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Monday, June 30, 2008

Nasi Love











On a recent trip to Bali I discovered the joys of Nasi Campur. ..

Nasi campur (mixed rice) is the most basic dish in Indo. That together with nasi goreng (fried rice) are the 2 meals most commonly consumed - Indonesians will typically have these dishes for both lunch and dinner, and probably a cigarette and a coffee for breakfast.

Nasi campur is a portion of steamed white rice (nasi putih) together with an assortment of other items, which can be wide ranging depending on who’s cooking. Its guaranteed that no 2 places will serve the exact same nasi campur. This dish has been around for a long time because it enables people to use left overs and small amounts of the more expensive items.

Around Kuta/Seminyak are a wealth of small warungs serving nasi campur. Some are oriented towards tourists / expats, other towards locals. It is pretty easy to tell which is which based on price (2500RP for locals compared to 25,000RP for tourists).

My very favourite Nasi Campur was at Made’s Warung (the original Made’s is in Kuta, and the new Made’s is in Seminyak). Made’s does an awesome campur for 15,000rp. Items found in nasi campur include tofu (tahu) tempe, chicken (ayam), beef (sapi), fish (ikan), peanuts (kacang), together with a wide selction of cooked vegetables including kangkung, the stringy green plant sometimes cooked with garlic and chili. A dollop of hot sambal might be added to the side of the plate, so treat any red sauce with care.

My favourite dish was the 1/2 nasi campur, 1/2 gado gado served at Made’s. It is 35,000RP (around $4) and is making my mouth water thinking about it. Under the low lighting of the beautiful balinese style courtyard at new Made’s you can’t really see what you are eating, but just devour this plate of yummy yummy flavours.

I would love to learn how to make it.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Jess’ Cheat Moroccan Chicken


buy the masterfoods moroccan spice mix, mix it with a heap of lemon and garlic and a bit of oil

coat the chicken it and marinate for as long as you can. i like to add chilli flakes as well, and extra cumin. anything in the cupboard that goes is good to add in fact.

cook the chicken: barbeque, fry in a pan, or bake in the oven for 30 minutes (baste regularly with the sauceif baking)

get some natural yogurt, mix it with cumin, cumin seeds, lemon and garlic, maybe a little oil too. set aside and when ready, serve with the chicken.

for the cous cous, cook as per the packet, then add cut up a capsicum, spring onion, coriander, handfuls of currants, pistachios, (maybe even pine nuts or almonds). and there is the dinner. garnish with coriander too. make a big serve and it is good for lunch the next day cold. i also like pouring the juices from chicken the pan over my couscous.

Grublover comment
This recipe is from my dear friend Jess, and I agree with her comment that it is “pretty damn fine”.