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Curry mee (Malay: mi kari; simplified Chinese: 咖喱面; traditional Chinese: 咖喱麵; pinyin: Gālímiàn; Jyutping: Gaa3 Lei1 Min6; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Ka-lí-mī) is a Maritime Southeast Asian spicy noodle soup garnished with various toppings.
Curry mee. Curry Mee (Chinese : 咖喱麵). A bowl of thin yellow noodles mixed with bihun in a spicy curry soup enriched with coconut milk, and topped with tofu puffs, prawns, cuttlefish, chicken, long beans, cockles and mint leaves, with sambal served on the side. It is often referred to as curry laksa.
Gulai is often described as Indonesian curry, [8] [2] [9] [10] although it is also considered a local dish in Malaysia and Singapore. Gulai is a common name to refer to curry dishes in the country, [1] although Indonesian, Malaysian, and Singaporean cuisine also recognise kari (curry). In Javanese-Surinamese cuisine it is known as guleh. [11]
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Maggi goreng: a variant of mee goreng using Maggi instant noodles. Mee goreng mamak: a variant that is found at Mamak stalls and is known to use spices, tomato sauce, potatoes and sweet soy sauce. Mee rebus: A dish using egg noodles in a sweet and spicy sauce, green chillies with a hard boiled egg. [7] Meen Varuthathu: Kerala-style marinated ...
Mee siam, dish of fried thin rice vermicelli with spicy gravy. Nasi kunyit, a glutinous rice dish seasoned with turmeric powder, coconut milk and asam gelugor. It is usually served with a chicken curry, ang ku kue, and pink-dyed hard-boiled eggs as gifts in celebration of a child of friends and family turning one month old.
Kari kapitan, or Captain's chicken curry, is a classic Penang Nyonya dish. It is normally a richer, drier, and thicker version of the standard local chicken curry, with each household having its own family recipe. [1] The origins of the name of the dish, Kari kapitan, are much debated.
The most common Australian version contains minced beef (called ground beef in North America) and curry powder and sometimes served over rice instead of fried noodles. This version has been promoted by the Australian Institute of Sport , [ 36 ] on ABC radio , [ 37 ] and a popular Australian women's magazine since the mid-1960s [ 38 ] and during ...