Preparation Authority tier 1

Keluak: The Poisonous Black Nut and the Art of Controlled Detoxification

There is no ingredient in world cuisine quite like keluak. The seed of the Pangium edule tree — a mangrove giant that reaches 18 metres in height and takes 10-15 years to produce its first fruit — is LETHALLY POISONOUS when raw, containing hydrogen cyanide at concentrations that will kill a human being. And yet, through a fermentation process that requires 40-60 days of burial in volcanic ash and earth, the Javanese, Peranakan, Torajan, and Betawi traditions have transformed this toxic seed into one of Southeast Asia's most prized culinary ingredients — a black, oily, intensely umami paste that gives rawon (Javanese black beef soup) its jet-black colour and extraordinary depth. The first written reference to rawon appears in the Taji inscription (901 CE) from Ponorogo, East Java, as *rarawwan* — making it one of the oldest documented Indonesian preparations, over 1,100 years old. The Serat Centhini (1814) describes it in detail. The Serat Wulangan Olah-Olah Warna-Warni (1926), a Mangkunegaran Palace manuscript, codifies the first detailed recipe. In 2013, rawon was designated an intangible cultural heritage of East Java. In 2018, it received national recognition. This is Indonesia's truffle — an ingredient so labour-intensive, so transformative, and so irreplaceable that no substitution produces even an approximation of the result.

1. **Three-star standard:** Keluak prepared through the full 3-day soaking process, freshly cracked, paste extracted that day. Bumbu ground in a cobek. Beef simmered gently for 2+ hours. The broth is jet-black, deeply savoury, with the keluak's truffle-earth-chocolate complexity fully developed. Fried shallots made fresh. 2. **Professional standard:** Pre-soaked keluak (purchased already processed from a market). Bumbu machine-ground. The black colour is correct but the keluak complexity may be slightly muted. 3. **Competent standard:** Keluak paste from a jar or pre-processed source. The colour is present but the depth is one-dimensional — it tastes of "dark" without the truffle-olive-chocolate layers. 4. **Failure:** Black food colouring used instead of keluak (yes, this happens — it produces the visual without ANY of the flavour; the fraud is immediately detectable by taste). Or raw keluak insufficiently detoxified — the residual cyanide produces a bitter, astringent, potentially dangerous soup.

INDONESIAN CUISINE — TIER 1 DEEP EXTRACTION (BATCH 2)

- Peranakan ayam buah keluak (same ingredient, different treatment — the keluak paste is stuffed back into the shell and served as a separate element alongside chicken) - Mexican mole negro (same "bla