Siomay is ubiquitous in Indonesian cities. It can be found in street-side foodstalls, travelling carts, bicycle vendors, and restaurants. Just like bakso, lumpia, and pempek, siomay was influenced by Chinese Indonesian cuisine. However Chinese Indonesian siomay usually served not with peanut sauce, but in sweet-sour and spicy chili sauce. Siomay has been incorporated into Indonesian cuisine for a long time, and the most famous variety is Siomay Bandung. It has been adapted into local Sundanese cuisine. Today, most of Siomay sellers are Sundanese. Another variety of siomay is called Batagor, also originated from Bandung. It is an abbreviation that stands for Baso Tahu Goreng. Batagor is very similar to siomay, except that it is fried instead of steamed.
Ingredients
200 g fish fillet
150 gr minced shrimp
150 g squash, finely grated
250 gr sago
1 tablespoon salt
100 g egg whites
10 pcs red onion, finely
6 cloves garlic, finely
beancurd
Complement:
pare
know
potato
cabbage
eggs
Directions:
1. Mix the fish meat, shrimp, and salt and stir well. Enter the squash, egg whites, onion, and garlic, stirring until blended.
2. Enter the sago flour, stirring until blended.
3. Spread batter on the fish, tofu, eggs, cabbage and melon, and enter. The rest, make a round shape.
4. Steamed dumplings in a steamer and all supplementary heat until cooked.
5. Serve dumplings with complementary and peanut sauce.
Peanut Sauce Ingredients:
500 g roasted peanuts, remove skin
milled until smooth.
150 gr large red chili
50 g onion
2 tablespoons salt
2 tablespoons sugar
3 pcs lemon juice
How to Make:
1. Fried red peppers and red onion. Remove and puree.
2. Mix the ground spices with ground nuts, sugar, salt, and a little water, stir until blended.
3. Heat the peanut sauce to a boil. Lift. Give the lemon lime.
Source: wikipedia & tabloid nova
No comments:
Post a Comment