|
Indonesian cuisine, like other aspects of Indonesian culture exhibits tremendous ethnic diversity, which adds to a world of pleasure for the gourmands on a culinary sojourn through the archipelago. Rice is the staple food of most of Indonesia along with corn, sago, cassava and sweet potatoes. Seafood is also an innate part of the daily diet of people in Indonesia, who like digging in a great variety of sea produce such as lobsters, oysters, prawns and shrimps, squid, crab, etc. Popular Cookbooks on Indonesian Cuisine For those who want to learn more about Indonesian Cuisine can refer to the following South-East Asian cookbooks available in the market, all have extensive sections on Indonesian culinary tradition. Southeast Asia Cookbook by Ruth Law New York, Donald I. Fine, Inc., 1990 Softbound, 452 pages Cuisines of Southeast Asia by Gwenda L. Hyman New York, Thomas Woll, 1993 Softbound, 197 pages, $14.95 The Indonesian Kitchen by Copeland Marks with Mintari Soeharjo New York, Atheneum, 1981, softbound, 278 pages The Cooking of Singapore by Chris Yeo and Joyce Jue Emeryville, Harlow & Ratner, 1993 Indonesian Food and Cookery by Sri Owen London, Prospect Books, 1986, hardboard, 268 pages Some Popular Indonesian Delicacies: Satay Ayam (Chicken Satay) Satay Sauce Rendang Kari Ikan (Fish Curry) Semur Daging (Slices Of Beef In Soya Sauce) Sambal – This is essentially the one Indonesian food that sparks the cuisine. There are sambals of all sorts to accompany different kinds of dishes. Staple Ingredients used in Indonesian Cuisine Tamarind juice Coconut milk Kaffir lime leaves Lemon grass/lemon grass powder Terasi or shrimp paste Sambal Oelek or raw chili paste Galanga (also known as laos) powder, it is the ground root of a rhizome related to ginger Kemiri or candlenut is ground and used in Indonesian food as a thickening agent
|