Friday, 11 July 2014

Sate Ampet Sasak with Sambal Kecap and simple Lotek (Indonesian) Lombok-Style Beef Satay with Sweet Soy Sauce Sambal and Steamed Veggies with Peanut Dressing


I love making a whole meal of the same cuisine since the flavours go well together and create THE experience.  I made this Indonesian menu and it was awesome, even though I'm not sure if Indonesians would serve them together...  who cares!?  Not me.  So this plate has beef satay with sambal, boiled vegetables with peanut sauce and fragrant rice (I'll post the recipe for this rice very soon).

The satay are a little different from most satay.  Instead of marinating the meat cubes in a paste, you fry the paste, simmer it with coconut milk, reduce, cool down, and then you mix it with the meat and marinate.  The result was awesome, most satay don't use coconut, some use grated coconut, but coconut milk is one of my favourite tastes/ingredients so I guess this makes these Lombok-style satay one of my favourite satay.  Did I use the word satay enough yet?  Oh, and the sambal/dipping sauce served with the SATAY is simple and simply tastes delicious and addictive.

The lotek is a quick vegetable side dish to whip out, especially if you made the dressing ahead.  If you do make it ahead, you can restore the sauce to its original consistency by adding a little bit of warm water and mixing.  This fragrant dressing makes boiled vegetables taste like the fanciest salad ever!

So I present to you the recipes for Lombok-style marinated satay, sambal kecap and lotek, all 3 from the book Authentic Recipes from Indonesia by Heinz Von Holzen and Lother Asarna.


(serves 4-6)

-2lbs/1kg beef cubes
-lime wedges to serve
-2 recipes sambal kecap to serve (recipe follows)
-skewers (soaked in water for an hour if baking in the oven or grilling on charcoal)

Marinade:
-4 candlenuts/kemiri nuts (replace by cashews or boiled almonds)
-1 inch ginger, peeled and roughly sliced
-2 red lombok chillies (replace by one or two bird's eye chillies without the seeds)
-2-3 bird's eye chillies, without seeds
-5 garlic cloves
-1/2tsp terassi (dried shrimp paste), roasted in a piece of aluminum foil in a hot oven for 5-10 minutes
-1tsp salt

-2tbsp oil
-1cup coconut milk (thick if you can find it)

Grind all the marinade ingredients together in a paste with a food processor or mortar and pestle.  In a non-stick pan over medium heat, heat up the oil then add the paste and stir-fry for 5 minutes or until fragrant.  Add coconut milk, lower the heat to medium-low, and simmer for about ten minutes or until the marinade has thicken.  Let it cool then mix it well with the beef cubes and marinate in the fridge for at least 2 hours.

Skewer the meat and cook in a pan, in an oven or on a bbq, turning often and basting with the leftover marinade.  Serve with 2 recipes of sambal kecap.

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And the recipe for sambal kecap, a really simple, easy to prepare and tasty sauce/condiment!

-3-4 shallots, thinly sliced
-1 lombok chilli thinly sliced (or 1 or 2 bird's eye chillies, deseeded if desired)*
-2tbsp kecap manis (thick sweet soy sauce)

Mix everything together!

*Indonesian cuisine uses mainly red lombok chillies, which are about finger-length and less spicy than bird's eye chillies, but I have a really hard time finding them, especially the red ones that i might have seen only once in Indiatown last summer, so I usually use a smaller amount of bird's eye chillies.  You can deseed them if you want but we like a good amount of spice.  Also, even when bird's eye chillies are used, it's almost always the red ones, but I like the taste of the green ones, so I take the liberty to mix them, especially in this sambal kecap, it adds a little wow!



And to finish, a recipe for lotek. Lotek is a salad of blanched vegetables with a peanut dressing. From what I understood, Lotek's dressing is similar to gado-gado's, but with less ingredients.  For example, in many recipes that I saw (I mean like websites and books that contain recipes for both lotek and gado-gado), gado-gado's dressing has kaffir lime leaves but lotek's doesn't. Anyhow, except the selection of vegetables and toppings, I'm not very sure about the differences between these two salads.  I like both!

Dressing (grind all ingredients in a food processor or mortar):
-1/2cup roasted peanuts
-2cm kencur root, peeled (lesser galangal, probably can be substituted for galangal since it's such a small amount)
-2-3 bird's eye chillies, without seeds
-1/2tsp roasted terassi
-1tsp palm sugar
-1tsp salt
-2tbsp water (or more if it is too thick)

You can serve the dressing on a mix of these suggested vegetables:
-blanched water spinach, spinach, or any kind of greens
-blanched or steamed pumpkin, kabocha, sweet potato, or any kind of squash
-green beans or snake beans
-potatoes
-carrots
-bean sprouts

I guess you can inspire yourself from this recipe and do anything you want.  I also added kaffir lime leaves in my dressing because I love them.  You can make it simple like on these pictures, or make it really diverse and fancy!  You'll be surprised how good boiled potatoes and peanut sauce go well together!












Ayam Masak Bugis (Indonesian) Buginese Chicken Stew


As a non-Asian, when I started cooking Asian food, it was hard for me to eat plain white rice.  I guess it's still not my favourite, so I usually eat my rice with pickles.  Another way to eat plain rice, probably my favourite, is with curry.  Indian people call "curry" mostly any dish in gravy or sauce, and plenty, PLENTY of sauce on my rice is the way to go, I usually even take a second serving of rice to finish the sauce!

This Indonesian curry might look like nothing, but it impressed me so much, I know I'm bound to cook it again!  Also I'm starting to enjoy a lot the taste of terassi/belachan (dried fermented shrimp paste sold in block, used in Indonesia and Malaysia too I think).

This curry is sooo easy to prepare! The dish itself was only chicken and sauce, but I was kind of too lazy to prepare a vegetable side dish so I added green beans, carrots and white mushrooms to it, and it was delicious.  I served it with some sambal oelek of course.  So here is the recipe for Buginese Chicken Stew from the book Authentic Recipes from Indonesia by Heinz von Holzen and Lother Arsana.


-a chicken, about 1kg/2lbs, cut in 4 or 6  (i used the same weight in legs only)
-4 cups chicken stock from chicken bones of chicken powder
-2 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
-12 shallots, thinly sliced
-1tbsp terassi (Indonesian dried shrimp paste), roasted in a piece of aluminum foil in the oven for 5-10 minutes at 400F3200C
-2tbsp tamarind juice (see this post for a how to: http://sunnysdelights.blogspot.ca/2014/06/asem-udang-bakar-sambar-telur-and.html)
-1tsp white pepper
-2 salam leaves (also called Indonesian bay leaves, but if you can't find them like me, use curry leaves which are a closer substitute than bay leaves)
-a cinnamon stick
-4 cloves
-1/4tsp nutmeg
-1tsp salt
-1tsp palm sugar or brown sugar
-1tbsp white vinegar
-1 cup coconut milk (thick if you can find it)
-fried shallots to top if desired (I desired it, I just forgot to put it!)
-some vegetables if you want to make this a whole meal 

Bring the stock to a boil over medium, then add all the ingredients except the chicken, coconut milk and vegetables if using, bring to a boil again and simmer for 5 minutes.  Add the chicken and coconut milk and bring to a boil again, then simmer for 20 minutes, turning the chicken every once in a while.

After 20 minutes, remove the chicken and place in a deep serving plate, (add veggies to the sauce if using) and simmer until (the veggies are cooked and) the sauce is reduced by half, about 10 minutes.  Pour the sauce over the chicken and serve with white rice!