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13/20

Meetbowl

Updated ,first published

Bakso special featuring variations of beef meatball.
1 / 6Bakso special featuring variations of beef meatball.Pete Dillon
Indonesian meatball eatery Meetbowl.
2 / 6Indonesian meatball eatery Meetbowl.Pete Dillon
Another meat ball variation.
3 / 6Another meat ball variation.Pete Dillon
Fried platter.
4 / 6Fried platter.Pete Dillon
Batagor (fishcakes with tofu and peanut sauce).
5 / 6Batagor (fishcakes with tofu and peanut sauce).Pete Dillon
Chilli sambal.
6 / 6Chilli sambal.Pete Dillon
13/20

Meetbowl

Indonesian$

Small, welcoming warung for springy meatballs in broth.

A good bakso (meatball) place has three things: a menu showcasing the dish’s various textures, traditional orange containers of vinegary sambal on each table and – at minimum – one faded European soccer poster on the wall. Meetbowl has the trifecta.

The go-to combo is a bowl of soft, airy beef bakso with golden wonton, stuffed tofu and both egg and rice noodles in a robust garlicky broth. Bakmie bangka deploys thick, curly noodles to hold onto the spices and oils from fried minced pork, with crackling and soy egg as toppings.

Spring onion-speckled spheres of fried bakso should be a mandatory side, whether bathed in broth or savoured with kecap manis. True to their Bandung roots, the owners also sell the street food batagor: Fishcakes with tofu dressed in peanut sauce fragrant with makrut lime.

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