answersLogoWhite

0

· Indonesian foods are famous for their rich spices and flavourings unlike Australians who tend to use less.

· Australians eat rice no more than a few times a week, whereas Indonesians can eat it up to 3 times a day.

· Australians generally eat a main meal at dinner but in Indonesia it's eaten in the late afternoon.

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Difference between Indonesian food and filipino food?

John Paul Bucknell


What are the differences between Poland and US?

what are some differences between poland and the united states of america


What does Indonesia eat?

Indonesian food.


What the differences between western food and eastern food?

Western food is prepare pizza,burger,pasta


What the differences between Paleolithic food and Neolithic food?

neolithic people farmed and paleolithic hunted for food


What do Indonesian people eat for lunch?

food


Differences between kitchen and bathrooms?

One you cook food in, the other you get rid of the food that you ate.


What is the difference between German food and Australian food?

German food is the cr****t sh*t you could possibly eat


Differences between why you cook food and why you eat food?

You prepare food to make it more appealing, you eat food to nourish your body.


What is the word 'food' when translated from English to Indonesian?

makanan


What are the differences between producers and consumers?

The difference between a producer and a consumer is that a producer makes his own food and consumer purchases his own food.


What are the differences between Middle East Islam and Indonesia Islam?

Answer 1It's quite the same. Most Indonesians are Sunni Muslims while a few are either sufis or shia. In the Middle East the majority are Sunnis. Shias are mainly located in Iran, Iraq, Lebanon and scattered in the rest of the region.Answer 2Ostensibly they are supposed to be the same. In practice, there are distinct differences. Most Indonesian Muslims are Sunnis from the Shafi'i School. In the Middle East, the Hanafi, Hanbali, and Maliki Schools of Sunni Islam are much more popular. However, the differences between Indonesian Islam and Middle Eastern Islam are more stark than the few differences in jurisprudence between Hanafis and Shafi'is.Most of these differences come from syncretism with Indonesian endemic faiths that only happened in Indonesia. One example of syncretic Indonesian rituals are Awwal Muharram (Islamic New Year), where the Sultan of Yogyakarta climbs to the top of an active volcano to plead with the forces of nature to protect them from catastrophe with food and flowers. This is an adoption of the previous Animist holiday of First of Suro, which has no corollary outside of Indonesia. There are also religions like Kejawan which are Muslim-Animist hybrid religions. Additionally, the Muslims of Kalimintan (Indonesian Borneo) often perform old Animist rituals but dedicate them to God now as opposed to the various fomer spirits.