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Rendang is a dish commonly described as fried meat [2] (meat fry) or dry curry [3], widely popular across Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and the Philippines.It refers to both a cooking method of frying and the dish resulted in the said cooking method [4] [5].
Kalio (Jawi: كالياو) is an Indonesian type of rendang that is cooked for a shorter period of time and much of the coconut milk liquid has not evaporated. Kalio has quite abundant liquid sauce acquired from cooked coconut milk that partly has turned into spicy oil, which is quite flavourful if consumed with steamed rice.
Mie celor (lit. ' blanched noodle ' in Indonesian) is a Southeast Asian noodle soup dish served in a coconut milk and shrimp-based broth, specialty of Palembang city, South Sumatra, Indonesia.
The dishes, usually numbering a dozen, typically includes beef rendang, curried fish, stewed greens, chili eggplant, curried beef liver, tripe, intestines or foot tendons, fried beef lung, fried chicken, and sambal, the spicy sauces ubiquitous at Indonesian tables. Nasi padang served this way is akin to an at-your-table, by-the-plate buffet. [1]
Nasi ambeng (from Javanese ꦤꦱꦶ ꦲꦩ꧀ꦧꦼꦁ 'nasi ambêng') is an Indonesian fragrant rice dish that consists of—but is not limited to [2] —steamed white rice, chicken curry or chicken stewed in soy sauce, beef or chicken rendang, sambal goreng (lit. fried sambal; a mildly spicy stir-fried relish commonly made with firm tofu, tempeh, and long beans [3]) urap, bergedel, and ...
Seblak (Sundanese: ᮞᮨᮘᮣᮊ᮪) is an Sundanese savoury and spicy dish, originating from the Sundanese region in West Java, Indonesia.Made of wet kurupuk (traditional Indonesian crackers) cooked with protein sources (egg, chicken, seafood or beef) in spicy sauce. [1]
Empal gentong is a spicy Indonesian curry-like beef soup originating in Cirebon, West Java.It is a variety of the Soto cuisine [1] and is similar to gulai which is usually cooked with firewood in a gentong stove (Javanese for clay pot).
Pempek in Indonesian 2006 stamp described as South Sumatran dish. Pempek is the best-known of Palembang's dishes. [3] Its origin is undoubtedly Palembang. However, the history behind the creation of this savoury dish is unclear.