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We
love food and believe it behooves all of us to know a little
bit more about it. Hope you enjoy these culinary tidbits.
RICE, RICE EVERYWHERE
If
you have been in Bali more than a day, you already know locals
eat a lot of rice, which in its cooked state we call nasi.
Rice for breakfast, rice for lunch, rice for dinner. What
takes the monotony out of this? Side dishes and condiments,
of course. Add it all up and you have the most common meal,
Nasi Campur (pronounced "champoor") which
means mixed rice.
If you want your rice to go, ask for Nasi Bungkus.
It's the same meal, but it will be wrapped in either 1) a
banana leaf, 2) a paper wrapper. Maybe you have guessed by
now that bungkus means wrapper. When the same meal comes in
a box, we call it Nasi Kotak. No surprise, kotak means
box.
Surrounding the nasi sela we serve organic chicken
stewed in freshly ground spices, wild mountain fern tips with
grated coconut and spices, sweet corn fritters, a crisp shrimp
in rice batter, and lots of yummy condiments and sambals.
A vegetarian version is also available.
After
the popularity of nasi campur comes the runner up in
popularity, nasi goreng, or fried rice. Nasi goreng
is a good way to use up yesterday's rice, whose dryness actually
makes for superior results. It's also quick, so lots of people
make nasi goreng for breakfast. Bubur injin, known
as black rice pudding, is another breakfast favorite, and
very popluar with Westerners who often favor something a bit
sweet for breakfast. It's made with a delicious, very dark
strain of rice.
SOTO AND SATÉ
Many Indonesians love soto ayam in the morning, a delicious
chicken broth redolent with garlic, turmeric, and ginger.
(And guess what. They have it with rice on the side!) Our
all natural version is popular not only with Indonesians,
but Westerners who don't have a tolerance for MSG.
Then
there's saté, skewered meat grilled over coconut shell
charcoals. Most people think saté has to come with
peanut sauce, but not true. Madurese saté, typically
prepared from goat (kambing) or chicken (ayam),
is indeed bathed in a smooth peanut sauce before serving,
but once you get to Bali, you'll find the indigenous saté
babi, or pork saté, often rubbed with chili paste,
grilled, and eaten with . . . you guessed, rice. Along the
coast, Balinese pound fish, coconut, and spices together,
wrap the concoction on bamboo or sugar cane, and call it saté
ikan lilit.
Upcountry, the same preparation is made with pork or duck,
and is not only food for ordinary mortals, but for religious
offerings and other ceremonial purposes as well. These saté
even appear on trays of food assembled for the express purpose
of presenting to a neighbor or friend as part of a formal
invitation to one's family ceremony, such as a wedding or
a tooth filing. The more saté on the tray, the more
the inviter thinks of you!
NOT A GOOD DAY TO BE A PIG
During the Balinese holy days of Galungan and Kuningan, Balinese
really love to eat meat, especially pork. In fact, in less
prosperous times, a typical Balinese consumed the majority
of his or her annual animal protein during these holidays.
The day that precedes each of these holidays is called Penampahan,
and this day marks the climax of food and religious offering
preparations for the next day's ceremony. On the morning of
Penampahan, Balinese head to market before dawn to purchase
enough food to last at least three days.
Once home, Balinese prepare pork in a number of ingenious
ways, the most famous of which is lawar. The ritual
act of preparing lawar (and traditional saté, for that
matter) holds such significance in Balinese culture that it
is given its own word: mebat. This applies to its preparation
not only in the home, but even in the village meeting house,
or balai banjar. (While in Bali, look around the village
meeting houses and you may see dozens of men assembled, collectively
employing crude cleavers and cutting boards in a communal
mebat.) Boiled young jackfruit, long beans, young papaya,
and raw coconut are grated or finely chopped, then added to
cooked minced pork. It takes a good hand to do the rest, mixing
the above ingredients with perfect proportions of fried sliced
garlic and sliced shallots, a paste of at least fifteen spices,
friend shrimp paste, hot chilies, kaffir lime leaves and juice,
and salt. And in defiance of all conventional food hygiene,
some Balinese still add a generous dose of raw pig's blood
to redden the dish and add flavor. Trust us, it's not necessary.
On the morning of Penampahan, lawar is usually ready to eat
by 7 or 8 a.m., and it is consumed immediately before the
ingredients sour. Believe it or not, it's not the meat that
sours first. It's the coconut.
Stomachs
full, Balinese then begin making the other pork preparations,
including babi kecap (a pork stew) and tum babi, little
dumplings of minced pork and spices wrapped and steamed in
banana leaves. And ever-economical and practical, Balinese
prolong the shelf life of lawar-if there are indeed any leftovers-by
wrapping it into dumplings and steaming it along with the
tum babi.
Yet another famous Balinese pork dish is the famed Babi
Guling, a spit-roasted whole pig stuffed with a delicious
mix of herbs and spices. Baby babi guling can often be seen
as the centerpiece of religious offerings, left there just
long enough to satisfy the deities, and then eagerly seized
and sliced up to serve the pious. Balinese prize the golden
skin, so crisp you can snap it in two. Again, many make their
fortunes selling babi guling strictly for human consumption.
You'll see food stalls all over the island selling it, or
you can order it in advance at Kafe Batan Waru.
NOT A GOOD DAY TO BE A DUCK EITHER
Ducks also meet their demise during the holidays. You should
not leave the island without trying bebek tutu, Balinese smoked
duck. Traditionally, it's a dish a Balinese would only prepare
for a ceremony since it involves at least six hours of ingredient
preparation, and as many hours again to smoke in a mound of
rice husks. Many Balinese now supplement their livings by
supplying smoked ducks to the big hotels, most of which don't
want the smoke disturbing their guests. Kafe Batan Waru can
provide you with this specialty given a day's advance notice.
Speaking of ducks, since they feed in the rice paddies on
worms and insects, they themselves are considered to have
a pure diet and their meat is suitable to be consumed by the
Balinese Hindu priests. It's useful to know that lawar and
tum can also both be prepared with rice field feeding duck
if you have to feed a priest.
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