Nasi dagang is a Malaysian and Southern Thai dish consisting of rice steamed in coconut milk, fish curry and extra ingredients such as fried shaved coconut, hard-boiled eggs and vegetable pickles. Nasi Dagang literally means "Trading Rice". It is a well-known breakfast food in the states on the East Coast of Peninsular Malaysia, such as Terengganu and Kelantan and Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat in Southern Thailand. The most famous Nasi dagang of Terengganu comes from Kampung Ladang, an area within the Kuala Terengganu district. Nasi Dagang can also be considered as a festive dish in Kelantan and
Terengganu because it is prepared at home for the morning of Eid ul-Fitr, a Muslim holiday that marks the end of Ramadan, to be eaten as a breakfast before or after the Eid prayers in the mosque. Apart from the basic combination of rice and curry, Nasi Dagang usually
comes with its different components which can be combined to suit the
diner's taste. From a simple serving of the steamed rice
and tuna curry usually found at roadside stalls, the complete home-made
version may include a sliced hard-boiled egg, fried coconut, vegetable
pickle and sambal. The Terengganu version uses the normal white rice, while the Kelantan
variety uses a type of rice locally called 'beras nasi dagang', which is
a type of wild rice that has a light purple colour and a little
glutinous. The Terengganu version is also much simpler, eaten only with the fish
curry (sometimes with belimbing buluh 'averrhoa bilimbi' added) and
pickles.
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