Skip to player
Skip to main content
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
15
Bookmark
Share
More
Add to Playlist
Report
Why the ugliest noodles in the world are an Indonesian delicacy
Insider
Follow
2 years ago
Indonesia's mie lethek noodles, or "ugly" noodles, have a distinctive dull grayish color when cooked. We visited a factory that still makes them using 2,000-year-old methods — one of only two such factories left in the country.
Category
😹
Fun
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
(upbeat music)
00:02
This dough will soon be transformed
00:04
into the ugliest noodle in the world.
00:07
Or at least that's what locals here
00:09
in the village of Bantul in Indonesia call them.
00:13
Mi lettuk means ugly or dull noodles,
00:16
mostly because of their gray color when cooked.
00:19
This is one of the only two factories in the world
00:23
that still make them using methods
00:25
that can be traced back more than 2000 years.
00:29
And there's nothing simple about how they're made.
00:32
It takes days of grinding, stomping, cooking, and drying.
00:37
And if the factory doesn't sell them all in 10 days,
00:40
it could lose a whole batch.
00:43
So what makes these noodles so special?
00:45
We visited the Mi Lettuk Zapu Surpana factory
00:51
to see how this family business is still standing.
00:58
The cassava root that gives the noodles their color
01:01
and taste is also toxic when eaten raw.
01:04
So the flour needs to be soaked for two days.
01:09
The flour is then ground beneath a large stone
01:22
for about an hour.
01:23
It's so heavy it needs to be pulled by an ox.
01:28
Every few minutes, workers scrape it clean
01:31
of any sticky flour, while Salijo continues
01:34
to shovel the flour into the path of the stone.
01:37
He also adds water to the mix to get the right consistency.
01:42
At 70 years old, he is a master,
01:51
well accustomed to the physical demands of the job.
01:56
He presses down with his feet to firm up the dough.
01:58
He can feel when it's ready.
02:01
It should be strong and not fall apart.
02:04
When it hardens, he cuts the dough into eight-inch cubes
02:16
with a special knife called a sabit.
02:18
He then places them on a two-by-three-foot bamboo tray.
02:25
As with most tools, workers make them by hand.
02:28
The trays are heavy, and with a little help,
02:35
Salijo puts them in a steam oven.
02:37
After 90 minutes, they start to look for signs
02:43
the dough is ready.
02:44
While it's in the oven, the dough rises,
02:53
but it's still not ready for shaping into noodles.
02:56
It needs to go back to be ground one more time.
03:00
The factory has three oxen.
03:04
They are old, so while one works, the other two rest.
03:08
Mukido oversees the whole process,
03:17
making sure the dough doesn't fall apart.
03:20
(speaking in foreign language)
03:24
He's been working here for 20 years.
03:30
The factory opened here in the small town of Bantul
03:43
in the 1970s, providing jobs to a community
03:46
otherwise dominated by farming.
03:49
(speaking in foreign language)
03:52
Salijo has been at the factory for 10 years.
03:55
He collects the ground dough into bags,
03:58
each weighing 40 pounds.
04:00
Finally, it's time to shape the noodles.
04:05
This is the only step that isn't done by hand.
04:09
Each lump of dough is enough to make 100 noodles,
04:14
with each string around two feet long.
04:18
This machine was brought in 20 years ago,
04:21
but it often breaks, bringing production to a halt.
04:24
Workers spread the noodles on bamboo trays
04:38
and make sure they aren't tangled.
04:40
(speaking in foreign language)
04:47
(upbeat music)
04:50
The noodles cook in the oven again for about one hour.
04:55
The doors don't seal properly,
04:59
so workers use rags to plug any gaps
05:02
and stop the steam from escaping.
05:04
Then they're hung to cool for two hours.
05:10
Each batch makes around one ton of noodles.
05:14
(upbeat music)
05:17
In the morning, workers separate them by hand
05:21
into portion sizes.
05:23
(speaking in foreign language)
05:27
Workers lay the noodles on large bamboo trays.
05:39
The factory has 100 of them,
05:41
and each one can be filled with up to 45 portions.
05:44
The drying process takes about a day,
05:52
but if it rains or it's too humid,
05:54
there's a risk the whole batch could be ruined,
05:58
so someone always has to be on watch.
06:01
(speaking in foreign language)
06:08
(upbeat music)
06:10
That's because the noodles have no preservatives,
06:18
so if they don't dry fast enough, they could go bad.
06:21
(speaking in foreign language)
06:36
Juri Murianto inherited this factory
06:38
from his uncle 23 years ago.
06:40
(speaking in foreign language)
06:46
Chinese settlers and traders
06:52
likely brought noodles to Indonesia back in 2000 BC,
06:56
and with them came many of their methods.
06:59
Locals here say the first noodle factory in Bantul
07:03
was opened in the 1940s by a Muslim preacher from Yemen.
07:07
They started making them with cassava
07:09
because his wife, a Chinese migrant,
07:11
noticed it was abundant in the region.
07:14
But the rapid rise of mass-produced instant noodles
07:18
in the 1970s pushed traditional manufacturers
07:21
out of the market.
07:23
Today, Indonesia is one of the largest producers
07:26
and consumers of instant noodles.
07:31
Juri's factory is one of just two left in the country
07:34
that make mie letek the traditional way.
07:36
Once the noodles are dry,
07:40
workers pack them into 10-pound bags.
07:42
Each one will sell for around $5.
07:45
That's half the price of Indomie,
07:49
Indonesia's most popular brand of instant noodles.
07:52
Buyers like Dalia come directly to the factory
07:58
to select bundles of noodles to sell at the market.
08:00
The broken strands are reused in the dough
08:04
or fed to the oxen.
08:06
The Bantul district has become well-known for its noodles.
08:19
They're even fit for a president.
08:22
Barack Obama tried mie letek
08:24
during a visit to the region in 2017.
08:27
(people chattering)
08:30
Chef Harianto is one of the oldest mie letek vendors
08:47
in the area.
08:48
His father started the business before Harianto was born,
08:52
and he still follows the same recipes today,
08:56
cooking the noodles in chicken broth with vegetables.
08:59
Harianto uses the same charcoal stove his father used.
09:14
He says it gives a powerful aroma and better taste.
09:18
(people chattering)
09:21
The noodles are chewy in texture and plain in taste.
09:38
Almost all of Harianto's customers are local.
09:42
Despite costing half the price,
09:46
mie letek can't compete with the big instant noodle
09:49
manufacturers in Indonesia.
09:51
And Judy isn't sure how long he'll be able
09:54
to keep his business,
09:56
one of just two remaining in the country, alive.
10:00
His children have moved to larger cities
10:02
and have little interest in taking on the business.
10:06
(speaking in foreign language)
10:10
, (laughing) (speaking in foreign language)
10:12
(laughing)
10:37
Meanwhile, Mukido is more upbeat about the future.
10:40
(speaking in foreign language)
10:45
, (speaking in foreign language)
10:48
(speaking in foreign language)
10:52
(speaking in foreign language)
10:56
, (speaking in foreign language)
11:01
(upbeat music)
11:03
(speaking in foreign language)
11:07
(upbeat music)
11:11
(upbeat music)
11:13
(upbeat music)
11:16
[MUSIC]
Be the first to comment
Add your comment
Recommended
1:15
|
Up next
The mamee noodle story: how a nostalgic Malaysian snack won over children across Asia
South China Morning Post
7 years ago
1:34
Rice noodles eaten the traditional way in SW China
The Star
4 years ago
6:26
The Small Tokyo Noodle Factory Making Michelin Star Ramen
Condé Nast Traveler
2 years ago
2:05
Rice cake soup 'tteokguk,' a Lunar New Year tradition
Arirang News
7 years ago
15:03
Sun Noodle
Eater
2 years ago
0:35
Lo Mein vs. Chow Mein: What's The Difference?
Southern Living
2 years ago
38:44
How 911 calls actually work, according to a former emergency dispatcher
Business Insider
15 hours ago
41:18
How ADX Florence actually works, according to a former supermax inmate
Business Insider
15 hours ago
0:51
8 Wall Street pros share their tips on investing amid rising AI bubble concerns
Business Insider
1 week ago
1:53
1. ASMR Remove louse dog from Christmas Girl Elf's Ears Treatment Animation Christmas asmr animation
W TV
10 months ago
3:04
3. ASMR removal of swelling caused by wearing large lip piercings ASMR Treatment Animation
W TV
10 months ago
37:15
Blackhead Removal ASMR - Doctor Pimple Popper Inspired
W TV
10 months ago
1:10
How moles are professionally shaved off
Beauty Insider
4 years ago
4:32
How four makeup factories create products from lipstick to eyeshadow
Beauty Insider
4 years ago
2:23
Satisfying waxing methods for hair removal
Beauty Insider
4 years ago
15:58
How the US Army is using influencers to fix its $1 billion recruiting crisis
Insider
1 week ago
46:20
How obsessive-compulsive disorder actually works
Insider
2 weeks ago
36:17
The hidden companies behind Trader Joe's $13 billion empire
Insider
2 weeks ago
1:45
Videos show Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro arriving in New York
Insider
2 weeks ago
3:15
VIDEO: US Military Captures Venezuelan President In Dramatic Raid
Insider
2 weeks ago
0:34
Flight radar shows planes avoiding Venezuela as the US carried out strikes on the nation's capital
Insider
2 weeks ago
16:33
With silver prices spiking, here's a look at its dark history
Insider
2 weeks ago
47:37
How Navy officers are trained at the grueling 13-week Officer Candidate School
Insider
3 weeks ago
1:21
Laura Dern says early "Jurassic Park" scenes left her unsure the movie would work
Insider
3 weeks ago
11:06
How Katz's Deli serves 70,000 pounds of meat a week
Insider
4 weeks ago
Be the first to comment