Woku

Woku is an Indonesian type of bumbu (spice mixture) found in Manado cuisine of North Sulawesi, Indonesia. It has rich aroma and spicy taste. Woku consist of ground spices paste; red ginger, turmeric, candlenut and red chili pepper, mixed with chopped shallot, scallion, tomato, lemon or citrus leaf and turmeric leaf, lemon basil leaf and bruised lemongrass. Rub main ingredients (chicken or fish) with salt and lime juices, and marinate for 30 minutes. All spices are cooked in coconut oil until the aroma came up and mixed together with the main ingredients, water, and a pinch of salt, well until all cooked well.

Woku
Red Snapper Woku
CourseMain course
Place of originIndonesia
Region or stateNorth Sulawesi
Serving temperatureHot
Main ingredientsChicken or seafood in hot and spicy spice mixture

Etymology

Woku is an authentic Manado sauce that get named from daun woka. Daun woka is a kind of young coconut leaf that is usually used as a rice wrapper.[1] Originally the initial woku dish are all wrapped inside young coconut leaf or banana leaf before being cooked, in similar fashion of cooking pepes or ketupat.

Variants

Almost any kind of meat, poultry and seafood can be made as a woku dish. The most common and popular are ayam woku (chicken woku)[2] and kakap woku (red snapper woku).[3] Woku belanga is a woku variant cooked in a belanga (clay pot) or any kind of saucepan, while woku daun is a woku dish cooked and wrapped in banana or woku (young coconut) leaves.[1]

gollark: Well, sure/
gollark: PotatOS actually just does `os.queueEvent "terminate"` and kills shell, though.
gollark: You queue some wrong event.
gollark: You can just crash the rednet coroutine and hook `printError`.
gollark: Now *none*, actually, since that's done in native code and CC:T has `debug`.

See also

References

  1. "Ayam Woku Belanga (Chicken with Spicy Chilli Woku Sauce)". My Little Kitchen. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
  2. "Ayam Woku" (in Indonesian). Sajian Sedap. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
  3. "Resep Masakan Kakap Woku Belanga Khas Manado" (in Indonesian). Resepnya.com. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.