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Omme Perrt

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Hotel and Restaurants Indonesia's Best Dishes Jakarta Westhill Consulting Travel Tours

started by Omme Perrt on 05 May 14
  • Omme Perrt
     
    http://westhillconsulting.info/blog/indonesias-best-dishes/

    Bakso
    A favorite among students, this savory meatball noodle soup gained international fame when U.S. President Barack Obama remembered it as one of his favorites during a visit to Jakarta last November.

    It takes on many forms; meatballs -- springy or rubbery, the size of golf balls or bigger -- are made from chicken, beef, pork or some amorphous combination of them all. Sold mostly from pushcarts called kaki lima, bakso comes garnished with fried shallots, boiled egg and wontons.

    Gado-gado
    Literally "mix-mix," the term gado-gado is often used to describe situations that are all mixed up -- Jakarta, for instance, is a gado-gado city.

    As a food, however, it is one of Indonesia's best-known dishes, essentially a vegetable salad bathed in the country's classic peanut sauce.

    At its base are boiled long beans, spinach, potato, corn, egg and bean sprouts coupled with cucumber, tofu and tempe.

    Gudeg
    Fit for a sultan it may not be, but gudeg is certainly the signature of the royal city of Yogyakarta. The sweet jackfruit stew is boiled for hours in coconut milk and palm sugar, making the fruit so soft and tender it falls apart with little chewing.

    Other spices are thrown into the mix but teak leaves give it a brown coloring. Like nasi uduk, it is served with rice, boiled egg, chicken and crispy, fried beef skin.

    Gulai
    Gulai is the common name for curry dishes, namely those from north Sumatra.

    Indonesian curries have regional variations that depend on the types of meat and fish available -- though gulai almost always incorporates cinnamon. Opor and rendang can be considered gulais, but better to try out the rainbow of other options.

    Perkadel
    So simple it's often overlooked, Perkadel's unassuming appearance belies its flavorful punch.

    A distant relative of Dutch minced-meat frikandel, these croquettes are either potato based and filled with beef or made from corn (perkadel jagung).

    In Bandung, crowds line up late night in seedy alleyways to snack on potato fritters made soft from frying in hot oil.

    Balado terong
    The color of this dish is enough to set taste buds going.

    Nothing more than grilled purple eggplant topped with heaps of chili sauce made from dried shrimp paste (balacan), it calls for a substantial portion of rice to even out the fire-engine flavor.

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