Rujak - Indonesian Hot and Sweet Fruit Salad

Rujak, not to be confused with RuPaul, is eaten as a snack in the late afternoon. Kedondong, an Indonesian fruit, is not available in America, so i have made a substitute.

Rujak
  • 1-14 oz. can pineapple chunks, packed in natural juice - drained - save the juice
  • 1 Tb. tamarind pulp soaked in 1/2 c. the pineapple juice - OR - use 3/4 tsp. tamarind concentrate.

Soak tamarind pulp in juice for about 15 minutes. Squeeze to extract flavor. Strain and discard tamarind seeds and fibers. If using concentrate, dissolve well in juice

  • 3/4 tsp trasi (firm shrimp paste) - roasted
    to roast, wrap piece of trasi in aluminum foil, place in skillet, heat on high fire for a couple minutes, just until you can smell the trasi.
  • 1 tsp. petis (a soft gooey shrimp paste)

    You may want to use both types of shrimp paste or only one, depending on availability

  • 6 Tb. brown or palm sugar
  • 1/2 tsp sambal ulek - or Vietnamese chili paste
  • 1/2 tsp. salt or to taste (since trasi and sambal are salted, you may not want any)
  • 1/2 c. roasted peanuts, chopped finely - or substitute 1/3 cup natural crunchy peanut butter

Mix tamarind, trasi and/or petis, sugar, & chili paste. Add to finely chopped peanuts

  • 1 cucumber, peeled and sliced in matchsticks
  • 1 small jicama, cut in "matchsticks" (called benkoang in Indonesia)
  • 2 tart apples (Granny Smith, for example), cut in matchsticks - (in Indonesia, they'd use kedondong)
  • 1 mango or 2 firm peaches, if mango unavailable - cut in dice

Mix cut-up fruits, including pineapple. Pour sauce over. Toss to blend. If desired, sprinkle with additional roasted, chopped peanuts.


Back to the Indonesian Recipe Index
To the Priestess's Quarters
To the Canaanite Temple

If you have any questions about these recipes
Send me E-mail!

mailto:lilinah@earthlink.net

1