Tempe is my favorite food overall, a cake made from soybean and fermented, they are cheap and it taste just like meat.
Reputedly to a story that I ever heard, some of them have regards Tempe only for poor people , the fact that they are wrong anyway. Tempe doesn’t deserve falsehood of rumour because Tempe is containing high protein.
By the way, there are always having words to described Tempe , a cake that has earthy smell, has succeed to amazed the world and of course it delicious.
My Sate Tempe recipe is actually inspired by Vegetarian Food Combining recipe book which written in Bahasa Indonesia, Unfortunately the recipe inside has no picture included, it makes me totally out of thrilled.
The ingredients have engaged lots of spices, needed several hours of marinated and also mentioned and prefer peanut sauce for it serves.
For it reasons, I made my own way of sate tempe and serve them with my simply lip smacking sauce that hold sweet soy sauce, slice fresh shallots, chili and lime juice, the combo has really appetizing taste to me, simply delish!
I called for my mother meat supposed-spice ingredients as she said that cumin seeds are always works best for the meat, they have been marry together since our ancestor time, haha…
For your special notes, I don’t used salt in this recipe as the sweet soy sauce creates enormous flavor to the Sate Tempe
Beside that, I fancy a traditional way of grilling, using charcoal mix with coconut shell, I just love the the particular smoky smell to my sate tempe, those charcoal and coconut shell have making the whole package flavorful and perfectly characterized
Sate Tempe
Yield 7-8 pieces of sate
Ingredients
150g tempe, cubed
8 bamboo skewer
*Soak in water 15 minutes
Marinate spices
4 tablespoons sweet soy sauce (kecap manis)
1 tablespoons olive oil
A good pinch of cumin seeds
½ teaspoon coriander seeds
1 cloves garlic, slice and fried
For the garnish
Deep fried shallots (bawang goreng)
*you might homemade it, finely slice shallots and deep fried
or ready made one
For the garnish
Deep fried shallots (bawang goreng)
*you might homemade it, finely slice shallots and deep fried
or ready made one
Ingredients for the sauce
5 tablespoons sweet soy sauce (kecap manis)
3-4 shallots (bawang merah), slice
2 chilies, slice *adjust the intensity of spiciness to your liking
Juice from ½ lime
*In the saucepan, combine all the sauce ingredients,
have a taste until it taste hooked you
Method
Steam the tempe for about 10 minutes
Preheat the grill
*You can always use pan grill or traditional way of grilling using charcoal
Using non stick pan, toast cumin seeds and coriander seeds, set aside
In a mortar and pestle *I use cobek, combine fried garlic,
cumin seeds and coriander seeds, grind them to smooth
cumin seeds and coriander seeds, grind them to smooth
Add-ins sweet soy sauce (kecap manis) and olive oil, mix well
Place cubed Tempe into mortar and pestle and mix with the marinated spices,
fold tempe gently using spoon until tempe cubed are well coated.
Thread tempe onto skewers, grill for 1-2 minutes each side.
Serve with the sauce





my mouth just watered.. honest!!
ReplyDeleteyour tempe are sexy!! *disindang sih makanan nya orang kaya maaak, bikin nya susah soale.. jadi gue suka brasa jadi wong sugih klo udah bisa makan tempe xixixi
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful dish! I've never been to Indonesia but had some dishes before because my college roommate was from Indonesia. I really enjoyed browsing your site! Photos are gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteYum! And what great shots and beautiful presentation. I am definitely wanting to try this one!
ReplyDeletemmm this looks delicious! may i ask, where did you find sweet soy sauce?!
ReplyDeleteNeelu, :))...thank you
ReplyDeleteFitri, lol..i can imagine how expensive Tempe in the US.
ReplyDeleteNami, Thank you for the visit and leave a comment :))
ReplyDeleteRussel, glad to hear that you gonna try to make sate tempe, it absolutely yummy, honestly :)
ReplyDeleteKara, i live in Indonesia which is very easy to, Kecap manis (sweet soy sauce is like the soul of every Indonesians :))
ReplyDeleteand i belive that you live in the US so you might get the sweet soy sauce (kecap manis) in the Asian store if at your place available or you might get it on line
Thanks for the visit anyway
Tempe is almost like my staple everyday food! Have never tried it Satay style!! :)Looks amazingly good!
ReplyDeleteIra - your tempe satay really makes everyone mouth watering. Even the non-vegetarians will not say no to this. What a fabulous idea of grilling tempe! The sweet soy sauce & the fried shallots are such complements, making this dish a delight! I wish tempe is a lot more available in Malaysia.
ReplyDeleteJess, just like you, i love tempe as part of my food :), hope you try sate tempe one day :), its yummy
ReplyDeleteReese, thank you.
ReplyDeleteoh i thought tempe is very easy to find in Malaysia
seperti biasa..aku ngences....cess...hihihi...tempe di gawe sate hadoww...awak dewe ae lek nggoreng di itung sangking irit e wkwkwk...itu mangkuk batu gawe aku yo...gambar e hebring!
ReplyDeleteI have never tried tempe like this! Looks yum!
ReplyDeleteGorgeous photos, Ira! I love tempe - grew up eating, in Malaysia. Gorgeous photos :)
ReplyDeleteOh, georgeous photos! Love the colors! What kind of camera and lenses are you using?
ReplyDeleteI would like to eat that :).
Em
This blog is nice and amazing. I love your post! It's also nice to see someone who does a lot of research and has a great knack for ting, which is pretty rare from bloggers these days.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
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