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Indonesia has developed numerous bakso variants, usually differing in shape, size, texture, ingredients, and fillings. [11] Bakso aci: meatball with more tapioca content; Bakso ayam: chicken bakso; Bakso babi: pork meatball; Bakso bakar: grilled and skewered bakso, prepared to satay; Bakso beranak: big meatball filled with small meatballs
Bakso (肉酥), bak-so is the Hokkien pronunciation for 'shredded-meat'), beef or chicken meatballs, usually served in a bowl of broth and other ingredients. Bakso ikan, meatball made of fish. Just like bakso, bakso ikan served in a bowl of broth and other ingredients.
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 .
Mie ayam sold by travelling vendor with wonton and bakso meatball. In Indonesia, the name is shortened to mie ayam or mi ayam. In Indonesia chicken noodles are often seasoned with soy sauce and chicken oil, made from chicken fat and spices mixture (clove, white pepper, ginger, and coriander), and usually served with a chicken broth soup. [8]
Batagor (abbreviated from Baso Tahu Goréng, "fried bakso [and] tofu") is a Sundanese dish from Indonesia, and popular in Southeast Asia, consisting of fried fish dumplings, usually served with peanut sauce. [1]
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.
Bakso vendor using pikulan. There are two methods of street food selling in Indonesia: mobile (traveling) as a food cart and stationed, such as in a food booth.Food hawkers on pushcarts or bicycles might be travelling on streets, approaching potential buyers through frequenting residential areas whilst announcing their presence, or stationing themselves on the sides of packed and busy streets ...
Cilok (Aksara Sunda: ᮎᮤᮜᮧᮊ᮪) is an Indonesian ball-shaped dumpling made from aci (tapioca starch), a Sundanese snack originated from Indonesia. [1] In Sundanese, cilok is an abbreviation of aci dicolok or "poked tapioca", since the tapioca balls are poked with lidi skewers made from the midrib of the coconut palm frond.