While the
Singapore portion of my recent SE Asia trip was jam-packed with stellar food, the Bali portion was, well, not so much. But while Bali couldn't match Singapore (I think few places can), there were some definite culinary highlights.
All of the fruits! February is rainy season in Bali and it's prime time for fruit. In my five days there, I polished off 6 kilos of mangosteen, a kilo+ of rambutan, an entire durian (eaten 30 feet from the tree it grew on), a kilo of sour passionfruit, the best bananas I've eaten, papaya, salak (aka snake fruit - tastes like pineapple), sweet passionfruit, local grapes (rare even within Bali), lengkeng (aka longan), wani fruit aka white mango, pineapple, and tamarillo (tastes like tomato). My stomach is strong.
The best cooked food I had in Bali was something that only crossed my lips because I had an early morning flight out and because I checked out the Lonely Planet guide to Bali from my local library (suck it, internet!). The airport is in a town that doesn't get much internet coverage, food or otherwise. Steps from the airport, among a handful of food stalls and carts, is one that sells three things: fried bananas with cheese, fried bananas with chocolate, and fried bananas with cheese and chocolate. I splurged for both toppings, taking my price from about 54 cents to about 62 cents. I don't know of adjectives to concisely describe how good the banana flavor was in these things. Tree-ripened bananas are like an entirely different fruit from the bananas we have here and these are given the steroid injection of being perfectly fried in a crisp batter kind of like a light tempura (probably rice flour?). Throw in chocolate and a little umami from the grated cheese and you have a spectacular dessert that was big enough for 3 people to share but which I happily inhaled by myself.
Lucky for me, a second top Bali dish came from the same small market as the bananas. A guy wearing flip flops was manning a long thin grill cooking sate kambing (mutton satay) over live charcoals. The well-seasoned chunks of marinated meat were perfectly cooked down to the little chewy charred bits and were then doused in a sweet, rich, slightly spicy sauce.
Babi guling, roasted suckling pig, is probably Bali's most famous meal. I tried it at 3 places in Ubud. Up first was Ibu Oka, the place put on the international map by Bourdain. It might have been good years ago, but with three locations and a dumbing down of the spice for tourists, it's an easy pass. My second babi guling (pictured above) was close by at Gung Cung, which serves enough tourists that I was given a printed menu (with higher prices than what locals pay) and they double-checked to make sure I could handle spicy food. Everything about this plate was better, especially the glass-like crunchy piece of skin.
While I would have been happy with Gung Cung being my top babi guling experience, I had time on my last day to take a ride on a scooter to Ibu Moris which, unlike the other two, was definitely not in the center of town and didn't have a printed menu. While not as aesthetically pleasing as Gung Cung and with a piece of skin not quite as crispy, this was definitely the big winner from my babi guling trio. The chili sauce was really spicy but the heat was secondary to the wonderful flavor. I believe the primary (if not only) chili used was one called cabai burung ungu. Someone should start growing it here. The succulent meat was delicious even without the added heat, but all together these were some glorious bites of food.
The tipat blayah at Hujan Locale, a "street food inspired" relatively upscale restaurant in Ubud, had the kind of complexity I loved about various curries and sauces in Singapore. The principles were the same - sweet, spicy, loaded with an intoxicating medley of flavors that were mixed in with and smoothed out by coconut milk. This dish had smoked chicken, Balinese urap egg, and cirspy chicken skin and basa genep spices. Had to google the spices and found a recipe that helps explain the complexity. Presumably there are a ton of variations but the one I found has pepper, garlic, onion, chilies, sesame seeds, nutmeg, shrimp paste, candlenuts, coriander, galangal, and ginger. Sounds about right. Would drink a tall glass of the stuff.
Some more food pics from my trip as well as a whole bunch of temples, monkeys and more can be seen
here.