Composition and cooking method
The cooking technique flourished because of its role in preserving meat in a tropical climate. Rendang is rich in spices. Along with the main meat ingredient, rendang uses coconut milk (Minangkabau: karambia) and a paste of mixed ground spices, which includes ginger, galangal, turmeric leaves, lemon grass, garlic, shallot, chillies and other spices. This spice mixture is called pemasak in Minangkabau. The spices, garlic, shallot, ginger and galangal used in rendang have antimicrobial properties and serve as natural organic preservatives. If cooked properly, dry rendang can last for as long as four weeks.
Traditional Padang rendang takes hours to cook. Cooking rendang
involves pounding and grinding ingredients as well as slow cooking, and
so is time-consuming and requires patience.[8] The meat pieces are slowly cooked in coconut milk and spices
until almost all the liquid is gone, allowing the meat to absorb the
condiments. The cooking process changes from boiling to frying as the
liquid evaporates. The slow cooking process allows the meat to absorb
all the spices and to become tender.
To cook the meat until tender, with almost all liquids evaporated,
requires great care, if the meat is not to be burned or be spoiled.
Because of its generous use of numerous spices, rendang is known for
having a complex and unique taste.
Rendang is often served with steamed rice, ketupat (a compressed rice cake), or lemang (glutinous rice barbecued in bamboo tubes), accompanied with vegetable side dishes such as boiled cassava leaf, cubadak (young jackfruit gulai), cabbage gulai, and lado (red or green chilli pepper sambal).
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Nasi rames rendang served with steamed rice, cabbage gulai, green sambal, and gulai sauce
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