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| name = Ayam goreng |
| name = Ayam goreng |
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| image = [[File:Ayam goreng in Jakarta.JPG|272px]] |
| image = [[File:Ayam goreng in Jakarta.JPG|272px]] |
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| caption = ''Ayam goreng Kalasan'', served with ''kremes'' crispy |
| caption = ''Ayam goreng Kalasan'', served with ''kremes'' crispy granules |
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| alternate_name = |
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| country = [[Indonesia]], [[Malaysia]], [[Singapore]] and [[Brunei]] |
| country = [[Indonesia]], [[Malaysia]], [[Singapore]] and [[Brunei]] |
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'''''Ayam goreng''''' is a generic term to refer to various kinds of [[Indonesian cuisine|Indonesian]] and [[Malaysian cuisine|Malaysian]] dish of [[chicken (food)|chicken]] [[deep fried]] in [[coconut oil]]. ''Ayam goreng'' literally means "fried chicken" in [[Indonesian language|Indonesian]] and [[Malay language|Malay]]. Unlike [[Southern United States]]-style [[fried chicken]], this Southeast Asian version |
'''''Ayam goreng''''' is a generic term to refer to various kinds of [[Indonesian cuisine|Indonesian]] and [[Malaysian cuisine|Malaysian]] dish of [[chicken (food)|chicken]] [[deep fried]] in [[coconut oil]]. ''Ayam goreng'' literally means "fried chicken" in [[Indonesian language|Indonesian]] and [[Malay language|Malay]]. Unlike [[Southern United States]]-style [[fried chicken]], this Southeast Asian version does not have [[Batter (cooking)|batter]] and is not coatedin flour andis richer in [[spices]]. |
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==Marination and spices== |
==Marination and spices== |
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Ayam goreng Kalasan, served with kremes crispy granules
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Course | Main course |
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Place of origin | Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei |
Region or state | Southeast Asia |
Created by | Indonesians and Malay |
Serving temperature | Hot |
Main ingredients | Chicken, turmeric, garlic, shallots and other spices deep friedincoconut oil |
Ayam goreng is a generic term to refer to various kinds of Indonesian and Malaysian dish of chicken deep friedincoconut oil. Ayam goreng literally means "fried chicken" in Indonesian and Malay. Unlike Southern United States-style fried chicken, this Southeast Asian version does not have batter and is not coated in flour and is richer in spices.
The spice mixture may vary among regions, but usually it consists of a combination of ground shallot, garlic, Indian bay leaves, turmeric, lemongrass, tamarind juice, candlenut, galangal, salt and sugar. The chicken pieces are soaked and marinated in spice mixture for some time prior to frying, in order for the chicken to absorb the spices. The chicken is then deep fried in an ample amount of hot coconut oil. Ayam goreng is usually served with steamed rice, sambal terasi (chili with shrimp paste) or sambal kecap (sliced chili and shallot in sweet soy sauce) as a dipping sauce or condiment and slices of cucumber and tomato for garnish. Fried tempeh and tofu might be added as side dishes.
There are many recipes of ayam goreng, among the popular ones are ayam goreng lengkuas (galangal fried chicken),[1] Padang style ayam goreng, Sundanese hayam goreng, Jakarta style ayam goreng, Javanese ayam goreng Kalasan, ayam goreng kremes and Malay ayam goreng berempah. East Javanese pecel ayam is actually an ayam goreng served with sambal. Another Javanese variant is ayam goreng penyet, penyetisJavanese word for "squeezed" since the fried chicken is served in earthenware mortar upon sambal and squeezed with pestle to mix it with sambal. In Indonesia and Malaysia various style of foreign fried chicken is often also called as ayam goreng. Common Southern United States fried chicken is often called ayam goreng tepung or flour-batteredorbreaded fried chicken.
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