Mie goreng
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Mie goreng in a restaurant in Jakarta. |
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Origin | |
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Alternative name(s) | Mee goreng or Mi goreng |
Place of origin | Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore |
Region or state | Nationwide |
Creator(s) | Chinese Indonesian and Peranakan |
Details | |
Course | Main course |
Serving temperature | Hot |
Main ingredient(s) | Fried noodles with chicken, meat or prawn |
Contents |
Origin and variations
The dish is derived from Chinese chow mein and believed to have been introduced by Chinese immigrants in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore. Mie goreng is also similar to Japanese yakisoba. However mie goreng has been more heavily integrated into Indonesian cuisine; for example the application of popular sweet soy sauce, sprinkle of fried shallots, addition of spicy sambal and the absence of pork and lard in favour for shrimp, chicken, or beef; to cater for the Muslim majority.In Indonesia mie goreng variants usually named after the ingredients, for example common mie goreng usually uses chicken, but mie goreng sapi uses beef, mie goreng kambing uses goat meat or mutton, mie goreng udang uses shrimp while mie goreng seafood uses mixture of fish, squid and shrimp. Some mie goreng might be named after the region of origin, such as Mie Goreng Aceh from Aceh province, mie goreng Jawa from Central Java and mie goreng Surabaya from Surabaya city. Mie goreng tek-tek refer to mie goreng sold by travelling street hawkers that hitting the wok making "tek-tek" sounds to announce their wares, while mie goreng dhog-dhog refer to mie goreng Surabaya that uses slit drum instead.[3] Indonesian tends to named similar foreign dishes as mie goreng, for example in Indonesia, chow mein is often called mie goreng China and yakisoba is called mie goreng Jepang. The instant version of mie goreng, Indomie Mi goreng, is also popular in Indonesia and other countries, notably Netherlands, Nigeria, Australia, and New Zealand.
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