Bakso - Authentic Chinese noodle soup with fish balls - easy recipe (2024)

Bakso - Authentic Chinese noodle soup with fish balls - easy recipe (1)

Bakso or baso is an Indonesian meatball or meat paste made from beef surimi (ground meat). Bakso can be found all across Indonesia; from the traveling cart street vendors to restaurants‘ (wiki).

Bakso can be made with fish too. Beb Vuyk has a fish bakso in her book. I’m eager to try this recipe, but unfortunately, I fail terribly. That does not sound very hopeful, but I’ve kept on experimenting and I’ve succeeded ;-).

Adapting the original recipe

I had to adapt the preparation of the original recipe though. The problem is that the fish mixture (surimi) remains too wet when I follow the original Beb recipe.Maybe it’s the fish or the way it is conserved now compared to 1973, when Beb wrote her book.

My balls fall apart in the soup. I then added more cornstarch but that didn’t work either. The balls taste too much like flour (terrible). I use cod from the freezer (according to Beb’s recipe that works too). The fish paste remains too wet after defrosting and draining.I looked up different

I looked up different bakso recipes online and changed four things about Beb’s recipe:

  • I do not use egg white
  • I use salmon and plaice. Salmon is an oily fish and helps to mix the fish into a smooth paste.
  • I use a blender to make surimi (ground fish meat)
  • When the balls are done, I let them cool in ice water

This recipe is definitely enough for 4people for lunch for example. This bakso is ready in 50 minutes.Below Beb’s recipe for bakso-mie. Where I do it differently, I’ve added a comment.

Chinese noodle soup with fish balls (Bakso-mie) #129 translated from Beb Vuyk’s Groot Indonesisch Kookboek, page 133.

Ingredients

1 liter fish stock, possibly chicken broth from bouillon tablets

200 gram of cod fillets (you can use cod from the freezer) – I use salmon and plaice fillets

1 tablespoon of cornstarch

1 egg white – I do not use egg white
100 grams of noodles

Herbs and spices

juice of 3 cloves of garlic

1/2 teaspoon monosodium glutamate (vetsin) – I do not use vetsin

1/2 teaspoon sugar


2 tablespoons of finely chopped celery

salt

pepper

Finely chop the cod fillets as fine as possible or use a meat grinder. Mix the fish with the corn starch, egg white, sugar, salt, pepper, vetsin and garlic juice. Make small balls the size of a large marble. The easiest way is to cover one’s hands with a little cornstarch or flour or use wet hands.

Bring the broth to a boil. Add the balls and let them cook until they float. Remove them from the broth, add the noodles (which are pre-soaked in water). Let the soup boil for 2 to 3 minutes, warm the fish balls in it and stir the celery through before serving.

Serve with soy sauce and lemon wedges.

Bakso - Authentic Chinese noodle soup with fish balls - easy recipe (2)

This is how I make bakso fish balls.

The fish balls are in terms of seasoningvery easy. The bakso consists of garlic, pepper, salt, and sugar. Because they are cooked in a fish broth they suck up more flavor.

The picture shows one egg white, but I do not use it in my version of bakso. It causes the balls to disintegrate in the soup.

Bakso - Authentic Chinese noodle soup with fish balls - easy recipe (3)

I buy salmon and plaice fillets. It is so much tastier to use a oily fish (salmon). The oil makes the fish more smooth and sticky and delivers easy to form compact balls.

I also see bakso recipes online with mackerel; another fat fish. That sounds delicious too.

I add the fish, garlic, pepper, salt and a tablespoon of cornstarch in a jug. Then blend it on high speed with my emersion blender.

Bakso - Authentic Chinese noodle soup with fish balls - easy recipe (4)

While mixing the fish into a smooth paste, I warm up a liter of broth made with one cube of fish stock.

Bakso - Authentic Chinese noodle soup with fish balls - easy recipe (5)

With a small spoon, I lay the balls gently into the simmering broth.

Bakso - Authentic Chinese noodle soup with fish balls - easy recipe (6)

Leave the pan on medium heat and gently cook the balls for a minute or two.

When they float to the surface they are done.

Bakso - Authentic Chinese noodle soup with fish balls - easy recipe (7)

I take them out immediately and let them cool in ice water. This allows the balls to remain tender and moist.

This allows the balls to remain tender and moist.

Bakso - Authentic Chinese noodle soup with fish balls - easy recipe (8)

Just before serving, I bring the bouillon to the boil and add the noodles. I let it simmer for a minute.

Then I add the fish balls to warm them up again.

Bakso - Authentic Chinese noodle soup with fish balls - easy recipe (9)

Beb uses celery to finish the dish. I think bakso is lovely too with fresh coriander.

In a bowl, I pour in some sweet soy sauce and a few drops of lemon juice. I top it off with some bawang goreng (fried onions).

Makan! The bakso is deliciously salty and the fish balls taste very fresh and juicy; the perfect lunch. For extra spiciness check the Indonesian chili salsarecipes (sambals) on this website.

Bakso - Authentic Chinese noodle soup with fish balls - easy recipe (2024)
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