Indonesia's 17,000-island geography and the absence of reliable refrigeration until the late 20th century made salt-fish preservation not merely practical but existential. Ikan asin — literally "salty fish" — encompasses dozens of distinct preparations varying by species, salt concentration, drying method, and intended use. The tradition is documented in Dutch colonial records from the VOC period (17th century onward), where dried fish appeared consistently in trade manifests alongside rice, spices, and salt. Today, Indramayu (West Java), Tuban (East Java), and various Sulawesi coastal cities are the major production centres.
Ikan Asin — Indonesian Salted and Dried Fish, Full Spectrum
The cardinal rule of ikan asin cooking: it brings its own salt. Taste before adding additional sodium at any stage. Ikan asin fried in coconut oil + white rice + sambal is the foundational Javanese economy plate — a combination that has fed more Indonesians through more lean years than any other. Its power is in that concentrated umami saltiness as a condiment to otherwise bland starch.
1. Jambal roti — premium, thick-fleshed, concentrated flavour 2. Teri medan — large, properly dried, no off-odour 3. Teri nasi — small, uniform, pliable before frying 4. Generic ikan asin — variable species and quality; acceptable for bulk cooking
Indonesian Deep Extraction — Batch 12