Rabu, 20 April 2016

I Wanna be A Hotel Owner

Owning and operating a hotel can be challenging work, but it can also be rewarding. Besides needing plenty of money, there is the long-term investment of time. If I have a chance to be part of tourism business I would run this awesome business.

Also, this business is all about people. It’s not about widgets or spreadsheets; it’s about making people happy. I want to show them what actually a friendliness is. 
 
As well as being a people-oriented industry, hospitality is creative. You are creating a product — be that food, drink, or an experience — and there's always scope to dream up new ways of making it more enjoyable for my customers.


Hotel room

I wanna name my hotel eith my name, Dina

Pengusaha Batik Lestarikan Budaya Pekalongan

Ahmad Marzuki
Datang sebagai sebuah trend baru, batik saat ini telah banyak dinikmati oleh semua kalangan. Adalah Ahmad Marzuki (31 tahun), seorang pengusaha batik asal Pekalongan yang berdomisili di Jakarta. Beliau sudah menggeluti usaha ini sejak tahun 2011. Toko batik yang bernama "Nata Batik" ini berlokasi di Jl. Penggilingan PIK Blok E No. 20,21,22 Cakung, Jakarta Timur. "Bisnis batik yang saya jalani selama 5 tahun ini menurut saya adalah bisnis yang menjanjikan, selain saya ingin mengenalkan batik Pekalongan, saya juga ingin turut serta melestarikan budaya Pekalongan", ujarnya.

Menurutnya batik adalah fashion style yang berubah namun tak lekang oleh waktu. Seiring berjalannya waktu, motif batik terus mengalami perubahan namun minat masyarakat terhadap batik ini tidak mengalami penurunan dan justru semakin meningkat. Daya tarik dari produk yang ia pasarkan adalah tersedianya batik untuk semua kalangan, dari mulai batik untuk anak hingga dewasa. Mulai dari daster, kaos, rok, celana, kemeja, sarimbit (jenis batik yang dijual berpasangan, biasanya memiliki kesamaan dari segi corak atau warna), dress, longdress, semuanya tersedia disini. Tak perlu merogoh kantong dalam-dalam, harga yang ditawarkan sangatlah terjangkau. Mulai dari Rp. 20.000,- hingga Rp. 250.000,- tergantung dari kualitas bahan dan metode pembuatannya (tulis, cap, atau sablon). Konsumen juga dapat membeli secara grosir dan eceran.

"Nata Batik" adalah toko batik terbesar di derah tersebut. "Saya tidak menyangka akan berhasil seperti sekarang ini karena dulu saya hanyalah seorang karyawan di suatu pabrik dan sekarang saya memiliki 2 karyawan yang bekerja di toko ini. Awalnya saya hanya menjual kaos batik kecil-kecilan dengan tenda sebagai usaha sampingan saya sebagai karyawan pabrik, lama-lama saya menikmati usaha ini dan syukur Alhamdulillah bisa berkembang seperti sekarang. Ide bisnis ini saya dapatkan karena saya sendiri kebetulan orang Pekalongan dan mertua saya juga berjualan batik di Pasar Comal", ujarnya lagi. Motto hidupnya sekarang adalah "Berwirausaha sekaligus melestarikan budaya, kenapa tidak?".

Batik Pekalongan

NATA BATIK
Wawancara dengan Pak Ahmad

Keluarga Ahmad Marzuki

Selasa, 19 April 2016

Indonesian Foods, I Love it !

The reason why I love Indonesia is because its food and beverages. Indonesian meals are commonly eaten with the combination of a spoon in the right hand and fork in the left hand (to push the food onto the spoon). Unlike European dining custom, knife however, is absent from dining table, thus most of the ingredients such as vegetables and meat are already cut into bite-size pieces prior of cooking. Although, in many parts of the country, such as West Java and West Sumatra, it is also common to eat with one's bare hands. In restaurants or households that commonly use bare hands to eat, like in seafood foodstalls, traditional Sundanese and Minangkabau restaurants, or East Javanese pecel lele (fried catfish with sambal) and ayam goreng (fried chicken) food stalls, they usually serve kobokan, a bowl of tap water with a slice of lime in it to give a fresh scent. This bowl of water should not be consumed, rather it is used to wash one's hand before and after eating.

Nasi Padang
 
Nasi Padang

Nasi Padang, named after its birth city in Sumatra, is 100 percent Indonesian.
Chose from among more than a dozen dishes -- goopy curries with floating fish heads or rubbery cow’s feet -- stacked up on your table. “It always looks sodead,” a friend once said.
Indeed, otak (brain) leaves little to the imagination. Chuck away the cutlery and dig in with your hands then wash the spice away with a sweet iced tea.

Nasi Goreng
 
Nasi Goreng

Considered Indonesia’s national dish, this take on Asian fried rice is often made with sweet, thick soy sauce called kecap (pronounced ketchup) and garnished with acar, pickled cucumber and carrots.
To add an element of fun to your dining experience, try nasi gila (literally :crazy rice") and see how many different kinds of meat you can find buried among the grains –- yes, those are hot dog slices.

Mie Ayam
 
Mie Ayam

For this dish, bakmie is boiled in stock and topped with succulent slices of gravy-braised chicken.
Chives and sambal add extra flavor -- but if it’s done right little else is needed. Unlike most Indonesian cuisine, where the secret is in the sauce, the clue to a good mie ayam is the perfect al dente noodle.

Bakso
Bakso

Bakso is Indonesian meat balls served in chicken broth soup, rice vermicelli or yellow noodles (depends on your liking), sprinkled with fried shallots, celery, and of course sambal.

Ketoprak
Ketoprak

Not to be confused with the theatrical drama of the same name that re-enacts Javanese legends, this Ketoprak is made from vermicelli, tofu, packed rice cake and bean sprouts.
It rounds out the quintet of pestle-and-mortar-based dishes that include gado-gado and pecel, and is a simple street dish that tastes mostly of peanuts and spice but is chockfull of carbohydrates.

Gado-gado
Gado-gado

Literally “mix-mix,” the term gado-gado is often used to describe situations that are all mixed up -– Jakarta, for instance, is a gado-gado city.
As a food, however, it is one of Indonesia’s best-known dishes, essentially a vegetable salad bathed in the country’s classic peanut sauce.
At its base are boiled long beans, spinach, potato, corn, egg and bean sprouts coupled with cucumber, tofu and tempe.

Martabak
Martabak Telur


Martabak Manis
Think of a spongy, thick crepe made with 10 times the lard and you’ll be somewhat close to imaging martabak.
The sweet version looks more like a pancake filled with gooey chocolate, peanuts or cheese, while the savory one is made from crispy pulled pastry like filo that is flattened in a wok as egg and minced meats are rapidly folded in.

Gorengan
Gorengan

Literally “fried foods,”gorengan are the most prolific snacks in all of Indonesia.
Street carts typically offer crispy golden nuggets of tempe, cassava and tofu, as well as fried bananas, sweet potatoes, vegetables fritters made from shredded carrot, cabbage and bean sprouts and fermented soybean cakes.

Siomay
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Think of it as Indonesia’s version of dim sum -- traditional steamed fish dumplings known in China as shaomai.
A complete portion comes with a steamed potato, cabbage, egg, and bitter gourd, and is served with a boiled peanut sauce similar to gado-gado.
Perhaps Indonesia’s most ubiquitous traveling street food, the best way to dine on siomay is from a bicycle vendor, who carts his large steamer around on the back of his bike.

Tahu Gejrot
Tahu Gejrot

These clouds of golden, fried tofu look like little packages behind the windows of the boxes from which they are sold.
Tofu is a poor man’s snack, but that also makes it prevalent. Keep an eye out for the vendors who cart stacks of the fluffy fried tofufrom devices slung across their shoulders.

Batagor
Batagor

Batagor is fried bakso and tofu with fish paste fillings. If you haven’t figured out yet, Indonesian dishes are similar to each other

Pempek
Pempek

This savory delicacy fish cake from Palembang in the south of Sumatra is normally served with yellow noodles, cucumber, and poured with sour sauce. You can also find ones that have eggs filling

Bajigur
Bajigur

Bajigur is one typical drink from the area of West Java. This drink has a sweet and savory taste because it is made from coconut milk and brown sugar. This drink is usually served in a relaxed moment and leisure, and is believed to increase appetite. Bajigur scent that mingled smell of pandan leaves presents its own sensation of this traditional beverage menu. Moreover as it flows through the esophagus and ending in the stomach. Warmth coursed through the body immediately. Bajigur usually served with boiled yam, boiled bananas or boiled peanuts.
Bajigur easily found in West Java, consumers were most people in the area. Including tourists from outside the region who are curious about this drink. This drink is safe to be consumed by small children to adults. Bajigur main ingredient is palm sugar, and coconut milk. To add flavor, also mixed a little ginger, salt and vanilla powder.

Sekoteng
Sekoteng

Sekoteng is drink native of Central Java with the ginger flavor that served hot. Other ingredients are usually mixed into a drink sekoteng are mung beans, peanuts, pacar cina, and chunks of bread. Sekoteng usually sold around by using a cart to carry. One side of ginger water in the pan along with the stove while the other side is a mixture of ingredients and place to prepare sekoteng.

Bir Pletok
Bir Pletok

It’s main ingredient is ginger, cardamom, lemongrass, cinnamon, kayu secang, and sugar.
This drink is perfect to drink at night to keep warm. Name pletok also unique origins. In the Dutch colonial period and the Japanese invaders often seen drinking beer in checkpoints.
Betawi people do not want to lose. They make their own beer that put into a bamboo tube and mixed with ice cubes. When the drinks in a bamboo tube shaken, will hear a pletok-pletok so that named pletok. Bir Pletok is believed to have various benefits, including relieving hot, prevent colds , and warm the stomach.

Es Cendol
Es Cendol


Cendol is typical of Indonesia beverage made from rice flour, served with grated ice, liquid palm sugar, and coconut milk. It was sweet and savory. In the area of Sunda, the drink is known as cendol while in Central Java known as es dawet.
Rice flour is processed in a way given the green dye then printed through a special filter, so the shape of grains. At first natural dyes from pandanus leaves are used, but now used artificial food colorings.
This drink is usually served as dessert or as a snack. Matches are presented in the daytime

Es Teler
 
Es Teler


Es Teler is a drink containing pieces of fresh avocado, young coconut, jackfruit, and dilute coconut milk. Then added sweetened condensed milk and syrup. Ice can be used shaved ice or ice cubes.
Another variation of es teler containing grass jelly, kolang-kaling, pacar cina, pieces of apple, papaya, sapodilla, melons, bread, and jelly. Until es teler to be difficult to distinguish from es campur.
 











Senin, 18 April 2016

10 Allures of Depok

10 Allures of Depok

Depok is a city in West Java province, Indonesia on the southern border of DKI Jakarta in the Jabodetabek metropolitan region. The "de" in Jabodetabek refers to Depok, while the word "depok" itself comes from Sundanese language meaning hermitage or abode of one living in seclusion. There is also a saying that the Depok word is an acronym of De Eerste Protestants Onderdaan Kerk.
There are 10 allures of Depok :
  1. Depok has a growing eclectic collection of malls and traditional markets. Older malls or other notable shopping centers include Mall Depok, Depok Plaza, and SixtyOne Building, and Depok ITC. Modern-day landmarks that were once known as Depok's primary shopping centers include Ramanda (now an autoshop plus education centre), Hero Supermarket (now Index Home Furnishings), Agung Shop (now defunct and burned during the riot), and Target (now defunct). There are several new shopping centers in Depok: ITC Depok, Depok Town Square — commonly referred to as DeTos, and the latest mall which is Margo City, all on Margonda Raya street. Traditional markets include Pasar Depok Baru, Pasar Depok Lama, Pasar, Pasar PAL, Pasar Agung, Pasar Musi, Pasar Majapahit. Depok has several major bookstores including a Gramedia and Toko Gunung Agung and a large collection of small roadside bookstores.                                      
  2. Public car transportation (angkot) is the major means of transportation in Depok. The other means of transport is train that connects Depok to Jakarta to the north and Bogor to the south.  In Depok there are two major train stations. The Depok or Depok Lama (Old Depok) Station, which is older and has many more tracks, is located to the south. The Depok Baru (New Depok) Station is closer to Jakarta. There are smaller train stations: University of Indonesia and Pondok Cina. The train is the fastest and most-used way to travel to central Jakarta and is usually extremely crowded during peak times.
  3.  Depok has many restaurants and cafes such as McDonalds, A&W, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Pizza Hut, and Starbucks, What’s Up cafĂ©, Yellow Truck Coffee, and so on.
  4. Education in Depok. There are several universities in Depok: Universitas Indonesia, Universitas Gunadarma, Politeknik Tugu, Politeknik Negeri Jakarta,  Universitas Bina Sarana Informatika. Depok has several private language schools, namely EF English First, International Language Programs (ILP), Lembaga Indonesia Amerika (LIA) and The British Institute (TBI),Lembaga Pendidikan Amerika Indonesia (LPIA) and several other smaller establishments. These are all along Margonda Raya and Cinere Raya, the main road through Depok.
  5. In Depok, you can find the most incredible sight: a gold-domed mosque. Known in Indonesia as Masjid Kubah Mas, or otherwise as Masjid Dian Al-Mahri, it's built on a plot of 80 hectares of land surrounded by fruit trees and a few other large, luxurious buildings. No expense seems to have been spared in the construction of the mosque: all the domes, pillars, and chandeliers have that golden touch, and many of the building materials were imported as well. Admission to the mosque is free, and people come from far and wide to see it. The mosque is well worth seeing, but do make sure to wear appropriate clothing that covers your legs and arms.
  6. Pasir Putih Depok, Located on Jl Raya Pasir Putih, Sawangan, this place is a water park and outbound venue. There are swimming pool, waterpark, trampoline, flying fox, and ATV.
  7. Pancoran Mas Conservation, this Forest Park is located at Jl. Cagar Alam and has been around since the Dutch colonial era. It is the habitat for several types of snake, bird, and also varieties of plant. Perfect for nature lovers.
  8.  Depok Fantasy Water Park, also known as “Waterboom Depok” in Depok Grand City, it adopted 1001 Nights theme where Aladdin and Princess Jasmine will greet you at the entrance and see the arabian palace with colorful domes.
  9. D’Kandang Amazing Farm, located at a countryside in Sawangan, you will see the interesting life at the farm. Learn the difference of local and imported cows. There are white, mottled brown or black, and even albino buffalo.
  10.  Kampung 99 Pepohonan, also known as “Village of Deer”, this place is located in Meruyung, Limo. Here, you can enjoy the green atmosphere, get to know the flora and fauna, as well as the outbound activities in the nature.