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  2. Bakso - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakso

    Bakso bola tenis tennis ball-sized bakso, either filled with hard-boiled egg as bakso telur or filled with tetelan which includes pieces of spare beef meat and fat or urat (tendon). Bakso cirawang: bakso made of cartilage, tapioca, and garlic. It is from Garut. [12] Bakso cuanki: a famous bakso in Bandung, West Java

  3. Ikan bakar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ikan_bakar

    Ikan bakar is an Indonesian and Malay dish, prepared with charcoal-grilled fish or other forms of seafood. Ikan bakar literally means "grilled fish" in Indonesian and Malay.Ikan bakar differs from other grilled fish dishes in that it often contains flavorings like bumbu, kecap manis, sambal, and is covered in a banana leaf and cooked on a charcoal fire.

  4. Fish ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_ball

    In Indonesia, fish balls are called bakso ikan (fish bakso) and often served with tofu, vegetables, and fish otak-otak in clear broth soup as tahu kok. It may be thinly sliced as additional ingredient in mie goreng, kwetiau goreng, nasi goreng and cap cai. A similar dish is called pempek, in which surimi is shaped into logs and fried.

  5. Indonesian cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indonesian_cuisine

    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.

  6. Mie bakso - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mie_Bakso

    Mie bakso is an Indonesian noodle soup dish consists of bakso meatballs served with yellow noodles and rice vermicelli. This dish is well known in Chinese Indonesian , Javanese and Malay cuisine . Mie bakso is almost identical with soto mie , only this dish has meatball instead of slices of chicken meat .

  7. Malay cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malay_cuisine

    Malay cuisine (Malay: Masakan Melayu; Jawi: ماسقن ملايو‎‎ ‎) is the traditional food of the ethnic Malays of Southeast Asia, residing in modern-day Malaysia, Indonesia (parts of Sumatra and Kalimantan), Singapore, Brunei, Southern Thailand and the Philippines (mostly southern) as well as Cocos Islands, Christmas Island, Sri Lanka and South Africa.

  8. Bakwan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakwan

    This kind of bakwan is similar to bakso meatball soup, and commonly known as 'Bakwan Malang' or 'Bakwan Surabaya' in reference to their cities of origin; Malang and Surabaya in East Java. Originally Bakwan comes from a Chinese Indonesian cuisine recipe along with Bakpao (Meatbun), Bakso (Meatball), Bakmie (Meat Noodle), and bakpia.

  9. Bagan (fishing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagan_(fishing)

    Bagan in Tondao lake. Earlier light fishing in the archipelago may have appeared with the emergence of acetylene lamps in the early years of the 20th century. [2]Bagan (bagang) was first introduced by Makassarese and Bugis people in South and Southeast Sulawesi in the 1950s. [1]