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A guide to Indonesian food

Written By Moremore on May 16, 2011 | 4:05 PM

Pizza lovers, did you know Indonesians adore Pizza Hut? True, your typical Indonesian pie probably has more crispy fish pieces, shrimp and corn on it than you're used to back home. And you probably won't find avocado milkshakes as an option at the soda fountain back in Grand Rapids. But the Indonesians in Bali are lovers of pizza much like you and I, dear reader, and unashamedly so.

At this point, more experienced travelers are probably scratching their heads. Who travels to Indonesia and writes about American fast food?? But the truth be known, this odd love for all things pizza illustrates a surprising fact: Indonesians are cultural chameleons when it comes to eating. This immense island nation is a place criss-crossed by trade winds of diverse culinary origin, bringing together influences and ingredients from places as far-flung as China, The Netherlands, India and even Mexico.Whether you're just visiting Bali or making a larger exploration of the Indonesian archipelago, expect to be surprised by Indonesia's spicy, exotic, and altogether unexpected blend of delicious eats. A taste of the tropics, and a taste of home at the same time. Ready to dig in? Keep reading below to begin your exploration of Indonesian (and Balinese) cuisine.

The World's Pantry
It was the world-famous islands of Maluku that first put Indonesian cuisine on the world map. Back in the 1500's, this string of remote islands was the only place in the world European traders could find the elusive spice Nutmeg. It didn't take long for the rumors of these fertile tropical islands to spread; soon the English and the Dutch were demanding their piece of the lucrative trade, adding coffee and tea plantations to the mix.

The Europeans were soon mingling with the Chinese, Indian and Middle Eastern traders who already knew Indonesia well, introducing a bewildering array of new foods. Peanuts and chili peppers came from the Americas, leading to Indonesia's ubiquitous sauces: the mouth tingling Sambal and the spicy peanut sauce used to top grilled skewers called sate.
These new ingredients were mixed with more familiar Indonesian staples like rice, a grain you'll see growing in paddy fields everywhere, and coconuts, another tropical staple that finds its way into the country's flavorful curries. Add in the country's ever-present and wonderfully fresh seafood, some wildly exotic fruits like Durian and rambutan, and you begin to get a sense of the diverse ingredients available to the typical Indonesian chef.

Local Specialties
Upon this palette of flavorful and exotic ingredients, all sorts of fantastic Indonesian specialties are possible. What's worth a try during your visit to Bali? Make sure to keep an eye out for uniquely Balinese specialty Babi Guling, a spit roast pig stuffed with spices and roasted in coconut water. Many travelers will swear Ibu Oka in Ubud is the place to try. We have to agree...the crispy pork skin, roasted for hours over hot coals, is sublime. Bebek, the local Indonesian duck, roasted in banana leaves stuffed with spices (Bebek Betutu) is another favorite.

Balinese cuisine also tends to be a microcosm of larger food trends in Indonesia. Nasi (rice) is practically the Indonesian national dish. You'll find Nasi Campur (mixed rice, meat and vegetables) and Nasi Goreng (fried rice with meat & vegetables) on menus everywhere. And there are the desserts - weird as it may sound you'll never go wrong with an Es Apokatavocado smoothie, doused with a liberal helping of chocolate sauce. And if you're looking for a totally unique dessert experience, track down some Es Campur. It's a sweet soup made of coconut, condensed milk, ice and a mix of chewy jellies. Bizarre, but quite wonderful.

Padang: A Taste of Everything
No matter what food you find to your liking in Indonesia, you're sure to be overwhelmed by the delicious options at some point. That's when Padang food comes in handy. Although Padang cuisine originated on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, it's become a universal favorite - nearly every city in Indonesia has a Padang restaurant, including in Bali. Look for the dishes of food stacked in the window and spicy scent wafting from inside, and you'll know you've arrived.

Don't know what to order? Not to worry... just walk up to the dishes and start pointing at whatever looks delicious. The server will add a healthy spoonful to your plate. You're likely to end up with specialties like Rendang, a buffalo coconut curry, or some leafy green kangkung(water spinach) and a few pieces of ayam goreng (fried chicken).

The flavors are mix of just about everything your tastebuds could want: spicy, milky, bitter and savory. The textures - crispy, creamy and chewy. It's like an Indonesian Old Country Buffet - execept with just a tad more spice, much fresher ingredients and some of the best home-cooked food you've had in life. In fact Padang cuisine is a lot like Indonesian and Balinese food itself - a wildly diverse mixture of flavors, textures and cultures, coming together into something that tastes like much more than the sum of its parts.
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Jakarta Fashion and Food Festival 2011

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Manadonese: vivid flavors and tongue-scorching spiciness



Manadonese...

With its vivid flavors and tongue-scorching spiciness, Manadonese cuisine might be the new Thai — if only the world knew about it. Good luck with that: tiny Manado city, on the northern tip of Indonesia's Sulawesi island, is unlikely to produce an international diaspora of restaurateurs anytime soon.
But there is one metropolis where the fare needs no introduction: Jakarta. Options for Manadonese food abound in the capital city. At Chamoe-Chamoe, tel: (62-21) 720 8294, one sip of kuah asam — a sour soup with tasty salmon and hints of lime, basil and lemongrass — instantly reveals a formidable competitor to Thailand's tom yum.

For an even better all-around introduction to the full spectrum of the cuisine, head straight to South Jakarta's Beautika, tel: (62-21) 722 6683, the city's must-try Manadonese joint. Brace for chaos if you go on a typical weekend afternoon: regulars crowd around metal buffet counters indicating what they want delivered to their tables. Grab a waiter and start pointing.
The key ingredient in Manadonese cooking is chili, which dominates the sambals and marinades (like rica-rica, in which it's ground with ginger and lime). The fiery must-try dishes include pepes (spicy chicken or fish cooked in banana leaves), cakalang saos (smoked pieces of skipjack tuna smeared with a searing red sambal) and ayam ternate (a dark red chicken with plenty of burn and a hint of palm sugar). The tude daun pepaya mixes smoothly flavored fish with bitter papaya leaves, while the sayur acar — carrots, green chili, cucumbers, shallots and bengkuang fruit all pickled in a vinegar yellowed with ground turmeric — offers plenty of bite. If you want relief from spice, go for the mellow ayam kecap or chicken in sweet soy sauce. Expect to gorge for less than $10 a head.
Beautika's decor is unremarkable — simple wood furniture, plastic gray silverware containers — and the dining spaces are a little cramped. (A section upstairs feels roomier but gets hot at times.) No matter. As you take one last bite of savory grilled marlin and wipe the perspiration from your brow, you'll see your satisfaction reflected in others' faces — and know you won't be the first to return for more spicy punishment.
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I'm Indonesian



I'm Indonesian

What may I ask the Lord for the born again but not in this country ...?

By leaving a feeling of peace in this country ...,
With all its natural beauty,
With friendly people there,
With all the things that we be prepared well by the Lord ...,
Many heard the story that makes us fascinated with this country, every day to enjoywhatever we want ... .. the boat arrived at the white sandy waterfront with piles of freshfish, agricultural land filled with food, warmth in peace, dense forests and are all available in the this country.
Now, especially in want ...?

Thanks God

Indeed, this country is admirable
Let my request to be impossible,
Because, I really love this country,
I'm PROUD was born in this country ...

RED WHITE ... .... INDONESIA.


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Come on, Time to Stop violence ..!!!

Written By Moremore on May 12, 2011 | 10:52 AM

Everyone would not want to live with hostility, heresy, resentment, physical action, and others but all people want to live with compassion spray, directed to noble deeds, respecting others, empathy, solid, and able to merge themselves to harmonize with all groups (mutual symbiosis).
Like it or not, apply violence (physical or non physical) because there is no social life, unable to hold back when it does not harmonize his will with a choice of others.According to John F. Kennedy; harmony will kill the right of individuals to merge what is believed, desired and wanted.
In the context of religion for example, one party sent to live the teachings or beliefs that have been ingrained. With a loud pushy and rude: "Come on, you must and shall enter our religion because our religion is the most / very true. Come on, straighten kindness, fight who disagree,  with us. Let's all convert to Islam, no religion other than Islam. "
Do we have to apply this to non  with our (non-Islam). Oh, do not be so. He said he ikraha fiddin, I still insist, be harsh. He said Islam a peaceful religion, why terror into the pavilion.
In the context of case law; one of them there are people who deliberately steal, cheat, and kill, must be judged to death? Without thinking clearly that there are law enforcement officers (police, judges) who can handle it legally. I do not know, maybe there are comments that say, how could the police and judges clean. Each time there is news, police and judges are still stumble lawsuits. Okay we have a multi-course different interpretations. Especially if the anger and lust and the act of petty cunning plus aji always be considered the ultimate sniper and efficacious.
In the context of the family, who became a statement to this day is, whether the female figures (each the wives) have experienced violence (nuzuz) than husbands (men) because they do not deserve. Obeying the will of the husband, although in the wrong corridor. Moreover, if a woman shall be deprived of their rights (misogyny) not to confirm its role (public space) as intelligent beings. Especially concerning child abuse. What good is Children's Day celebration will reflect national; Son as the successor of our nation's future, they do not want to be removed during enjoy, because their parents imposed by reason of acts of violence as a form of awareness.Once again, do not be so.
Perhaps in addition to what is described above, can also be linked with other contexts. I believe every human being must have the vision, character, and a different attitude.

What Fortunately Conflict

What's the point we build a conflict, quarrel, riot until the violence becomes the end of the settlement that has no meaning, not too useful. Want to carry around the spirit of compassion, caring, mutual help, tolerance, tolerant painstakingly built it? What is the meaning of pluralism (inclusive) disclosed just enough, then disappear like smoke.This is also because there are no consequences to apply themselves as well as all people in building a sense of security, peaceful, prosperous, peaceful and prosperous in a country that often collide interests.
Anyone would say, violence in any form or intent, not the main goal in solving every problem. It must be realized, the violence only ransacked the rights of individuals (specifically), especially fraternity (solidarity) among us. Are not we taught the importance of meaning or symbol of "Unity in Diversity" and the 45 Constitution, religious sciences for over the years we schooled. It does not only contain a dry substance, not even considered just a figment. In addition, we are taught how we appreciate and respect difference ethnicity, tribe, race, and religion. Therefore, the attitude of maturity we should shore up embers that continued to spread in various parts of the region (especially in Indonesia).
No exaggeration, if we live together, not necessarily marginalized, discredit, discriminate against any provision of God (not ignite extreme action).

Negative Stigma to provocateur

Being a provocateur (context provocation) is not always viewed positively and not deny (impartial social interests). Nothing wrong if we take care of provocation action which is still heavily publicly-incessant polemic reap, sow confrontation, compete among one another sheep.
Provocateurs certainly do not want to think shallow, being ignorant (fool). Of course many paths to the point of satisfaction for heating the atmosphere, many cunning political strategy to tactics, deliberately  (gossip) for causing the gap and social deterioration. Especially considering the danger of provocation could injure anyone if we do not think rationally (clear) digest again, what the best thing to complete the problem of whack in this country. Maybe we are not aware that it may act provocation who make bad effects (can also be caused by hasut-inflammatory, making a lie; inconsequential) to incidents of clashes, riot of violence, can not be inevitable. 
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Bunaken Island




What is a coelacanth?
Coelacanths are an ancient group of large, lobe-finned fish . They were thought to be extinct for the last 70 million years until a living coelacanth was caught off of South Africa in 1938. How long have coelacanths existed? Fossil records show that coelacanths have existed for about 400 million years, which makes them one of the oldest living animals lineages on earth.


Where in the world are coelacanths found?
Millions of years ago, coelacanths lived in waters all over the world but now they are only known to exist in two small areas of the world: Comoro Islands near Africa and in Manado Tua, North Sulawesi.

What is special about coelacanths?
Many people are interested in coelacanths because they are rare and they are a living fossil. A living fossil is an organism that has not changed in millions of years. For example, if dinosaurs were still alive today, they would be a living fossil too. 

What are some unique features of the coelacanths’ appearance?
Coelacanths have seven thick, fleshy, lobbed fins that move in the water in the same manner as a four-legged animal, such as a trotting horse. They also have an extra tail on the end of their body called an “epicaudal” lobe, which no other fishes have. Coelacanths also have a joint on their skull, which is thought
to allow them to open their upper jaw upward when
capturing prey.

How many coelacanths exist today?
The coelacanth population around the Comoro Islands is estimated to be less than 500 individuals. The population at Manado Tua is not yet known. Other populations may exist in other part of Indonesia, or even in the rest of the world but they have not yet been.
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North Sulawesi - Indonesia

In terms of social and cultural settings, North Sulawesi comprises of four large ethnic groups i.e. Minahasa, Bolaang Mongondow, Sangihe and Talaud. Each ethnic group was divided into several sub-ethnic groups which are indicated by differences in their language, tradition, and norms. Based on languages, sub-ethnic groups are categorized into Minahasan languages (Toulour, Tombulu, Tonsea, Tontemboan, Tonsawang, Ponosakan, Bantik), Sangihe and Talaud languages (Sangihe Besar, Siau, Talaud, Bolaang Mongondow languages (Mongondow, Bolaang, Bintauna, Kaidipang).
However, the Indonesian language is the country official language which is used and understood well by most of the people in North Sulawesi. Main religions which are practiced by the people are Protestant Christianity, Chatholicism, Islam, Hindu and Budha.
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