Pontianak, West Kalimantan — positioned exactly on the equator (its Tugu Khatulistiwa equatorial monument sits 3km from the city centre) — is one of Indonesia's most culturally complex food cities, its cuisine shaped by the intersection of Malay, Hakka Chinese, Dayak, Bugis, and Javanese communities whose food cultures have been negotiating shared space for 250 years. The city's name derives from the Malay word for female ghost (hantu pontianak) — a mythological foundation that gives the city a characteristic Indonesian mix of the practical and the supernatural. The food, however, is entirely practical: Pontianak's wet market (Pasar Flamboyan) is one of the most abundant in Kalimantan, stocked with both coastal seafood and jungle produce that appears in no other regional cuisine.
Masakan Pontianak — The City on the Equator
Indonesian Deep Extraction — Batch 16 (FINAL)