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Apam balik (lit. ' turnover pancake '; Jawi: أڤم باليق ) also known as martabak manis (lit. ' sweet murtabak '), [3] terang bulan (lit. ' moonlight '), peanut pancake or mànjiānguǒ (Chinese: 曼煎粿), is a sweet dessert originating in Fujian cuisine which now consists of many varieties at specialist roadside stalls or restaurants throughout Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia and ...
Martabak manis or terang bulan. Another variety of martabak is called martabak manis (sweet martabak), also known by the name Terang Bulan or Martabak Bangka. [18] This naming however, is only valid in Indonesia, since the identical folded thick pancake is called apam balik instead in Malaysia.
The soup is whitish in colour, made from coconut milk with slices of fish flesh. Various fish can be use. However, the most common one is ikan gabus . A simpler recipe might use powdered dried shrimp instead of fish. The coconut milk soup is spiced with garlic, coriander, galangal, salt, and salam leaf (Indonesian bay leaf).
Dengke mas naniura [a] is a traditional Batak dish originating from the North Sumatra province of Indonesia. [2] The name of the dish means "pickled fish" in the Toba Batak language.
Terang bulan, bread like puff with sugar, corn, and coarse nut in the middle. Tiwul, boiled rice substitution made from dried cassava. Tumis sayuran, stir-fried vegetables, usually mixed with chili and a spice paste. Tumpeng, a rice served in the shape of a conical volcano, [14] usually with rice colored yellow using turmeric. It is an ...
Kue bulan, circular cake shaped like the moon, white and thinner than regular mooncake. Fillings may include pork, chocolate, cheese, milk, durian, jackfruit and many other exotic fruits made into a paste. Kue burgo, folded rice pancake served in savoury whitish coconut milk-based soup, flavoured with fish, and sprinkled with fried shallots.
Arsik is an Indonesian spicy fish dish of the Batak Toba and Mandailing people of North Sumatra, usually using the common carp (known in Indonesia as ikan mas or gold fish). [1] Distinctively Batak elements of the dish are the use of torch ginger fruit (asam cikala), and andaliman (similar to Sichuan pepper). [1]
Crab in Padang sauce or Padang crab (Indonesian: Kepiting saus Padang) is an Indonesian seafood dish of crab served in hot and spicy Padang sauce. It is one of the two most popular ways that crab is served in Indonesia, commonly found in coastal cities with abundant seafood, such as Padang, Jakarta, Medan, Surabaya, Makassar and Cirebon. [1]