Botok

Botok (sometimes called Bobotok in its plural form or Botok-botok) is a traditional Javanese dish made from shredded coconut flesh which has been squeezed of its coconut milk, often mixed with other ingredients such as vegetables or fish, and wrapped in banana leaf and steamed. It is commonly found in Central and East Java.[2]

Botok
Unopened botok in banana leaves wrapping.
Alternative namesBobotok, Botok-botok
CourseMain course
Place of originIndonesia[1]
Region or stateCentral Java, Yogyakarta, East Java
Serving temperatureHot or room temperature
Main ingredientsGrated coconut with various ingredients (tempeh, tofu, anchovy, fish, meat or mushroom) spiced and steamed in banana leaf
VariationsBuntil, Pepes, Otak-otak

Botok seems to be a byproduct of coconut milk production, to save and reuse the grated coconut flesh that might be otherwise discarded. Commonly, the grated coconut flesh flakes are discarded after squeezing it to acquire the coconut milk. However, by cooking them in banana leaf with additional mixture and spices, they can also be eaten as additional dish. Another way to save the grated coconut residue is to saute them as serundeng. Today however, to acquire tastier and richer taste, many recipes insist on using only freshly grated coconut flesh that still contains coconut milk. Botok is typically consumed with rice.[3]

Preparation and serving

The grated coconut flesh is mixed with chilli, salt, pepper, lemon basil and salam (Indonesian bay-leaf) and additional ingredient. This mixture is placed upon a piece of banana leaf, and then the leaf is wrapped tight and secured with a stick, then placed on a steamer. The most basic botok usually uses simple and cheaper ingredients, such as minced tempeh, tofu or anchovy.[2] After the botok is cooked, the banana leaf package is opened and served with steamed rice. After perfectly cooked, the grated coconut and sometimes the egg addition, acted as the binding agent of the whole botok ingredients.[4]

Variations

Botok tawon, botok made from bee larvae.

To add flavour and nutrients, many botok recipes and variants might use additional ingredients as protein source, such as petai cina, belimbing wuluh, ares (the core of a banana trunk), mushroom, tofu, tempeh, anchovy, wahoo, catfish, salted fish, egg, salted egg, shrimp, minced beef or even bee larvae.[5] The botok method is used in several variant ingredients, and also become the name of a dish prepared in this manner, for example:

  1. Botok ares (the core of a banana trunk botok)
  2. Botok belimbing wuluh (Averrhoa bilimbi botok)
  3. Botok beluntas (Pluchea indica leaf botok)
  4. Botok daging (minced beef botok)
  5. Botok jamur (mushroom botok)
  6. Botok lele (catfish botok)
  7. Botok mlanding (petai cina or lamtoro botok)
  8. Botok ontong (jantung pisang/banana flower bud botok)
  9. Botok tawon (bee larvae for honeybee botok)
  10. Botok tahu (tofu botok)
  11. Botok tempe (tempeh botok)
  12. Botok telur (egg botok)
  13. Botok telur asin (salted egg botok)
  14. Botok tengiri (wahoo botok)
  15. Botok teri (anchovy botok)
  16. Botok tempe tahu teri (tofu, tempeh, anchovy combo botok)
  17. Botok udang (shrimp botok)
  18. Botok wader (Silver rasbora botok)

Similar dishes

Buntil is prepared in a similar way, but used papaya or cassava leaves instead of banana leaves, making the wrapping edible as part of the dish. Botok is often considered as the variations of pepes, the cooking method using banana leaf. However botok is identified more specific by using shredded coconut flesh, while pepes usually contains no coconut at all.

The South African dish of bobotie is thought to be the derivative of Indonesian bobotok.[6] It is however, quite different as it uses minced beef and eggs, with the absence of grated coconut and banana leaf package. The role of grated coconut and eggs as binding agent in bobotok seems to be replaced by beaten eggs, milk and shredded bread in bobotie.

See also

References

  1. "Botok lauk khas pulau jawa". (Indonesian)
  2. "Botok Tempe Tahu Teri". Tasty Indonesian Food. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  3. The Food of Indonesia: Delicious Recipes from Bali, Java and the Spice Islands. Heinz Von Holzen, Lother Arsana. (2015). 112 pag. ISBN 978-0804845137
  4. The Ultimate Guide to Indonesian Cuisine: The Most Popular Indonesian Recipes in One Place. Valeria Ray (2019) 99 pag. ISBN 978-1080711352
  5. Indonesian: modern and traditional Indonesian cuisine. Mae Chandra (2014) 192 pag. ISBN 978-1742575520
  6. Theodora Hurustiati (10 November 2013). "Bobotie's melting pot". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
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