Thursday, April 22, 2010

Curry Udon

Another improvitation from my kitchen... ^^ lol
Usually opor is being eating with Rice, or Lontong. In my kitchen I just have fresh Udon, so I was thinking why can't I eat opor with it ? Sounds weird huh ? but the taste is not as weird as it sounds...Just try it !!

For the opor seasoning I used instant seasoning.. yeah, not healthy at all, but I had to coz I was hungry, the drums is already being played (my stomach)...Don't have much time to make the fresh one so I used Indofood OPOR AYAM..


Ingredients
2oo gr fresh Udon
1 pack Indofood OPOR AYAM
2 boiled eggs
2 tbsp dried small shrimp
50 gr bean sprouts
tofu (as much as you like)
4 small chilli (as preference)
3 cloves garlic
1 /2 red onion
water

How to make :
Chop the garlic, onion, and chilli, set aside. Heat oil in a boiling pot, add onion and garlic also the shrimp until a little bit brown. Add the instant seasoning, stir a bit then add about 400 ml water let it boil for a while. Add boiled egg, chilli, udon and tofu. Let it boil for about 5-10 minutes.
Serve it with bean sprout.

A small Information about OPOR

Opor, Indonesian’s tra­di­tion in Idul Fitri (Ramad­han Fes­ti­val) is iden­ti­cal with the pres­ence of Chicken Opor as appe­tizer when being together with fam­ily. Even, Indone­sians who live abroad say that Chicken Opor is an oblig­a­tory meal in Idul Fitri, just like tra­di­tion of Chicken Turkey on Thanks­giv­ing Day. As a part of feast, it is accom­pa­nied by ketu­pat and fried liv­ers sam­bal as complements.

The his­tory is Chicken Opor was claimed as Javanese cul­ture, espe­cially Jawa Ten­gah and west­ern Jawa Timur. But, this meal is also much known in other regions. Actu­ally, Chicken Opor is thick spicy boiled chicken that the spice made from squeezed coconut and added by sev­eral spices such as serai (lemongrass/citronella), ken­cur (grater galin­gale), and so on. Because the fla­vor is not hot and deli­cious, this food is closed on either children’s tongues or old peo­ple one. It is very suit­able for you who like food with squeezed coconut. If you are bored with chicken as the prime ingre­di­ent, you can change it with tofu, pota­toes, or eggs. It is cheap enough but it is still deli­cious. If you wanna shake your tongue with this, let see the recipe below.


Chicken Opor
Chicken Opor Recipe

Ingre­di­ents:

  • 1 free-range chicken or domes­tic poul­try, cut into 8 pieces, clean and smear with salt and lime, let it for about 15 minutes
  • 1 liter squeezed coconut or 1 small box of Kara coconut milk, add for more thick soup
  • 1–2 cloves (preferred)
  • 1–2 stalks of serai, crushed
  • 3–4 cm of galan­gale, crushed
  • 1–2 lau­rel likes
  • 1–2 cit­rus leaves
  • A half of medium pan of water, mix with coconut cream
  • Cook­ing oil
  • 1 tbsp salt
  • Sugar
  • Chicken stock (from chicken’s soaking)

Grinded Spice:

  • 5 grains kemiri (fruits of can­dlenut tree), fried with­out oil
  • 1 tbsp corian­der, fried with­out oil
  • 2 cm turmeric
  • 3–4 cloves garlic
  • 5 onions

Direc­tions:

  1. Con­sum­ing free-range chicken doesn’t need to be fried because the flesh will be tough. But, it is sug­gested to fry domes­tic poul­try until it is skinny (not too dry), removed.
  2. Cook grinded spice in lit­tle oil, then add cit­rus leaves, serai, galan­gale, lau­rel likes, cloves. Cook until it is fra­grant. Put fired chicken in and add coconut milk.
  3. Stir occa­sion­ally in order that the coconut milk doesn’t cur­dle, espe­cially the coconut milk has boiled. Medium fire and stir­ring occa­sion­ally is sug­gested. Add salt, sugar, and stock. Cook about for 1 hour because usu­ally spice has absorbed into domes­tic poul­try. Free-range chicken needs more times to be well-done.
  4. Serve with sow­ing fried onion. Lon­tong, ketu­pat, or rice is preferred.

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