cuisine is a cuisine tradition of Balinese people from the volcanic island of Bali. Using a variety of spices, blended with the fresh vegetables, meat and fish. [ 1 ] Part of Indonesian cuisine , it demonstrates indigenous traditions, as well as influences from other Indonesian regional cuisine, Chinese and Indian .

  3. Nasi campur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasi_campur

    Nasi campur is a ubiquitous dish around Indonesia and as diverse as the Indonesian archipelago itself, with regional variations. [1] There is no exact rule, recipe, or definition of what makes nasi campur, since Indonesians and, by large, Southeast Asians commonly consume steamed rice, added with side dishes consisting of vegetables and meat.

  4. List of Indonesian dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Indonesian_dishes

    Nasi bali: Nationwide, but especially popular in Bali Rice dish Balinese-style of mixed rice. The tastes are often distinctly local, punctuated by basa genep. Nasi bebek: Chinese Indonesian Rice dish, meat dish Made of either braised or roasted duck and plain white rice. Nasi bebek goreng Nationwide, but especially popular in East Java and Bali

  5. Rijsttafel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rijsttafel

    The rijsttafel was created to provide a festive and official type of banquet that would represent the multi-ethnic nature of the Indonesian archipelago. Dishes were assembled from many of the far flung regions of Indonesia, where many different cuisines exist, often determined by ethnicity and culture of the particular island or island group — from Javanese favourite sateh, tempeh and ...

  6. Tumpeng - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumpeng

    Tumpeng in a cone. The cone-shaped rice is surrounded by assorted Indonesian dishes, such as urap vegetables, ayam goreng (fried chicken), ayam bakar (grilled chicken), empal gepuk (sweet and spicy fried beef), abon sapi (beef floss), semur (beef stew in sweet soy sauce), teri kacang (anchovy with peanuts), fried prawn, telur pindang (boiled marble egg), shredded omelette, tempe orek (sweet ...

  7. Urap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urap

    Urap (bottom right) as part of a nasi kuning dish. Urap (sometimes spelled urab or in its plural form urap-urap) is a salad dish of steamed vegetables mixed with seasoned and spiced grated coconut for dressing. [1] It is commonly found in Indonesian cuisine, more precisely Javanese cuisine.

  8. Nasi jinggo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasi_jinggo

    Nasi jinggo (also known as jinggo rice) is a Balinese ready-to-eat street food, packaged in small portions of banana leaves. Apart from being eaten as street food, nasi jinggo is also used in various religious ceremonies such as the Ngaben funeral rites, birthday celebrations, and meetings.

  9. Nasi goreng - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasi_goreng

    Nasi goreng petir (lit: "thunderbolt fried rice"), an extra hot and spicy fried rice [103] Nasi goreng platar or "fried rice platter", a hotel's restaurant style of serving nasi goreng. [104] Nasi goreng pliket or sego pliket (Javanese for "sticky fried rice") goat fried rice with sticky texture because of the addition of goat bone marrow. [49]