Lebanon
SEASONINGS
A Lebanese flavor profile is fragrant, fresh, and balanced – never overwhelming, always layered. Herbs are less prominent than various spices and their combinations, with the exception of mint and parsley. Lebanese cuisine welcomes not only fresh but also dried herbs, especially mint, which is generously used in beverages.
Compared to other Mediterranean cuisines, Lebanese dishes stand out for its sourness . The sour elements are yogurt, tomatoes, pomegranates, and their molasses, extensive use of lemon juice, verjuice (acidic juice made by pressing unrip grapes), plums, almonds, apricots (even not fully ripened), high-quality sumac. The name of sumac comes from the Aramaic word summaq, meaning dark red. Indeed, dark red berries, once they are fully ripe are harvested, dried, and ground to a texture of ground nuts. Widely used in Turkish, Middle Eastern, and Lebanese cooking, it adds sourness and zestiness and calls out the natural flavors in meats, salads, and dips. Many Lebanese sauces and dressings feature garlic, lemon, and tahini, a paste made from toasted and ground sesame seeds. Sesame, nigella seeds, mahlab are often sprinkled on breads and pastries. The use of floral waters is extensive: orange blossom water and rose water have been used for centuries and are associated with luxury and refinement.
ZA’ATAR – a fundamental spice mix often used as a topping for bread, meats, and vegetables, or mixed with olive oil. Made of dried thyme, sumac, sesame seeds, salt.
Warm spices are popular: allspice, cinnamon, nutmeg, coriander, cumin, cloves, and black pepper. Together, they form the BAHARAT spice blend, which is also known as the Lebanese SEVEN SPICE blend.
Though more widely associated with Egypt, variations of DUKKAH are also found in Lebanese cuisine. It blends sesame seeds, coriander seeds, cumin, salt, and black pepper.
KAMOUNEH spice – used to flavor kibbeh and can be used as a meat rub. This spice mix gives a distinctive earthy flavor: cumin (key spice, hence the name), coriander, cinnamon, pepper, dried mint, allspice, sumac, and basil.
SAUCES
The classy flavor combination of garlic, lemon, and olive oil is also common to Lebanon. It unfolds in TOUM sauce (resembling Spanish allioli and French aioli), where these three ingredients, salt and water, are emulsified to a thick spread in a food processor. Although the ingredients are the same, the feel and texture of the sauce are quite distinct.
TARATOR sauce – tahini, lemon juice, garlic, water used as a dressing for falafel, shawarma, fish, or served alongside kibbeh and roasted vegetables
DIBIS W TAHINI – a traditional sauce made from a mix of tahini and dibis (date molasses).
SUMAC SAUCE – a tangy sauce made from sumac, olive oil, and sometimes mixed with onions and parsley.
Indonesia
SEASONINGS
Indonesian cuisine has bold, direct seasoning rather than the refined, subtle flavor layering. Flavors are centered around a balance of the five sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and umami tastes. However, in practice, it has a leaning towards sweet undertones, more predominant than in other cuisines.
Some characteristically Indonesian are combinations of turmeric, galangal and ginger (especially the galangal), lemongrass, tamarind, garlic, shallots, kaffir lime leaves, pandan leaves, chili pepper, candlenuts, palm sugar and the sweet soy sauce kecap manis.
Unlike North Indian cooking tradition that favours dried spice mixes, Indonesian cuisine is more akin to Thai, which use more fresh ingredients. Bumbu is the Indonesian word for seasoning; this word frequently appears in all – spice mixtures, sauces, seasoning pastes. The bumbu mixture is usually stir-fried in hot cooking oil first to release its aroma, prior to adding other ingredients. There are four main basic bumbu blends:
BUMBU DASAR PUTIH / WHITE BLEND: garlic, shallots, candlenut, coriander, and galangal. It is used in lighter-colored dishes such as opor ayam (chicken in coconut milk), sayur lodeh (vegetable stew), and various sotos (traditional soups).
BUMBU DASAR MERAH / RED BLEND: red chilies are added to the white spice blend, sometimes with tomato, shrimp paste, and sugar. It is used for reddish dishes like sambal goreng, nasi goreng, and various spicy stews.
BUMBU DASAR KUNING / YELLOW BLEND: Contains turmeric along with shallots, garlic, candlenut, coriander, ginger, galangal, and black pepper. It colors and flavors nasi kuning (yellow rice), soto, and pepes (food wrapped in banana leaves).
BUMBU DASAR JINGGA / ORANGE BLEND: a richer blend combining red chili with spices such as caraway, anise, coriander, candlenut, turmeric, and galangal, used in gulai (curry), rendang, and other robustly flavored stews and curries.
Although Indonesia is the home of cloves and nutmeg, these two spices are not as predominantly used in everyday cooking as one might expect. Cloves and nutmeg are more regionally significant, especially in Maluku and some Eastern islands, in medicine and rituals.
Palm sugar is a natural sweetener from the sap of various palm trees, used in tropical Southeast Asia. It has less sweetness and a rich, complex caramel-like taste with hints of butterscotch. In Indonesian cuisine, palm sugar is essential. The two common types are gula jawa (Javanese sugar), dark and molasses-like, and gula aren, which is lighter and more delicate.
SAUCES
SAMBAL. Most Indonesians favor hot and spicy food, so the importance of sambal in Indonesian cooking cannot be overstated. Eating without sambal feels incomplete. There are hundreds of regional varieties, but generally it’s a chili sauce from fresh and fried chillies, with a blend of shallots, garlic, galangal, shrimp paste, salt, sugar, and tamarind.
KECAP MANIS is a thick, savory, and dark consistency soy sauce. Its thickness comes from palm sugar and gives it a rich, molasses-like sweetness. This kecap manis is an essential marinade, glaze, dipping, or table sauce.
KECAP ASIN is a regular salty soy sauce that is used as a condiment or seasoning, often alongside salty and spicy foods, or for dipping.
KECAP IKAN – a fermented fish condiment used for umami flavoring in many Indonesian dishes.
BUMBU KECANG – peanut sauce, made from ground roasted peanuts mixed with spices, chili, and sometimes coconut milk. It is famously used as a dipping sauce for satay and as a dressing for salads.
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