Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In Minahasa, North Sulawesi it is called babi putar. Babi kecap: Chinese Indonesian Braised meat Braised pork with sweet soy sauce. [5] Babi panggang: Batak, Balinese, and Indo Roasted pork Pork roasted in light spices and chopped, usually served with Batak style sambal and sayur daun singkong (cassava leaf vegetables). Bandeng presto Javanese ...
Donat kentang: Nationwide A ring-shaped fritter made from flour and mashed potatoes, coated in powder sugar or icing sugar. Karipap: Malay A dumpling snack usually filled with chicken and potato with a dried curry inside. Klappertaart: Manado, North Sulawesi
Perkedel are vegetable fritters from Indonesian cuisine. [1] Most common perkedel are made from mashed potatoes, [2] [better source needed] yet there are other popular variations, such as perkedel jagung (peeled maize perkedel) and perkedel tahu (tofu perkedel) and perkedel ikan (minced fish perkedel).
Mashed potato or mashed potatoes (American, Canadian and Australian English), colloquially known as mash (British English), [2] is a dish made by mashing boiled or steamed potatoes, usually with added milk, butter, salt and pepper.
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 ...
Kerak telor (English: Egg crust) is a Betawi traditional spicy omelette dish in Betawi cuisine.It is made from glutinous rice cooked with egg and served with serundeng (fried shredded coconut), fried shallots and dried shrimp as topping. [1]
Kue are bite-sized snacks or desserts originally from what is now Indonesia but have since spread throughout Southeast Asia. Kue is a fairly broad term in Indonesian to describe a wide variety of snacks including cakes, cookies, fritters, pies, scones, and patisserie. [1]
Cendol / ˈ tʃ ɛ n d ɒ l / is an iced sweet dessert that contains pandan-flavoured green rice flour jelly, [1] coconut milk and palm sugar syrup. [2] It is commonly found in Southeast Asia and is popular in Indonesia, [3] Malaysia, [4] Brunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Philippines, and Myanmar.