Selain Coto dan Konro, Makassar juga punya sajian kuliner khas yang akhir-akhir ini cukup naik daun. Apalagi kalau bukan nasi goreng merah yang memiliki daya tarik tersendiri karena warna merahnya yang benar-benar mencolok. Warna merah pekat nasi goreng tersebut memang berasal dari saus merah khas Makassar yang terbuat dari tomat. Bagi kamu yang selama ini penasaran dengan resep nasi goreng merah khas Makassar ini, langsung saja simak resepnya berikut dan segera eksekusi di dapurmu!1. Bahan-bahan yang dibutuhkanilustrasi saus merah khas Makassar membuat 3-4 porsi nasi goreng merah khas Makassar, bahan-bahan yang harus kamu persiapkan adalah sebagai berikut, 600 gram nasi putih dingin 3 butir telur 3 siung bawang putih cincang halus 3 siung bawang merah cincang halus 150 gram ayam fillet potong kecil-kecil atau dadu 200 gram udang ukuran sedang kupas dan buang kulitnya 1 batang daun bawang iris tipis-tipis 5 sdm saus merah Makassar 1 sdt garam 1/2 merica bubuk Timun secukupnya Selada secukupnya Tomat secukupnya Minyak goreng secukupnya 2. Goreng telur terlebih dahuluilustrasi mengocok telur tiga butir telur terlebih dahulu, kemudian pecahkan lalu kocok telur hingga kuning dan putihnya menyatu. Goreng telur menjadi dua bentuk, yang pertama jadikan telur dadar terlebih dahulu. Kemudian yang kedua buat telur orak-arik untuk campuran nasi goreng merah untuk telur dadarnya, kalian bisa menambahkan garam secukupnya untuk memberikan sedikit rasa asin pada telur. Jika sudah selesai membuat telur dadar dan orak-arik, Masukkan bumbu-bumbu dan bahan pelengkapilustrasi bawang merah dan putih wajan berukuran sedang kemudian tuangkan minyak goreng secukupnya. Selanjutnya, tumis bawang putih dan bawang merah yang sudah diiris tipis-tipis. Tumis bumbu tersebut hingga aroma harumnya daging ayam fillet yang sudah di potong dadu atau kecil-kecil beserta udang yang telah dibersihkan dan dibuang kulitnya. Masak terus hingga bahan-bahan pelengkap tadi berubah warna dan matang. Baca Juga Resep Nasi Goreng Tek-tek ala Abang Kaki Lima, Aromanya Bikin Ngiler 4. Tambahkan nasi putih serta saus merahilustrasi memasak nasi putih sebanyak empat piring atau sekitar 600 gram. Langsung masukan ke dalam wajan yang telah berisi bumbu-bumbu dan bahan pelengkap. Aduk terus menerus hingga nasi mengurai atau masukan telur yang sudah diorak-arik sebelumnya. Aduk sebentar kemudian tambahkan saus merah Makassar, garam, merica, dan irisan daun bawang. Oseng terus menerus sampai bumbu dan nasi serta warna merah pada saus tercampur Nasi goreng merah khas Makassar siap disantap!Nasi goreng merah Makassar Jika nasi goreng merah khas Makassar terlihat sudah matang, angkat lalu pindahkan ke piring saji secukupnya. Plating nasi goreng tersebut dengan menambahkan telur dadar, mentimun, selada, dan irisan goreng merah khas Makassar sangat nikmat jika dimakan menggunakan kerupuk. Rasa manis dari saus merah yang berbahan dasar tomat dan gurihnya bumbu bakal bikin kamu gak berhenti perlu ribet beli di luar kalau sudah tahu resep nasi goreng merah di atas. Kamu bisa bikin di rumah dengan porsi sesuai kebutuhanmu, deh. Dijamin, rasanya gak kalah nikmat dengan yang ada di resto atau warung langganan kalian. Baca Juga Resep Nasi Goreng Cumi Tinta yang Enak dan Tanpa Bau Amis IDN Times Community adalah media yang menyediakan platform untuk menulis. Semua karya tulis yang dibuat adalah sepenuhnya tanggung jawab dari penulis.
Selainitu nasi ini juga kaya akan vitamin dan mineral sehingga membuat nasi merah dipilih untuk menjalani program diet. Hanya saja ada orang-orang yang salah mempersepsikan nasi merah yang
Anda sedang mencari resep untuk sarapan? Nasi goreng merah bisa menjadi solusi menu sarapan Anda. Cara membuatnya tidak terlalu sulit, Anda hanya membutuhkan nasi, saus tomat, saus rajarasa, saus tiram, dan beberapa bahan lainnya untuk membuat nasi goreng merah. Sebaiknya Anda menggunakan tekstur nasi yang pera agar lebih nikmat ya. Tak perlu khawatir akan memakan waktu yang panjang, membuat nasi goreng merah hanya membutuhkan waktu selama 30 menit hingga disajikan ke meja makan Anda loh. Selamat mencoba!Baca JugaNasi Goreng KuningNasi Goreng Tek-TekNasi Goreng Jawa
Steps Stir-fry until fragrant spices. Enter the red rice, fish sauce, sugar, shredded chilli, leeks, stir well. Add bean sprouts, bean sprouts stir until wilted. Lift. Serve with a sprinkling of fried rice fried anchovies, sliced omelet and fried onions.
Though there are many worthy contenders for the title, all right-thinking people surely agree that fried rice is the very best kind of rice. And the Indonesian version, nasi goreng, is right up there in the top tier – “one of the world’s great comfort foods”, according to Rick Stein, who developed a taste for it while filming there with a crew who apparently preferred to start the day with a full English. Jakarta-born food writer Pat Tanumihardja explains that it’s the use of kecap manis Indonesian soy sauce and terasi Indonesian shrimp paste that “sets nasi goreng apart from other fried-rice variations you’ll see in other countries”.Not that there’s just one version of nasi goreng, obviously; a country made up of more than 14,000 islands contains multitudes in this respect as much as any other there’s nasi goreng kambing with mutton, nasi goreng ayam with chicken, and nasi goreng gila, or crazy fried rice, which can apparently contain anything the cook happens to have to hand, from corned beef to sausages. But for those of us without easy access to Indonesia’s many night markets and street stalls, what’s the best way to make it at home?The riceClearly, the most important ingredient, and all the recipes I try call for long-grained varieties, occasionally basmati, but more often jasmine, which goes slightly sticky when cooked, making it easier to eat. That should, in theory, also make it less satisfactory for stir-frying, but actually, as long as you break up any clumps beforehand, this tacky plumpness makes for a very alluring texture. So, though you can use just about any rice you like, jasmine is my Tanumihardja’s nasi goreng it’s the kecap manis and shrimp paste that sets nasi goreng apart’. Thumbnails Felicity CloakeThe prevailing wisdom with fried rice is that you need to let the rice cool completely first, with Tanumihardja recommending using day-old rice for this purpose, and Indonesian food writer and cook Sri Owen telling readers of her Rice Book to let it cool for at least two hours before use. Some recipes, however, such as Meera Sodha’s in East, use freshly cooked rice – and, to my surprise, this works just fine. As Serious Eats’ J Kenji López-Alt, who has investigated the subject with characteristic rigour, explains, as cooked rice ages, it dries out, which means it’ll fry more quickly and is less likely to stick together – he recommends leaving it under a fan for an hour, but says even freshly cooked rice spread out on a tray to cool slightly before use is superior to drier, day-old rice, which has a tendency to go hard and chewy in a hot wok. Personally, I rather like a few rogue, crunchy grains, but still, it’s good to know that a sudden craving for fried rice isn’t necessarily a hiding to fatOwen uses a mixture of oil and butter, which is hard to prevent burning at such a high heat. If you’d like butter in there – though it doesn’t seem to be common, as far as I can tell – add it at the end a neutral oil seems the best bet for Owen’s version if you are going to add meat or seafood, cook it through first, is Owen’s baseAlmost every recipe starts with some sort of onion – whether yellow, as in Owen’s version and Eleanor Ford’s in Fire Islands; red as in Sodha’s; or shallots as in Rick Stein, Jennifer Joyce and Tanumihardja’s recipes – and garlic. My testers and I like the sweetness of the shallots, but red onion makes a good substitute, with some fresh spring onion stirred in at the end as in Ford, Stein and Anissa Helou’s are also vital, both medium and mild and small and vicious, though Tanumihardja suggests stirring in some sambal oelek, or tangy Indonesian chilli paste instead. Helou makes her own sambal bajak, a brick-red mixture of fried chillies, shallots, palm sugar, bay leaves, lemongrass, galangal, tamarind and nutmeg, which gives her dish a lovely, warm sweetness. Stein, meanwhile, gives us a recipe that starts with a Balinese spice paste made from pepper, nutmeg, candlenuts, sesame seeds, shallots, ginger, galangal, turmeric, pauses for breath lemongrass, garlic, chillies, shrimp paste, palm sugar, salt, lime juice and my lovely accountant recently brought me back from Malaysia a gift of candlenuts, which look deceptively like macadamias but are toxic raw – and, perhaps unsurprisingly, can be hard to source in this country – and this feels like the perfect excuse to use some of them up. The results are deliciously aromatic – a real special-occasion dish – but it can’t be denied that these may not be ingredients that everyone will have to hand, and as this is essentially a way with leftovers for most home cooks, I’m going to pare it back to the essentials, while keeping the paste idea, which seems to distribute the flavours better through the rice than chopped ingredients. Shallots, chilli, garlic and shrimp paste feel like the cornerstones; add other ingredients as you fancy – and note that Jane Grigson includes a recipe using anchovies instead of shrimp paste in her Fruit Book, which may sound unlikely, especially in combination with her banana garnish, but actually works surprisingly Grigson’s take on nasi goreng uses strips of omelette rather than the more common fried manis, a sweet, thick soy sauce, is, as Tanumihardja observes, a must, though you could use dark soy sauce and sugar if you can’t find it, and most recipes also include some light soy sauce, too, for a more salty, savoury note. Some recipes include an acid as well – Sodha goes for white-wine vinegar, Helou for tamarind and Stein for lime juice – but I find the oily starchiness of the rice more comforting without. Tomatoes are also a possibility, generally in the form of puree, though Owen allows for ketchup as an alternative, which also ticks the sweet-and-sour box, if that’s what you’re all the recipes come garnished with a fried egg which is why nasi goreng is the best of all fried rices. But some also incorporate eggs in other forms Grigson goes for strips of omelette, while Helou cracks an egg directly into the wok, explaining that William Wongso, Indonesia’s foremost celebrity chef, reckons it must brown on the base “to release the aroma” before adding the rice. I’m with him; egg-fried rice is never a bad meat and 10 vegHelou writes in her book Feast that “you can add what you want to the rice, but traditionally it is made simply with spring onions and fresh chillies and served for breakfast with a fried egg”. As Owen notes, if you are going to add meat or seafood, as Stein does with his chicken and prawns, and Grigson with her ham definitely non-traditional in a country that’s Muslim, it’s best to cook it through first. That way, you don’t overcook the other ingredients. However, some vegetables can be added straight to the wok, as long as they’re chopped up fairly small I try recipes using mushrooms, carrots, green beans and even, to my utter joy, shredded Brussels sprouts thanks, Meera!. I can confirm that, as long as it will cook in time, this is an infinitely generous dish, ready to welcome with open arms almost anything you throw into Helou Traditionally, nasi goreng is made simply with spring onions and fresh chillies and served for breakfast with a fried egg.’The garnishFried eggs are the classic choice, but sliced cucumber and tomato are also popular, the cucumber in particular adding a soothing crunch. Prawn crackers are also sometimes used as a secondary piece of cutlery. Crispy shallots, of the kind sold in south-east Asian food stores, are a great idea. Grigson’s salted peanuts and banana are perhaps more leftfield choices, but as I have not, as yet, been lucky enough to visit Indonesia, I’m unable to pronounce on their popularity in the field, so I’ll just say anchovies and banana is not a combination I’m keen to nasi gorengPrep 25 min, plus chilling timeCook 5 minServes 2200g jasmine rice 2 tbsp neutral oil1 garlic clove, peeled and crushed2 eggs, beaten2 tbsp kecap manis2 tsp soy sauce4 spring onions1 bird’s eye chilli, sliced, to serveFor the paste50g shallots, peeled and roughly chopped1 garlic clove, peeled and roughly chopped2 tsp Indonesian shrimp paste terasi1 large medium red chilli, deseeded1 tbsp neutral oilOptional toppingsFried eggsSliced cucumber or tomatoesLightly blanched vegetablesCooked meat or seafoodCrispy shallotsSalted peanutsPut the rice in a pan with 400ml boiling water. Stir once, bring to a simmer, then cover and turn the heat right down. Cook for 15 minutes, then take off the heat and leave on a damp tea towel or cloth for five minutes with the lid off. Fork through to fluff up, then spread on a baking tray and refrigerate, overnight if the rice in boiling water, drain, spread out on an oven tray to cool down, then all the ingredients for the paste in a small blender or mortar and whizz or pound until fairly all the ingredients for the spice the oil in a wok over a high heat, then fry the garlic until golden, not brown, then pour in the eggs, leave to cook until half set, then break up. Carry on frying the egg until it’s just beginning to brown, then tip in the spice paste and cook for a minute or the garlic until golden, then add the eggs and leave to cook until semi-set and brown at the the rice by hand, breaking up any clumps as you go, and fry until heated through, then stir in the kecap manis, soy sauce, spring onion and in the spice paste, then add the rice, breaking it up as you do so. Add the soy, spring onion and chilli, and stirring, for another minute or so, then taste and season as necessary. Divide between plates and top with whatever you’ve chosen from the list above. Eat immediately. Nasi goreng the best version of the best of all rice dishes, or do you have another favourite? How do you make yours, and have you ever had it with a banana on top?
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