Nias Island (Pulau Nias), off the western coast of North Sumatra, is home to one of Indonesia's most distinctive pre-Austronesian cultures — the Nias people, whose megalithic stone architecture, social hierarchy system, and food traditions mark them as culturally distinct from both the mainland Batak traditions and the Malay-influenced coastal cultures. Nias was largely isolated from the spice trade's cultural influence; its food traditions reflect an older, more self-contained agricultural and hunting system. The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami devastated coastal Nias communities; recovery has been partial and the cultural and culinary documentation of Nias traditions is an urgent scholarly priority.
Masakan Nias — Western Sumatra's Most Distinct Cultural Island
Indonesian Deep Extraction — Batch 16 (FINAL)