Mie celor

Mie Celor

A plate of Mie Celor with sambal.
Course Main course
Place of origin Indonesia
Region or state Palembang, South Sumatra
Serving temperature Hot
Main ingredients Noodle, coconut milk, dried shrimp broth, bean sprouts, egg, celery, scallion, shallot
Cookbook: Mie Celor  Media: Mie Celor

Mie celor (meaning: celor/blanched noodle), is a noodle dish served in coconut milk soup and shrimp-based broth, specialty of Palembang city, South Sumatra, Indonesia.[1]

Ingredients

It is made from rather large yellow wheat noodle, with the size similar of Japanese buckwheat noodle. The broth can be made from ebi (dried shrimp) or fresh shrimp, cooked in rich coconut milk. The noodle is served with bean sprouts and hard boiled egg, and sprinkled with sliced fresh celery, scallion and fried shallot.

If the broth was made from some fresh shrimps, the peeled shrimp itself would be the part of the topping. If however dried shrimp are used instead, the ground dried shrimp powder would be sprinkled on top of the noodle. To add spiciness, a separate sambal might be added on the side.

Etymology

In local South Sumatran Malay dialect, celor or celur means showering the ingredients in boiled hot water, in similar fashion as blanching. It refer to the method of softening and cooking the noodle before simmered in coconut milk soup. Today, together with pempek, mie celor has become Palembang's signature dish.

See also

References

  1. "Mie Celor Palembang". Ridha's Kitchen. November 18, 2013. Retrieved May 20, 2014.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.