The
Indonesian cuisine is something of a combination of Indian and Chinese
cooking and absolutely delicious. A complete Indonesian Rice Table with
all its side dishes is quite a culinary experience.
If
you visit Holland or Indonesia I can definitely recommend for you to
dine in an Indonesian restaurant and try the many different dishes.Of
course, in Indonesia the cooking varies from island to island.
In
Holland one serves a strong dark beer with Indonesian food.
If
there is an Oriental shop in your neighbourhood, look for Conimex
products and you will find the necessary ingredients there. But
you can easily substitute with fresh ingredients and other dried
spices.
Bahmi
Goreng
Ingredients
left-over
meat, like chicken, pork, beef , cut up in very small cubes
1 Pk Chinese egg noodles ( Mie)
3 cloves garlic, crushed
onion, cut up into very small cubes
carrot, cut into very small cubes
cabbage, cut up in small cubes
celery, cut up small
1 1-inch piece of fresh ginger root, crushed
chive, cut up small
1 great leek ( if available)
salt, pepper
Indonesian soy sauce ( Ketjab Benteng Manis-
a Conimex product)
3 eggs
butter for frying
1 teasp. sambal oelek ( a Conimex product),(
or chili pepper flakes)
shrimp paste ( optional)
kroepoek ( shrimp crackers) for garnishing
oil for frying shrimp crackers
small whole dill pickles for garnishing
Method
1)
Boil egg noodles in salted water and drain
2)
Put garlic, onion, carrot, cabbage, celery, ginger root, chive,
leek, salt, pepper and a little shrimp paste in a large mortar
and crush with pestle until all flavours are nicely blended
3)
In a large skillet or wok, heat up butter and sauté vegetable
blend for a few minutes
4)
Add cut-up meat, sauté again for a minute or two
5)
Add boiled and drained noodles and mix thoroughly
7)
Take off fire and put into serving bowl, keep warm
8)
Fry an omelette from the three beaten eggs with a little salt
and pepper and cut into long thin strips and decorate top of the
Bahmi with them
9)
Cut dill pickles in half, lengthways and then cut one side in
little strips ( but leave attached ) like a fan, press slightly
down to spead the fan and decorate Bahmi
10)
Deep-fry shrimp crackers until fully expanded and decorate top
of Bahmi
4
tablespoons butter
3 cloves garlic
2 onions
1/2 lb cooked meat ( maybe leftover , like
chicken ( no bones), pork, beef - cut up in very small cubes )
3 cabbage leaves
4 shallots
2 red peppers or 2 chilis
1 cup beansprouts
1 1/2 lbs rice, steamed or boiled
thin omelettes ( recipe given below)
2 tablesps soya sauce ( Ketjab Benteng manis,
see Bahmi Goreng recipe above)
8 oz prawns, (shelled, deveined and fried
briefly in butter and seasoned to taste with salt and pepper ,
garlic and ginger root)
1 small cucumber
Prawn crackers
Method
1)
Melt butter and stir-fry crushed garlic and chopped onions for
1 minute
2)
Add meat, and continue to stir-fry
3)
Add very thinly sliced cabbage, shallots ( cut in 1 inch pieces),
thinly sliced peppers or chilis and keep stirring
4)
When well-mixed, add beansprouts, then rice and half the omelettes
( cut into small pieces) and the Ketjab Benteng ( soy sauce)
5)
Add cooked prawns and mix well
You
have to add more butter while frying if mixture is getting too
dry.
Place
in a serving bowl and decorate with crossed strips of omelette,
cucumber and prawn crackers ( deep fry prawn crackers until fully
expanded).
Thin
Omelettes for garnishing
Beat
3 eggs lightly with 3 tablesps milk or the same amount of water.
Season with salt and pepper to taste. Brush frying pan with butter.
When hot, pour in enough egg mixture to make 1 very thin omelette.
Tip pan sideways to thin out omelette. When cooked, roll omelette
and slice into thin strips. Repeat until egg mixture is finished.
1
large cucumber or several small cucumbers
1/2 teasp salt
1 tablesp vinegar
1/2 teasp sugar
1 fresh chili pepper, sliced thinly
1 shallot stalk ( the white part), sliced
into thin rings
Method:
1)
Peel cucumber- slice very thinly- sprinkle salt over it, then
squeeze out excess liquid from cucumber slices
2) Mix vinegar and sugar and add to cucumber
3) Add chili and shallot stalk and mix well-
Chill until needed
1/2
lb lean pork, cut into cubes
2 full teasp boemboe sesaté ( saté
spices, a Conimex product) or fresh: 2 cloves garlic, 1 onion,
quartered, 2 chilis, 2 macademia nuts 2 inch piece ginger root,
1 teasp coriander, 1/2 teasp turmeric- ground into a smooth paste
1/8
slice goela djawa ( Javanese sugar)- if available, or 1/4 teasp
brown sugar
2 teasp Ketjab Benteng ( soy sauce)
1 cup coconut cream
salt to taste
saté sticks ( wooden skewers)
oil
Method
1)
Fry boemboe sesaté (or freshly made paste )in 3 tablesps
oil on a low fire, add salt to taste
2)
Add sugar, soy and a cup of coconut cream
3)
Keep sauce boiling until thick, then cool down
4)
Put cubed meat into sauce and knead thouroughly, then let it stand
for 1 hour , so sauce can be absorbed by the meat
5)Thread
4 or 5 pieces of meat on a wooden skewer or bamboo stick
6)
Grill meat on skewers in a large frying pan, using about 5 tablesps
of oil. Heat oil and sear the saté
Served
with peanut or soya sauce
Peanut
Sauce
Dilute
3 tablesps gado gado ( peanut sauce from Conimex , or substitute
with cunchy peanut butter) with same quantity of water. Boil it
up until sauce thickens. Pour sauce over saté and serve.
Spicy
Soya Sauce Dip
Mix
3 tablesps Ketjab Benteng ( or its substitute,
see Bahmi recipe above) with 1/2 teasp sambal oelek ( ground hot
chili peppers ), some lemon juice and 1/2 teasp onion powder or
1 teasp very finely ground fresh onion. Pour sauce over saté
and serve.
1
large chicken
4 candlenuts or macademia nuts
3-inch piece fresh ginger root, finely chopped
2 onions, finely chopped
3 cloves garlic, finely chopped
2 tablesps coriander
1/2 teasp ground laos ( root spice, like ginger
root)
1/2 teasp cumin
1 piece lemon grass, if available fresh( or
dried)
2 salam leaves , if available, or substitute
with bayleaf or curry leaf
2 tablesps oil
salt, pepper to taste
4 cups coconut milk
2 tablesps tamarind juice
Method
1)
Cut chicken into serving pieces
2)
Grind candlenuts, green ginger root, onions and garlic into a
fine paste ( in the blender )
3)
Stir-fry the paste, coriander, laos, cumin, lemon grass and salam
leaves in hot oil in a large saucepan to bring out the flavour
and aroma of the spices
4)
Add chicken pieces, season with salt and pepper, stir well
5)
Cover saucepan and let simmer for 10 mins
6)
Add coconut milk and slowly bring to the boil, stirring coconut
milk with a down-up-over motion to stop it from curdling
7)
Cook over medium heat until the chicken is tender, adjust seasoning
8)
Add tamarind juice just before finishing the cooking