Bumbu Kacang (Indonesian Peanut Sauce)
Bumbu Kacang (Indonesian Peanut Sauce) - kvalifood.com
Bumbu kacang is the peanut sauce used for gado-gado and pecel in Indonesia. Unlike a simple satay dipping sauce, it gets its distinctive character from kencur (lesser galangal) and kaffir lime leaves. The peanuts are fried, ground with a spice paste, and simmered with palm sugar and tamarind into a thick, pourable sauce.
Makes ca. 500 ml
Ingredients
- 250 g raw peanuts
- 3 red chilies (cayenne or Dutch red), deseeded for milder sauce
- 3 bird’s eye chilies, to taste
- 4 cloves garlic, peeled
- 3 cm piece kencur (lesser galangal), peeled
- 3 kaffir lime leaves, spines removed, very thinly sliced
- 80 g palm sugar (gula Jawa), shaved or chopped
- 1 tsp tamarind pulp, soaked in 2 tbsp warm water and strained
- 1 tsp salt, to taste
- 300-400 ml warm water
- 2 tbsp cooking oil
- 1 lime, juice of
Directions
- Heat the oil in a wok over medium heat. Fry the peanuts, stirring frequently, until golden brown, about 5-7 minutes. Remove and drain on paper towels.
- In the same oil, fry the red chilies, bird’s eye chilies, garlic, and kencur over medium heat for 3-4 minutes until softened and fragrant. Remove from heat.
- Grind the fried peanuts in a food processor or mortar to a coarse paste. Some texture is desirable.
- Grind the fried aromatics with the palm sugar, strained tamarind water, salt, and sliced kaffir lime leaves until you have a rough paste.
- Combine the peanut paste and spice paste. Transfer to a saucepan, add 300 ml warm water, and stir well. Simmer over medium-low heat for 5-8 minutes, stirring frequently, until the sauce thickens and oil begins to separate. Add more water if the sauce is too thick.
- Remove from heat and stir in the lime juice. Adjust salt, sugar, and lime to taste. The sauce should balance sweet, sour, salty, and nutty.
Notes
- Kencur has a unique camphor-like aroma that defines this sauce. Dried or powdered kencur (1 tsp) works in a pinch, but fresh is best. Do not substitute galangal or ginger.
- Keeps 3-4 days refrigerated. Thickens when cold – reheat with a splash of water. For longer storage, freeze the paste before adding water.
- For a shelf-stable dry version (pecel style), skip step 5. Store the combined paste in the freezer and reconstitute with hot water when needed.
- Replace half the water with coconut milk for a richer East Javanese style.
- Serve warm over blanched vegetables, boiled potato, fried tofu, tempeh, and hard-boiled egg with rice cakes and krupuk.
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