Indonesian Street Food in Jakarta - FIRE DUMPLINGS in Chinatown (Glodok) + BEST Chinese Street Food
🎥 Indonesia Village Food in Harau Valley, West Sumatra: https://youtu.be/PDMIZXBnFu8 Our Patrons + Members get access to exclusive content, monthly blooper reels, food maps and MORE! 💖 SUPPORT US : https://www.patreon.com/join/chopsticktravel? 🥢 BECOME A MEMBER : https://www.youtube.com/lukemartin/join Welcome to the 4th episode of our Street Food in Indonesia series! Today we are in Jakarta, eating our way through Glodok Chinatown! Here you can find authentic Chinese restaurants and street food! We started our day in Chinatown with Bakmi (meat + noodles) made fresh to order. Served with char siu pork (barbecued), blanched vegetables and pickles on the table, this is a satisfying bowl of noodles (Rp. 26.000 / USD $1.82). For our next food stop, we go to a street side shop serving Kuo Tieh (pot stickers). Outside of the restaurant you can watch the chefs preparing the dumplings from scratch, starting with making and rolling the dough, stuffing the dumplings with meat and chives and then cooking them over a huge flame. The pot stickers were delicious, but slightly more expensive than we expected in Jakarta (Rp. 50.000 / USD $3.49 for 10 pieces). Next we check out the fresh market in Glodok, which is full of traditional Chinese ingredients you normally don’t see in Indonesian wet markets. Next, we visited Dharma Bhakti Temple (Jin De Yuan) which is the first and oldest temple in Jakarta, built in 1650. It is historically significant, and very important for Chinese living in Jakarta, especially around Lunar New Year. We wanted to experience a full meal after eating street food, so we went to a Hakka restaurant, known as the first Hakka restaurant in the city fro 1925. The owner was very friendly and recommended several dishes to us. We ordered braised noodles (Rp. 50.000 / USD $3.49), red yeast fried eel (Rp. 60.000 / USD $4.19), minced pork steamed with pickles (Rp. 80.000 / USD $5.59), pork ball soup (Rp. 15.000 / USD $1.05) and several other complimentary dishes. The food was authentic and the setting was traditional set back in the twisting alleyways of Jakarta. Restaurant addresses: 1. Bakmi at Bakmi Loncat Elda Jl. Kemenangan Raya No.56, RT.2/RW.1, Glodok 2. Kuo Tieh at Santong Kuotieh 68 Jl. Pancoran No.73, RT.1/RW.6, Pinangsia 3. Petak Sembilan Market (fresh market) Jl. Kemenangan Raya No.40, RT.5/RW.1, Glodok 4. Dharma Bhakti Temple Jalan Kemenangan III Petak Sembilan No. 19, RT.3/RW.2, Glodok 5. Hakka Chinese Food at Wong Fu Kie Jalan Perniagaan Timur 2 No. 22 Sekitar Pasar Pagi Lama (dekat Daerah asemka) Jakarta Barat Kota, RT.8/RW.1, Roa Malaka Are you enjoying our Indonesia Food series? If so, make sure to subscribe and turn on “all notifications” so you never miss an episode! In the next Jakarta episode, we are focusing on Betawi cuisine, which includes some Betawi street food and a traditional Betawi family meal. Stay tuned! ————————————— Hi we’re Luke Martin and Sabrina Davidson, food lovers and world travellers! We make videos about local, authentic and unique foods from across the globe. We particularly like to sample street food across Asia. We are based in Taiwan where we frequent the best Taiwanese street food stops and create travel content to make finding food in Taiwan easier for YOU! Although we are based in Taiwan we travel the majority of the year around the world in search of the best food. We’ve filmed in Japan, China, The Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong, South Korea, Indonesia, India, Vietnam, Turkey, Israel, Lebanon, Palestine, The Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Greece, Sri Lanka, Canada and the list is still growing! Our mission is to create content that is entertaining, informative, honest and fun! We love what we do and we are always grateful for your support! Thank you and see you on the next episode! ————————————— 📱FOLLOW US : https://www.instagram.com/chopsticktravel https://www.facebook.com/chopsticktravel https://www.chopsticktravel.com 🎵 MUSIC (try it for free) : http://share.epidemicsound.com/Dj3dj