Jamu gendong (literally "carried jamu") refers to the traditional practice — almost exclusively female — of carrying fresh jamu preparations in a wicker basket (tenggok) on the back, walking neighbourhood streets at dawn and morning to sell door-to-door. The jamu gendong is a living institution that predates modern pharmacy by centuries: her basket contains typically 5–8 fresh preparations made from scratch that morning, offered in small portions (100–150ml, poured into a glass) tailored to the customer's stated condition. The customer-vendor relationship is long-term, personalised, and advisory: the jamu gendong knows her regular customers' health conditions, adjusts preparations seasonally or in response to illness, and provides informal health consultation as part of the service.
Jamu Gendong — The Mobile Jamu Vendor as Institution
Indonesian Deep Extraction — Batch 13