Kubo
Kubo
Kubo
Kubo, Michiko. 2010. The Development of an Indonesian National Cuisine: A Study of New Movement of Instant
Foods and Local Cuisine. In Globalization, Food and Social Identities in the Asia Pacific Region, ed. James Farrer.
Tokyo: Sophia University Institute of Comparative Culture.
URL: http://icc.fla.sophia.ac.jp/global%20food%20papers/html/kubo.html
Copyright 2010 by Michiko Kubo
All rights reserved
i
the
Indonesian
Indonesia).
case
is
different
cuisine
(masakan
discussion. In short, the term Indonesian cuisine is not familiar to the Indonesian
people and is rarely used among them. But what non-Indonesians call Indonesian
cuisine does in fact exist.
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The Development of an Indonesian National Cuisine: A Study of New Movement of Instant Foods and Local Cuisine
outlook. Thus the Indonesian cuisine that foreign visitors consume is almost always
served by persons with an awareness of the world outside.
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The menus at Indonesian embassies in any given country are intended to represent
the national cuisine, but may sometimes be prepared using whatever ingredients are
available in that country, or may even be changed to adjust to local culinary tastes of
the country from which the guests come. Indonesian restaurants in Japan also have
a variety of menus that may be attuned to the culinary preferences of both cooks
and the customers.
Such variations are common, but this does not mean the cuisine has lost its
identity. Observations show that there are fundamental styles that are not at all
affected by the changes, which would generally be a combination of rice as the
staple food and other dishes consisting of meat, fish, and vegetable proteins. Sambal
is the basic seasoning, and the millstone, the tool needed to prepare it, remains
unchanged.
In addition to the above, Indonesias economic growth and urbanization have
affected womens awareness and values, bringing significant changes in their life
styles. Accordingly, women are starting to look for ways to save household labor,
and the demand for easy-to-prepare instant foods is on the increase. In urban areas,
new trends are emerging with caf-style restaurants that are now replacing food
stands, which used to serve local dishes solely for migrant workers.
In this paper, I will focus on two trends in Indonesian cuisine development: (1)
the emergence and diffusion of Indonesian cuisine as an instant food, and (2) new
trends in the development of Indonesian cuisine at the local level.
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The Development of an Indonesian National Cuisine: A Study of New Movement of Instant Foods and Local Cuisine
less time for conventional housework, is leading to a growing demand for instant
foods.
Instant foods can be defined as
instant seasoning mix (bumbu instan).
According to Fujiki (Fujiki 1997, 99),
instant seasoning mix is defined as
seasonings for specific menus, which is
similar in concept to Cook Do seasonings
released in Japan in 1981 by Ajinomoto
Co. Ltd.
One of the most basic instant products is Masako. This powdered relish seasoning
is the leading product of PT Ajinomoto Indonesia, and is also marketed under
different product names in other Southeast Asian countries. However, it comes in
various flavors, and the amount of spice is adjusted to suit the taste of a particular
country. The sales share of instant seasoning in Indonesia occupies over 90% of
the conventional food market. The hot-selling products are sold at 1,000 rupiah
(approximately 9 yen as of November 2008) for one pack, which consists of three
small packages (NNA Asia). Especially in regional areas, Masako is popular among
the common people, and most customers buy only a small amount in one round of
shopping.
The company also releases other branded products such as Sajiku or Saori.
Sajiku is an instant seasoning that comes in sachets. Other products include nasi
goreng seasoning mix (chicken, prawn, sea food, spicy flavors), ayam goreng, soto
ayam, opor, rendang, gulai, and fried chicken seasoning mix. Saori is a brand for
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The company
that
follow
traditional
Products of Kokita
The products of this company are distributed not only in Indonesia but also in
the USA, Europe, Middle East, Korea, Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Brunei, Australia,
and New Zealand. As the companys website commented, Kokita provides career
women and busy housewives with a practical and simple way to capture the unique
flavor of traditional recipes. The company distributes a wide variety of instant
seasonings:
Essential seasoning for chili dishes consists of red chilies, tomatoes: best for
Balinese spicy egg, ayam panggang, fried potatoes, fried noodles, etc.
Essential seasoning for turmeric dishes consists of turmeric, candlenut: best
for spicy shrimp and bamboo shoot with coconut, sambal goreng telur, fish curry.
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The Development of an Indonesian National Cuisine: A Study of New Movement of Instant Foods and Local Cuisine
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*They are the answers to the question, What kind of menu do you recommend to foreigners as typical Indonesian cuisine?
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The Development of an Indonesian National Cuisine: A Study of New Movement of Instant Foods and Local Cuisine
Comparison of the data in all four categories reveals certain menus in common
namely, gado-gado, soto, rendang, and gulai. The menus of instant seasonings
commercially available (such as gado-gado, soto, rendang, and gulai) are derived
from the local dishes that had spread across the country via the movement of migrant
workers, especially during the Suharto period and the introduction of transmigration
policy.
became less aware of the local features, and the public questionnaire shows that
these dishes are generally regarded by many as Indonesian cuisine, not necessarily
reflecting any particular ethnic groups (suku). This emerging concept of Indonesian
cuisine, which goes beyond the framework of ethnic groups or local dishes, applies
to masakan daerah (regional cuisine) as well.
These dishes are served in the
restaurants
throughout
Indonesia,
Nasi goreng
pouches are more popular, because the use of hot water for cooking (such as boiling,
steaming) is common in Japan.
These observations suggest an extremely high potential for wider use of foods in
retort pouches, given as well, the sufficiently low price of such foods in Indonesia.
Also, it is probable that many Indonesian people working abroad would use them.
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Measuring spoons and cups, more than intuition and experience, underscore the
role that cookbooks play in providing standardized cooking information across the
nation. Similarly, instant seasonings allow people to reproduce the same flavor of
dishes every time by simply opening the package and mixing in the ingredients. This
could mean a homogenized cuisine that may eventually dominate Indonesias food
taste. Homogenization is not a natural but a human-induced phenomenon brought
about by the food and food-service industries. These instant foods allow people
to cook simply and enjoy the same flavor of dishes whenever and wherever they
want. As instant foods become ever more popular and the flavor of foods becomes
homogenized, the dishes selected for instant foods may give the Indonesian people
the common concept of a national, rather than local, dish.
But in Jakarta
The Development of an Indonesian National Cuisine: A Study of New Movement of Instant Foods and Local Cuisine
Chicken satay
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The Development of an Indonesian National Cuisine: A Study of New Movement of Instant Foods and Local Cuisine
4. Conclusion
After discussing the two paths of development in presentday Indonesian cuisine, the emergence and spreading
popularity of instant foods, and new trends in the local cuisine,
there are three factors that seem to define the concept of an
Indonesian national cuisine. First is a homogenized Indonesian
cuisine resulting from the recent popularity of instant
seasonings, second, the continued existence of local cuisine,
and third, the appearance of new brands of local cuisines.
The analytical results indicate that a common concept of
Indonesian cuisine beyond the framework of ethnic groups
or local dishes (masakan daerah) has been gradually emerging,
and evolving into a Indonesian national cuisine.
Javanese fastfood restaurant
will remain to be enjoyed as Indonesian cuisine, and others will take the form of
instant seasoning mix becoming widely known, conceptually speaking, as a common
fare (masakan daerah). There is yet another completely different movement in
which the local cuisine features even stronger local dishes. Further studies will be
required to observe what these new phenomena will lead to, and whether or not the
homogenized flavor of Indonesian cuisine (masakan Indonesia) may be a factor to
bring about national standardization.
Glossary:
ayam bakar: grilled chicken
ayam goreng: fried chicken
ayam panggang: charcoal-grilled chicken
bubur Manado: porridge Manado-style
gado-gado: boiled vegetable salad with peanut sauce
gulai: stew with turmeric and coconut milk
ikan asin: salted fish
ikan rica-rica: fried fish with chili-pepper sauce
kuah asam: sour soup with fish
mie goreng: fried noodle
nasi goreng: fried rice
nasi kuning: yellow rice with turmeric
opor: chicken simmered in mild coconut curry Jawa style
rending: beef stew Padan style
sambal bajak: fried chili-pepper sambal relish
sambal balado: red pepper sauce Sumatra style
sambal goreng telur: boiled egg with spicy sauce
sambal terasi: chili-pepper sauce with garlic, shrimp paste and palm sugar
sop ikan: soup with fish
soto ayam: turmeric flavored chicken soup with vermicelli
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The Development of an Indonesian National Cuisine: A Study of New Movement of Instant Foods and Local Cuisine
References
Fujiki, Shouichi. 2007. Kakoushokuhinsangyo no hattatsu to chouri eno eikyou (The developing of
food industry and its influence on cooking). In Nihon no shoku/100 nen Tsukuru(Japanese
food/100 years Making), eds. Koichi Sugita and Naomichi Ishige, 94-106. Tokyo: Domesu
Shuppan.
Honda (Kubo), Michiko. 2008. Masakan Indonesia as a National Cuisine. Masters thesis. Sophia
University.
Website References:
Ajinomoto Indonesia. http://www.ajinomoto.co.id/produk_masakanasp (accessed November 20, 2008)
Indofood. http://www.indofood.co.id (accessed November 20, 2008)
Kokita. http://www.ikafood.com (accessed November 22, 2008)
NNA ASIA. Interview article of the President of Ajinomoto Indonesia, Mr. Shunichi Komatsu, May 1,
2008. http://news.nna.jp/free/interview/kono/kono256.html (accessed November 22, 2008)
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