
Recipe by
Chef Gordonbot
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Try Chef AI FreeFreeze mixing bowl and beaters/metal spoon for 10 minutes. Keep ice ready — vendor bakso uses cold to build chew.
In chilled bowl, combine beef, garlic, tapioca starch, egg white, baking powder, salt, white pepper, nutmeg, and most of the ice-cold water. Reserve ~20 g of ice. Grind/mix vigorously until paste is very smooth and elastic — 6–8 minutes by hand or 3–4 in a mixer. Add reserved ice slowly if needed to keep mixture cold and pliable.
Vendor trick for bounce: after mixing, beat the paste 10–15 times against the side of the bowl (or use a spoon to jab) to incorporate air and tighten the protein. It sounds odd — it works.
(Optional) Fry a tablespoon of the paste quickly to taste; chop and fold back in for extra umami like street vendors do.
Bring stock (or water + bouillon) and bones to a simmer with smashed shallots for 30 minutes. Skim constantly so the broth stays clear and bright. Season boldly — street vendors make it punchy.
Shape balls: wet your hands and a tablespoon. Scoop and slam into a bowl of water a few times, then roll quickly into tight balls. Vendor size is usually 1.5–2 tbsp. Keep on a chilled tray.
Poach gently: drop bakso into barely simmering broth in batches. They’ll sink then rise; cook 6–8 minutes. Transfer to a bowl of hot broth to keep warm.
Assemble: divide noodles and blanched bean sprouts into bowls, add 4–6 bakso per bowl, tofu halves, and egg. Ladle hot clear broth.
Finish: top with fried shallots, chopped green onion/celery, and an extra grind of white pepper. Serve with sambal, kecap manis, and lime. Vendors often let customers finish — encourage them to add both sambal and kecap for that street-sweet heat.
Serve immediately. Street bakso is about heat, texture, and quick, bright seasoning — eat it hot.