Rumah Makan & Catering


my favorite Kios Tomang Cakwe Martabak Bangka Manis Special, Jl. Tebet Barat Dalam Raya, Apin HP 085216895822, Martabak Bangka rasa Keju, Kacang, Coklat, Martabak Telor & Daging, Pisang Gepeng, Onde-Onde, Aneka Kue etc.
my favorite Alfabet Catering, Jl.Minangkabau No. 24, Tel. 8294465, 8313634, HP 08121005086, 0815 8818933, Fax 9313635, Email alfabet@yahoo.com.Contact person : Ibu Tini (owner) : 0812-1005086, Mba Rossi (marketing) : 0815-14123798.
Testimoni: Semuanya bilang makanannya enak2 bangeett...gw sendiri emang udah jatuh cinta waktu test food pertama kali.. dan langsung aja mutusin pake vendor ini, dan emang ga nyesel deh... makanan ga kurang (itungan porsinya sesuai), dekorasi catering bagus...walopun ga waahh bangett, semuanya terkoordinir dengan baik, thanks to mba Dian (PICnya)... Pokokna, Alfabet is very highly recommended laaa....Other Comment.
my favorite Umi Noor Catering Jl. Tebet Barat 5 No. 11A, Telp. 8303603, HP 08128216105, Email umi noor Website click here. Lasagna, Macaroni Schotel, Pastel Ayam Tutup, Spaghetty Tutup, Brownies Kukus, Kue Wijen, Goreng Pisang Kipas, Gulai Kepala Ikan, Asam Padeh, Sayur Kemumur, Pindang Kepala Ikan Salmon etc.
Aldira Catering Profesional Wedding Organizer http://ardilacatering.com/
Testimonial: Kami atas nama Keluarga Besar mengucapkan terima kasih pada Ardila Catering sebagai Catering dan Wedding Organizer yang telah membantu dan mensukseskan acara kami. Pelayanan yang profesional Decorasi yang mantap abis, dan Menu makanan yang lezat, Pokok nya mantap abis... Sekali lagi terima kasih, semoga sukses selalu. Toko & Sari, Cilandak, Jakarta


Ardila Catering & Wedding Organizer
Selamat Datang di Website Ardila Catering
Ardila Catering didirikan dengan tujuan utama memberikan pelayanan terbaik dan menjadi mitra Penyelengaran pasta Pernikahan , Khitanan, Pernikahan Perak/Gold, Ulang Tahun, Aqikah, Meeting, Reuni, Seminar, Product Launching, Gathering dll.
Keberhasilan kami adalah kepuasan konsumen merupakan komitmen utama kami, pelayanan kami didukung oleh tenaga profesional, mutu produk yang prima serta pelayanan berkelas hotel berbintang.

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Umi Noor Catering Jl. Tebet Barat 5 No. 11A, Telp. 8303603, HP 08128216105, Email umi noor Website click here. Lasagna, Macaroni Schotel, Pastel Ayam Tutup, Spaghetty Tutup, Brownies Kukus, Kue Wijen, Goreng Pisang Kipas, Gulai Kepala Ikan, Asam Padeh, Sayur Kemumur, Pindang Kepala Ikan Salmon etc.
Restoran & Catering Sederhana Bintaro Masakan Padang Jl. Tebet Barat Dalam Raya No. 84, Telp. 8311316, 8311304, Fax 831 1333, Website click here. Ayam Gulai, Kambing Gulai, Gulai Kepala Ikan, Gulai Kapau, Sayur Nangka, Ayam Bakar etc.
my favorite Alfabet Catering, Jl.Minangkabau No. 24, Tel. 8294465, 8313634, HP 08121005086, 0815 8818933, Fax 9313635, Email alfabet@yahoo.com.Contact person : Ibu Tini (owner) : 0812-1005086, Mba Rossi (marketing) : 0815-14123798.
Testimoni: Semuanya bilang makanannya enak2 bangeett...gw sendiri emang udah jatuh cinta waktu test food pertama kali.. dan langsung aja mutusin pake vendor ini, dan emang ga nyesel deh... makanan ga kurang (itungan porsinya sesuai), dekorasi catering bagus...walopun ga waahh bangett, semuanya terkoordinir dengan baik, thanks to mba Dian (PICnya)... Pokokna, Alfabet is very highly recommended laaa....Other Comment.
Restoran & Catering SEDERHANA, Masakan Padang, Jl. KH. Abdullah Syafei No 2 (Lapangan Ros), Telp. 8303222, 8314485, Fax 8314486. Sedia Nasi Putih, Ayam Pop, Ayam Gulai, Ayam Goreng, Ayam Bakar, Gulai Otak, Gulai Gajeboh, Gulai Tunjang, Gulai Babat, Gulai Ati Ampla, Gulai Kambing, Gulai Cincang, Gulai Cumi, Gulai Kepala Ikan Kakap, Ikan Mas Bakar, Ikan Mas Goreng, Ikan Kembung, Ikan Tenggiri, Ikan Lele Bawal, Udang Besar Goreng, Udang Sate, Paru Goreng, Belut Goreng, Sambal Goreng Jengkol, Sambal Goreng Udang, Sambal Goreng Ati, Sambal Goreng Ikan Asin, Sambal Goreng Ikan Bilis, Sambal Telor Puyuh, Telor Dadar, Telor Gulai, Perkedel, Sayur Daun Singkong, Sayur Nangka, Sayur Buncis, Keripik Singkong, Urap, Teri Terong Cabe Hijau, Ikan Sepat Cabe Hijau, Ikan Asin Gabus Cabe Hijau, Terong Balado etc.
Rumah Makan & Catering Susi, Jl. Tebet Barat Dalam Raya No.110, Telp. 8294796, 8352173, HP 08129579522. Masakan Padang.
 
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WIKIPEDIA

Restaurant
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A restaurant is a retail establishment that serves prepared food to customers. Service is generally for eating on premises, though the term has been used to describe take-out establishments and food delivery services. The term covers many types of venues and a diversity of styles of cuisine and service.

A restaurant owner is called a restaurateur; both words derive from the French verb restaurer, meaning to restore

Catering
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Catering is the business of providing foodservice at a remote site.

Rendang
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rendang is a dish which originated from the Minangkabau ethnic group of Indonesia, and is now commonly served across the country.[2] One of the characteristic foods of Minangkabau culture, it is served at ceremonial occasions and to honour guests. Also popular in Malaysia and Singapore, rendang is traditionally prepared by the Malay community during festive occasions. Though rendang is sometimes described as being like a curry, and the name is sometimes applied to curried meat dishes in Malaysia, authentic rendang is nothing like a curry.

Rendang is made from beef (or occasionally chicken, mutton, water buffalo, duck, or vegetables like jackfruit or cassava) slowly cooked in coconut milk and spices for several hours until almost all the liquid is gone, allowing the meat to absorb the spicy 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. The spices may include ginger, galangal, turmeric leaf, lemon grass and chillies. Chicken or duck rendang also contains tamarind and is usually not cooked for as long as beef rendang.

There are two kinds of rendang: dried and wet. Dried rendang can be kept for 3–4 months, and it is for ceremonial occasions or to honour guests. Wet rendang, also known as kalio, can be found in Minangkabau restaurants, and without refrigeration, it should be consumed within a month.

Rendang is often served with rice in Indonesia, but in Malaysia it is also served with ketupat (a compressed rice cake) and lemang (glutinous rice barbecued in bamboo tubes).

Ketupat
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ketupat (not to be confused with Lontong) is a type of dumpling from Indonesia, Brunei, Singapore, Malaysia and the Philippines (where it is known by the name Patupat in Kapampangan. Puso in Cebuano, or Ta'mu in Tausug), made from rice that has been wrapped in a woven palm leaf pouch which is then boiled. As the rice cooks, the grains expand to fill the pouch and the rice becomes compressed. This method of cooking gives the ketupat its characteristic form and texture of a rice dumpling. Ketupat is usually eaten with rendang (a type of dry beef curry) or served as an accompaniment to satay. Ketupat is also traditionally served by Indonesians, Moros and Malays at open houses on festive occasions such as Idul Fitri (Hari Raya Aidilfitri). During Idul Fitri in Indonesia, ketupat is often served with chicken curry, accompanied with spicy soy powder. Among Filipinos, puso is also traditionally used as a pabaon or a mobile meal, traditionally brought by workers as a type of packed lunch, served with any selection of stews.

There are many varieties of ketupat, with two of the more common ones being ketupat nasi and ketupat pulut. Ketupat nasi is made from white rice and is wrapped in a square shape with coconut palm leaves while ketupat pulut is made from glutinous rice is usually wrapped in a triangular shape using the leaves of the fan palm (Licuala). Ketupat pulut is also called "ketupat daun palas" in Malaysia.

In Indonesia, ketupat sometimes boiled in thin coconut milk and spices to enhance the taste.

Local stories passed down through the generations have attributed the creation of this style of rice preparation to the seafarers' need to keep cooked rice from spoiling during long sea voyages. The coco leaves used in wrapping the rice are always shaped into a triangular form and stored hanging in bunches in the open air. The shape of the package facilitates moisture to drip away from the cooked rice while the coco leaves allow the rice to be aerated and at the same time prevent flies and insects from touching it.

In France, beef steak is usually served with French fried potatoes also known as "pommes frites", and the combination is known as "steak-frites". Vegetables are not normally served with steak in this manner, but a green salad may follow. In the United Kingdom they are also served with French fried potatoes although they are often thicker than the French variety and the combination is called Steak and Chips. Peas, half a tomato or a fried onion ring often feature on the plate too.

In Italy, steak was not widely eaten until post-WWII due to the relative ruggedness of the countryside inhibiting the space- and resource-consuming raising of great bovine herds, but some zones of Piedmont and Tuscany were still renowned for their beef. Bistecca alla fiorentina is a well-known specialty of Florence; it is typically served with just a salad or Tuscan beans. From the 1960s onward the so called "economic boom" allowed more and more Italians to switch to a red meat-heavy diet.

Lontong
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lontong (not to be confused with Ketupat) is an Asian dish made of compressed rice that is then cut into small cakes.

Popular in Indonesia and Malaysia, the dish is usually served cold or at room temperature with sauce-based dishes such as gado-gado and salads, although it can be eaten as an accompaniment to other dishes such as Satay and curries.

Lontong is traditionally made by partly cooking the rice and packing it tightly into a rolled-up banana leaf. The leaf is then secured and cooked in boiling water for about 90 minutes. Once it is cooled, the rice compacts and can be cut up into bite-sized pieces.

Alternative ways of cooking lontong include placing uncooked rice into a muslin bag then letting the water seep in and cause the rice to form a solid mass (Ingram, 2003).

Lontong is a popular slang word used by Indonesia leading IT company in order to describe useless people, who never give any value.

Sate
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Satay or sate is a dish consisting of chunks or slices of dice-sized meat (chicken, goat, mutton, beef, pork, fish, etc.) on bamboo skewers (although the more authentic version uses skewers from the midrib of the coconut leaf). These are grilled or barbecued over a wood or charcoal fire, then served with various spicy seasonings (depends on satay recipe variants).

Satay may have originated in Java, Indonesia, but it is also popular in many other Southeast Asian countries, such as: Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand, as well as in The Netherlands which was influenced through its former colonies.

Satay is a very popular delicacy in Indonesia and Malaysia, with a rich variety among Indonesia’s diverse ethnic groups’ culinary art (see Cuisine of Indonesia). In Indonesia, satay can be obtained from a traveling satay vendor, from a street-side tent-restaurant, in an upper-class restaurant, or during traditional celebration feasts. In Malaysia, satay is a popular dish - especially during celebrations - and can be found throughout the country. A close analog in Japan is yakitori. Shish kebab from Turkey, Chuanr from China and sosatie from South Africa are also similar to satay.

Although recipes and ingredients vary from country to country, satay generally consists of chunks or slices of meat on bamboo or coconut-leaf-spine skewers, grilled over a wood or charcoal fire. Turmeric is a compulsory ingredient used to marinate satay and to give it a characteristic yellow color, especially for Beef, Chicken, Mutton and Pork. Meats used include: beef, mutton, pork, venison, fish, shrimp, squid, chicken, and even tripe. Some have also used more exotic meats, such as turtle, crocodile, and snake meat.

It may be served with a spicy peanut sauce dip, or peanut gravy, slivers of onions and cucumbers, and ketupat (rice cakes).

Pork satay can be served in a pineapple-based satay sauce or cucumber relish. An Indonesian version uses a soy-based dip.

Satay is not the same as the Vietnamese condiment, “Sate”, which typically includes ground chili, onion, tomato, shrimp, oil, and nuts. Vietnamese sate is commonly served alongside noodle and noodle-soup dishes.