Suprisingly, tempe was purportedly indentical with poverty in Indonesia but nowadays, it no longer underestimated. It has become popular and well-liked worldwide and it takes special place into culinary star in many countries.
I am proud to be an Indonesian for having tempe among my daily-life that often cook them in various way, moreover it inexpensive food which are pack of nutrients.
Some time ago, when I was down to my my mom home town, I was learning how to make homemade spinach crakers (rempeyek bayam) and mungbeans mix with anchovies crackers (rempeyek kacang hijau dan ikan teri) through my mother.
it was a great time, I and my mother had a chat within our memories, jokes and laughter adorned both. She shared tips, thought me how to do the trick and advised me with all her wise words of cooking.
Because the time were not enough unfortunately, as well, there were so much plans going on until I forgotten to learn how to make tempe chips with her in personally.
By then it leaves me curious, I was end up with long conversations by phone-call ;( chirping like a hunger bird asking this and that lol
As The ingredients were uniquely given by guesstimated so i need to hold up the recipe before it shared, its a challenging task to make it happen and these guys are became my superb snack :)
To be honest, my tempe chips recipe is actually belonged to my mother, I just adapt and tweaking a little bit and add-in my own idea to make the result equally.
As my mom tips to add-in the betel lime water ( air kapur sirih ) to the batter in order to make them super crispy.
Since I wanted this recipe going on generally so I substitute betel lime water with icing sugar and the result definitely offer me superb satisfying.
Tempe Chips ( Kripik Tempe)
Ingredients
200g tempe, thin slice
½ cup rice flour
¼ cup sago flour ( tepung sagu), substitute tapioca flour
2 kaffir lime leaves, discard mid rib and finely slice
1 clove garlic
½ teaspoon coriander seed/ you may use coriander powder
2 teaspoons icing sugar
½ cup water +2 tbsp
Salt to taste
Oil for deep frying
Method
Using mortar and pestle, grind the garlic and coriander powder
* I use cobek. Set aside
Meanwhile mix rice flour and sago flour in a big bowl,
add-in water stir well until smooth consistency.
Add in spice paste, slice kaffir lime leaves, icing sugar and season with salt.
Heat oil in wok over medium fire, when it’s hot reduce to small fire
* this is very important part to exacting the heats,
otherwise your Tempe would burnt easily and it inedible
Dip the tempe carefully into the batter one at a time and deep fried them
*work patiently and do the remaining until all are done.
Serve and snack them with or without your favorite dipping sauce
Cook note,
~ if sago flour is not available at where you are—u can use sago pearl instead,
grinding them into very fine powder that would resemble flour
* with a note if you might curious about.
~ Try to slice the tempe as thin as possible to get ideal tempe chips




looking good Ira! love the lighting and the set up of your photos ;)
ReplyDeleteMaaaaaak, foto nya cakeeep, kau siksa diriku kembali. *sst..bikin buku masakan donk, foto cakep2 gitu loooh..
ReplyDeleteHi Ira, what a beautiful photography - I've never tried this dish but it looks really delicious!!!
ReplyDeleteOh gosh... i remember buying this on the side of the street.....
ReplyDeleteLooks delicious. Would love for you to share your pictures with us over at foodepix.com.
ReplyDeleteIra, besok2 kalo kamu lg marah ama aku, lemparin aku cobek kecil itu ya *ntar aku tangkep* ...
ReplyDelete~sambil ngunyah-ngunyah tempe goreng~
liza, thank you!
ReplyDeletefitri, hehehe...thank you, bikin buku?? butuh fokus dan confidence, sedangkan aku gak punya 100% :(
ReplyDeleteNami, it easy to make as long as Tempe available in Japan :))
ReplyDeleteJess, you definitely missing them right now ;)
ReplyDeletefoodepix, sure thing! thank you for dropping by
ReplyDeleteVania, LOL... make sure nangkepnya pakek baseball gloves ya hehehe
ReplyDeleteWe ate so many of these when we were in Indonesia and and have definitely been missing them! Totally making these soon.
ReplyDeleteThey look so crispy and yummy! True enough, tempe is no longer the poor man food, but a right of its own. Thanks for sharing the recipe with us. I can have so many of these crispy goodness!
ReplyDeleteIra,
ReplyDeleteYour photos and recipes always leaves me drooling.. I need to get some tempeh, ASAP :)
I really want to try Temph. i have heard a lot and ewe do get it at one of our health food market. Your recipe seems perfect for me, because I am glutenfree.
ReplyDeleteRachel, thank you for dropping by and leave a comment.
ReplyDeletewould love to know how this recipe turns out, happy cooking!
Reese, its truly yes that tempe finally a Rocking star to the world culinary
ReplyDeleteKiran, thank you for the kind words to my works, really appreciate
ReplyDeleteNeetu, thank you for the visit.
ReplyDeletei do hope that you like the result when you get the tempe at the market, happy cooking ;)
Looks really good! I have never tried making Tempe chips at home!
ReplyDeleteYou must try it out one day, it worth it and super addicted
DeleteThank you Lemeei
wah mantap..
ReplyDeletehai Ira thx for the recipe. do you know where to betel lime in US?
ReplyDeletePerhaps you can online order and shipping over to US
Delete