This dish is traditionally sold and served in the old-type coffeeshops by Malays in Singapore and Malaysia. However with the profileration of air-conditioned food centres, this dish has become part of the Nasi Padang stalls in these food centres. Standard of the fare served at these foodstalls and food centres are variable and cannot compare with the home-prepared version as many ingredients are left out of the commercially prepared dish and cooking methods are compromised.
The Lontong dish (where the sayur lodeh are served with ketupat or lontong (rice cakes) is a traditional Hari Raya dish served for lunch on that day.
For instructions and tips on ketupat weaving refer to Section 2 of this Homepage.
Garnish
1.Serunding - for recipe see links below 2. Sambal Tumis - for recipe see links belowMethod
1. Blend in an electric blender items 2,3,4 in a thick paste. 2. Fry the paste in some oil till fragrant. 3. Add coconut milk diluted in some water (consistency and thickness of milk depends on preference); add in the lime leaves (optional), blue ginger and lemon grass. 4. Bring to a slow boil and add in the vegetables, and cook till vegetables are tender. 5. Add in the glass noodles if this is used. 5. Add in the tempeh and the fried tahu pieces. 6. (Optional) Add some chillie oil to give some colour to the gravy. This may be left out if a mild gravy is preferred as the chillie oil may make the gravy too chillie hot for some people to take. 7. Serve hot in a large bowl as gravy for lontong (rice cakes- cut into rounds or squares). The sayur lodeh is laddled out into individual bowls or deep plates where the lontong pieces (rice cakes) are already arranged as a complete one-dish meal. 9. Garnish with serunding and chillie tumis. The serunding is sprinkled on top and a teaspoon of the chillie tumis is also added on top of the dish or served in a small dish separately.