Beef kway teow: Difference between revisions
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'''Beef |
'''Beef kway teow''' or '''Beef Kwetiau''' is a dish of flat rice noodle ([[Shahe fen|kway teow]]) noodles [[stir-fried]] and topped with slices of [[beef]] or sometimes include beef offals, served either dry or with soup. The dish is commonly found in Southeast Asian countries; especially Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia, and can trace its origin to [[Chinese cuisine|Chinese tradition]]. It is popular dish in [[Singapore cuisine|Singapore]] and among [[Chinese Indonesian cuisine|Chinese Indonesians]] where it locally known in [[Indonesian language|Indonesian]] as '''''Kwetiau Sapi'''''.<ref>{{cite web| title = Kwetiau sapi / Beef kway teow | author = Tri Sari | date = August 12, 2011 | work = Indonesian Cooking | url = http://indonesiancooking.yolasite.com/recipes/kwetiau-sapi-beef-kway-teow }}</ref> |
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==Variants== |
==Variants== |
Revision as of 13:46, 4 February 2016
File:Beef Kway Teow.jpg | |
Alternative names | Kwetiau Sapi |
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Course | Main course |
Place of origin | Singapore and Indonesia |
Region or state | Nationwide in Singapore and Indonesia |
Serving temperature | Hot |
Main ingredients | Kway teow (flat rice noodles), beef tenderloin, gula Melaka ,sliced, dried black beans, garlic, dark soy sauce, lengkuas (galangal or blue ginger), oyster sauce, soya sauce, chilli and sesame oil |
Variations | Fried Beef Kway Teow, Hainanese-style beef noodles |
Beef kway teow or Beef Kwetiau is a dish of flat rice noodle (kway teow) noodles stir-fried and topped with slices of beef or sometimes include beef offals, served either dry or with soup. The dish is commonly found in Southeast Asian countries; especially Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia, and can trace its origin to Chinese tradition. It is popular dish in Singapore and among Chinese Indonesians where it locally known in Indonesian as Kwetiau Sapi.[1]
Variants
Technically, all kway teow (flat rice noodles) stir fried with beef can be categorized as beef kway teow. As the result, there are various recipes of beef kway teow exist.
Singapore
In Singapore, traditionally, beef extract was added to the stock, and the soup is enhanced with gula melaka and lengkuas (galangal or blue ginger). [2] However, the dry version of Beef Kway Teow is mixed with sesame oil, soy sauce and chilli; thick gravy is not usually served in this version.[3]
Indonesia
In Indonesia, kwetiau sapi is a popular Chinese Indonesian dish. Kwetiau with beef is known in three variants; kwetiau siram sapi (poured upon), kwetiau goreng sapi (stir fried), and kwetiau bun sapi (a rather moist version). The kwetiau siram sapi is a kwetiau noodle poured (Indonesian: siram) with beef in thick flavorful sauce. The beef sauce has thick and rather gloppy glue-like consistency acquired from corn starch as thickening agent. The kwetiau goreng sapi is a variant of popular kwetiau goreng (stir fried kway teow) but distinctly served with beef. While the kwetiau bun sapi is similar to common fried kwetiau but rather moist and soft due to water addition.[4]
The common ingredients are flat rice noodle (kwetiau), thin slices of beef tenderloin, garlic, sliced bakso meatballs, caisim, napa cabbage, oyster sauce, beef stock, soy sauce, black pepper, sugar, corn starch, and cooking oil.[5]
See also
References
- ^ Tri Sari (August 12, 2011). "Kwetiau sapi / Beef kway teow". Indonesian Cooking.
- ^ "Beef Kway Teow Soup". TheStraitsTimes. Retrieved 25 January 2016.
- ^ "Beef kway teow".
- ^ "Siapa Tak Kenal Kwetiau Sapi Mabes?". Kompas Travel (in Indonesian). 28 November 2011.
- ^ Caroline Myra (14 November 2014). "Resep Kwetiau Siram Sapi ala Restoran, Lezat, Sehat tanpa Micin". Kompasiana (in Indonesian).