curprev19:5219:52, 22 January 2023 Austronesiertalkcontribs 9,848 bytes+12 Per talk, we include both major countries (NB: countries!) here, against the endless POV pushing from chauvinists from both sides. Restricting "Malaysian" to "Malay" is definitely not consensus here (non-Malay Malaysians also know how to fry chicken).undo
curprev22:1822:18, 9 March 2020 Austronesiertalkcontribs 9,251 bytes+30 Reverted 1 edit by Xykds: Pretty odd to see that the Strait of Malacca did not prevent the people on both sides to speak the same language, but yet represented such an abolute barrier for the transfer of basic cooking skills, to the point that the people on the peninsular side were not even able to fry a chicken? (TW)undoTag: Undo
curprev17:1717:17, 23 January 2020 Anumengelamuntalkcontribs 9,236 bytes+59 "Indonesian language" is literally a standardized, politically correct variant of Malay as much "Malaysian language" - according to the Asia Society. Let's keep this politically neutral.undo
curprev06:0306:03, 10 February 2019 Brandonlim96talkcontribs 8,305 bytes+1 Ayam goreng can be found throughout Southeast Asian cuisine. Particularly around the Malay Archipelago (list even states it's places of origins). Calling this exclusively an "Indonesian dish" is not accurate.undoTag: Visual edit