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Untir-untir or kue tambang is a traditional Indonesian deep-fried twisted doughnut—that fried in peanut oil. This dish has a shiny and golden look with crispy taste, almost similar to mahua in Chinese cuisine and lubid-lubid in Filipino cuisine.
The word "mutabar" is the original name for the particular dish referred to in other languages and dialects as "murtabak." "Mutabar" is an amalgam of two words, "muta" (being the Keralite word for egg, a significant component of the dish) and "bar," an abbreviated form of the word barota, or "bratha roti" (the bread).
A soldered tin cup from 1970s Singapore for pouring out the roti jala batter through the hollow "legs" Drizzling the batter onto a hot plate. Roti jala, roti kirai or roti renjis (English: net bread or lace pancake; Jawi: روتي جالا ) is a popular Malay, Minangkabau, and Acehnese tea time snack served with curry dishes which can be found in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore. [2]
Like mie goreng or kwetiau goreng, bihun goreng is usually seasoned with kecap manis (sweet soy sauce) and bumbu. [6] Typical ingredients involved in its preparation include garlic , onion or shallots , fried prawn , chicken , beef , or sliced bakso ( meatballs ), chili, Chinese cabbage , cabbages , tomatoes , egg , and other vegetables.
Burgo is an Indonesian folded rice pancake served in savoury whitish coconut milk-based soup, flavoured with fish, and sprinkled with fried shallots.The dish is one of the regional specialty of Palembang, the capital of South Sumatra, Indonesia. [1]
Nunuk Nuraini (1961 – 27 January 2021), also known as Bu Nunuk ("Mrs. Nunuk"), was an Indonesian food scientist who invented Indomie's mi goreng-flavor instant noodles. [1] [2] West Java governor Ridwan Kamil called her pahlawan bagi anak-anak kos ("hero for the boarding house kids"). [3] [4] The mi goreng flavor is described as a "cult ...
Klepon is a boiled rice cake filled with liquid palm sugar (gula jawa/merah/melaka) and coated in flaked coconut. [6] The dough is made from glutinous rice flour, sometimes mixed with tapioca (or sweet potato alternatively) [5] and a paste made from the leaves of the pandan or dracaena plants — whose leaves are used widely in Southeast Asian cooking — giving the dough its green colour.
Kue pukis seller on a boat at Lok Baintan floating market in Banjar Regency, South Kalimantan. The batter is made from the mixture of wheat flour, water, yeast, eggs, sugar, thick coconut milk, and salt; with vegetable oil, butter or margarine used to grease the cake mold to avoid it being stuck.