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Traditional Balinese kitchen with simple utensils
Despite the complex blending of spices and fragrant
roots that gives Balinese food its intriguingly different flavor,
the typical Balinese kitchen is remarkably simple. The centerpiece
of the kitchen generally a spartan, functional room is the wood
fired stove topped by a blackened clay pot used to steam rice and
leaf-wrapped food. In many modern households, this is joined by
a gas cooker for boiling water and frying. Both stoves receive daily
offerings of a few grains of rice, a flower and salt a gift to Brahma,
the Lord of fire.
Although all utensils were once made of clay, most
cooks now use metal for cooking. Many people in the major towns
also use electric rice cookers, but most agree that the traditional
method for cooking rice is superior. After the rice has been well
washed and soaked, it is partially boiled, then set in a woven steaming
basket (kukusan) over a clay pot filled with boiling water. The
conical kukusan is covered with a clay lid and the rice left to
steam. Every so often, boiling water is scooped out of the clay
pot and poured over the rice to keep it moist and prevent the grains
from sticking together.
Bamboo is often used in the Balinese kitchen. A narrow
bamboo tube is used to direct a puff of air into the fire, acting
as a bellows. This bambbo is called semprong. A split length of bamboo plaited so that it fans out
is used as a scoop for lifting out and draining fried food, while
bamboo handles with small coconut shells on the end make scoops
or ladles.
Every Balinese kitchen has its coconut scraper, either
a wooden board set with rows of sharp metal spikes or a sheet of
thin alumunium with spikes punched out. Grated coconut is mixed
into many dishes, or squeezed with water to make coconut milk.
Another essential item is the saucer like stone mortar
(batu base) used for grinding dry spices, chillies, shallots and
other seasonings. The Balinese mortar is shallow and the stone pestle
has a handle carved at right angles to the head so that the action
is one of grinding rather than pounding.
The chopping block used in the preparation of almost
every meal is usually a cross section slice of a tree trunk, the
wood strong enough to take the repeated blows of a sharp cleaver
used to mince meat or fish to a paste, and for chopping and slicing
various roots and vegetables.
The furniture in a Balinese kitchen is minimal; apart
from the stove, a bench and a food cupboard, where the cooked food
is stored during the day, there is usually a wide, low bamboo platform,
used for sitting on while preparing foods. It also doubles as an
eating area or a spare bed. Practicality is the theme of any Balinese
kitchen.
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