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Fish and seafood—such as mackerel, mackerel tuna, tuna, skipjack tuna, red snapper, gourami, pangasius, hemibagrus or cuttlefish — either the whole body or sometimes only the fish heads are added to make a spicy and tart fish stew. It is important that the fish remain intact for serving so generally the fish is added last. [10] In Indonesia ...
Sambal terasi A common Indonesian style of sambal with a distinct shrimp paste flavor. [55] Similar to the Malaysian belacan, but with a stronger flavour, since terasi is more tangy and fermented. Red and green peppers, terasi, sugar, salt, lemon or lime juice (tangy, strong).
Sambal roa - hot sambal that uses chili, tomatoes and spices with smoked Hemiramphus fish from Gorontalo and North Sulawesi. Suitable with rice or fried banana. [3] Sambal goreng – sambal that made of a mix of crisp fried red shallots, red and green chili, shrimp paste and salt, briefly stir-fried in coconut oil. It can be made into a whole ...
Asam pedas – sour and spicy fish stew dish. Bakso ikan – fish meatball soup. Ikan kuah kuning – fish soup in clear yellow broth. It is a side dish of papeda and be a delicacy from Maluku and Papua. Mangut – Javanese coconut milk fish soup. Pindang – fish boiled in salt and sour-tasting spices, usually tamarind.
Sambal Embe, a Balinese Sambal made from sautee sliced garlic, onions, chili peppers, salt, and terasi (condiment made from pounded and fermented shrimp or small fish). It is also used in a Balinese traditional offerings. Tipat cantok, a Balinese tipat rice cake with vegetables served in peanut sauce dressing, akin to gado-gado and pecel.
Indonesian Sundanese meal; Ikan bakar (Grilled fish), Nasi timbel (Rice wrapped in banana leaf), Ayam goreng (Fried chicken), Sambal (Chili sauce), Tempe goreng (Fried tempeh), Tahu goreng (Fried tofu), and Sayur asem (Sour vegetable soup); the bowl of water with lime is for hand washing called Kobokan.
Fish head curry [3] [4] Ghalieh mahi ; Haemul jeongol ; Halászlé (Hungarian paprika-based river fish soup) Kokotxas (a traditional Basque fish stew) Maeuntang (spicy Korean soup) Meen Kuḝambu (traditional Tamil Kuzhambu stew, made with fish) Moqueca (traditional Brazilian stew) Riblji paprikaš (spicy Croatian fish stew from Slavonia)
Sambal ulek – spicy chilli paste; Satay (sometimes spelled saté, sate, or sateh) – various thinly sliced meats, marinated then broiled on a skewer, such as: sate ayam (chicken); sate babi (pork); sate lilit (seafood) Sayur lodeh – vegetable stew (spicy) in coconut milk; Semur daging – a type of stew of beef braised in sweet soy sauce