A TASTE TESTED BY TIME
RK [Jakarta Post, Thursday July 9,
2015| by Trisha Sertori|Contributor | Bangli]
HE succeeded with a dish named Ayam
Keren. His granddaughter, a princess of the Bangli Royal House, has
followed in her grandfather’s footsteps by continuing to prepare the dish that
takes more than 12 hours to prepare and cook.
The princess, Anak Agung Ayu
Sugantini, better known as Bu Ayu, nightly prepares her grandfather’s
extraordinary dish, which has an aroma so fragrant you feel that you area
eating perfume rather than a type of smoked chicken.
The secret of her continued success
with the dish, which was once the chosen offering for kings and gods, is her
meticulous adherence to the preparation and cooking techniques laid down by her
grandfather and subsequently by her mother.
“I start preparing the chicken at
about 9 p.m., firstly by washing out the cavity with coconut oil and salt. It
is then stuffed with a full complement of Balinese herbs and spices, which I
grind by hand,’ said Ayu.
“She added some people who have
worked with her and set up their own Ayam
Keren businesses use a blender to speed up the spice mixing process and
cook the chicken on conventional gas stoves.
Ayam Keren
prepared that way tastes very different – there is no smoke. In Bali, we have a
saying: ‘Tangan Basa’, which means
that some people’s hand have special quality that make food taste more
delicious,” said Ayu, who believes in putting her devotion into every chicken
she prepares, just as her grandfather did.
Ayu believes that when the spices
are mixed in a blender, the magical Tangan
Basa element is lost, and the flavors do not have that special something
that can only be attained by hand grinding, a process that takes far more time
and care.
Her grandfather, she said, was the
Royal Chef of the warrior kesatria class and the king believed and trusted in
him to prepare his food.
“So my grandfather was both a chef
and food taster, whose food was known to be safe and delicious. As a taster he
was brave and as the Royal Chef he wanted to design special dish: Ayam Keren.
It took him six months to develop the recipe, which is the same one I use
today,” said Ayu.
Her place has been visited by one of
Indonesia’s best-loved food experts , William Wongso, and an American chef from
the Culinary Institute of America.
“The American chef took the recipe,
but to cook and prepare Ayam Keren is
very difficult and detailed. So he many have the recipe, but he does not have
the magic,” said Ayu, pointing out that even for her, as an accomplished Ayam Keren chef, creating the dish away
from the Bangli Palace where she has lived all her life, is almost impossible.
“I have often thought to open a warung specializing in Ayam Keren in Denpasar, but even for me,
Ayam Keren is too detailed to cook
away from the palace,” said Ayu, who takes daily orders for the delicacy that
is served during ceremonies and celebrations.
While I was talking to Bu Ayu one of
customers arrived at the palace to collect his Ayam Keren, ordered two days before. Komang Widiana is a regular
customer.
“I order Ayam Keren just to eat, it tastes great and the spices are
delicious. We have it about once a week and we always order Ayam Keren from Bu Ayu for family
celebrations and ceremonies,” said the 32-year-old from Bangli.
Widiana said he has never thought to
try Ayam Keren prepared by other
cooks. “Bu Ayu’s Ayam Keren is the
original, so I have never tried buying it from other places. We have been
ordering this dish from her all my life,” said Widiana.
So delicious is her Ayam Keren that for a time she was
sending betel nut wrapped chicken parecels on order to Wiliam Wongso in
Jakarta. But the logistic of sending such a tender dish via aircraft proved too
difficult.
“Getting to the airport with the Ayam Keren to send to Jakarta was so
tough, that in the end I just gave up,” said Ayu, dusting away charred rice
hulls from the hole-in-the-wall oven that is essential to the dish’s
preparation.
Once the Ayam Keren has been stuffed with herbs including tamarind, palm
sugar and turmeric, to name just a few of its many ingredients, it is massaged
with coconut oil and wrapped in betel nut leaves, the parcels are placed on a
bed of rice hulls and placed in a terracotta oven. The oven is then surrounded
by coconut husk coals and more rice hulls are added to cover the oven. For the
next 12 hours, with a quick turn-over at 5 a.m., the Ayam Keren is steamed, smoked and roasted until, on opening the
betel nut leaves, there rests a meal fit for a King at a price even commoners
can afford.
Related posts or Read also :
Keywords : bangli.
Tags : signature dish,ayam keren.
Description: A hundred year ago, the King of
Bangli’s official chef and food taster set out to create a signature dish that
would stand the test of time.
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