Friday, December 21, 2007 - Page updated at 12:00 AM
 
 
Julia's Indonesian Kitchen feels like home
 

By Providence Cicero
 
Special to The Seattle Times

Indonesian $ Julia's Indonesian Kitchen 
 
 
910 NE 65th St., Seattle; 206-522-5528; www.juliasindokitchen.com
 
 
Hours: lunch daily 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; dinner 3-9 p.m. Friday-Sunday (beginning in 
January, Tues-Thurs. as well.) 
 
 
Drinks: Indonesian-style fruit drinks and shakes, coffee and tea; American soft 
drinks; wine and beer license pending. 
 
 
Cards: Visa, MasterCard 
 
 
Access: not wheelchair accessible. 
 
 
Rating: recommended 
 
 
Itemized bill, meal for two 
 
 
Lumpia $3.95 
 
Martabak Telur Bandung $4.95 
 
Ayam Goreng Kremes Tante Julia $12.95 
 
Wedang Jahe $2.00 
 
Teh Tarik $2.00 
 
Tax $2.40 
 
Total $28.25 
 
 

We wandered into this narrow bungalow on a raw, wet day (is there any other 
kind in December?) looking for sustenance and craving something hot. We found 
just what we needed, starting with a bracing cup of ginger tea. 
 
 
"It's good on a day like this, but there are many reasons to drink it," said 
Rudy Tanumihardja, who suggested the drink, as he set the freshly brewed topaz 
infusion in front of me. The first sip stopped the shivering. 
 
 
A slight, soft-spoken man, Tanumihardja is as soothing as that cup of tea. He 
was our server - and our tour guide - explaining the unfamiliar items on the 
short menu, patiently helping us pick and choose from among the Indonesian 
specialties prepared by his wife, Julia Suparman, and her daughter-in-law, Yusi 
Sasmitra. 
 
 
Indonesian cuisine is influenced by many cultures, thanks to the early spice 
traders and centuries of European domination. 
 
 
Rijstafel, a multicomponent feast with rice as its centerpiece, is a remnant of 
Dutch rule, and you can experience a version of it here. A miniversion is 
offered at lunch ($7.95); the full rijstafel is available at dinner ($48.95 for 
four) for now only on weekends. But beginning in January, the restaurant will 
open for dinner Tuesday-Sunday. 
 
 
Simpler entrees, also paired with rice, feature curried or fried chicken, beef 
or vegetables. 
 
 
There are noodle soups as well, and starters such as, lumpia, risoles 
(deep-fried crepes enfolding creamy chicken and vegetables) and martabak (a 
beef and onion omelet). Prices range from $3.95-$7.95. 
 
 
The biggest splurge - Ayam Goreng Kremes, a whole fried Cornish hen that feeds 
two ($12.95) - is also the best bet. 
 
 
Beverages go way beyond hot tea and coffee. Among the exotic array: a creamy 
avocado shake; an herbal tonic made with grass jelly and jackfruit; and an iced 
concoction sweetened with pink coconut syrup that blends shredded coconut, 
agar-agar and palm seeds. 
 
 
Julia's two small rooms are homey and comfortable, softly lit and prettily done 
up with batik prints and Javanese puppets. It's a sweet refuge for an 
inexpensive meal whatever the weather. 
 
 
Check Please 
 
Lumpia: Four fried spring rolls filled with chicken and vegetables deliver 
crackle and crunch with every bite. 
 
 
Martabak Telur Bandung: This egg pancake is billed as a starter but would be a 
fine light lunch. Egg is mixed with a savory mince of beef and spring onion, 
browned to a gentle crisp and cut into squares for serving. Sweet pickled 
vegetables make a wonderful accompaniment. 
 
 
Ayam Goreng Kremes Tante Julia: This small, whole, deep-fried chicken is the 
got-to-go-for item. The crisp-skinned bronzed bird is cut into quarters and 
buried under "extra crispy bits." Delectable crumbles made with flour moistened 
with chicken marinade and deep fried to the color of mahogany. For more pizazz, 
count on the house special chili sauce, sambal terasi, a complex condiment that 
teeters between searing and sweet on a fulcrum of fermented shrimp paste. 
 
 
Wedang Jahe: This ginger tea is not on the menu right now so you'll have to ask 
for a cup of the fortifying, sweet and spicy topaz elixir. 
 
 
Teh Tarik: This milky black tea is also fragrant with ginger and sweetened with 
pandan sugar. 
 
 
 
Providence Cicero: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
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