Balinese flavors
Nasi Campur Bali
The Balinese 'mixed rice' plate — steamed rice surrounded by 4–8 small dishes: lawar, sate lilit, braised jackfruit, tempeh, spiced duck or pork, a fried egg, and sambal matah. Unified by bumbu Bali spice paste made from 12+ fresh spices.
About this dish
Nasi campur is less a specific dish and more a philosophy of eating — the idea that no single preparation should dominate, and that balance requires many different flavors, textures, and temperatures on one plate. In Balinese Hindu belief, balance is a sacred value (rwa bhineda, the duality principle), and the nasi campur plate reflects this physically: neutral rice at center, surrounded by spicy, salty, sour, sweet, and umami components each in their proper proportion. The defining ingredient of any authentic version is bumbu Bali — the base spice paste made from turmeric, ginger, galangal, shallots, garlic, lemongrass, lesser galangal (kencur), candlenuts, chili, and shrimp paste, pounded fresh by hand rather than processed. A warung's reputation lives or dies on the quality of this paste. Warung Mak Beng in Sanur, serving since 1941, is regarded as the most legendary nasi campur address — its version uses fresh-fried fish as the centrepiece rather than pork, reflecting the Sanur coastal community's fishing heritage.
Allergen information
Preparation methods may vary by restaurant. Always confirm with staff if you have severe allergies.
Where to try
Warung Mak Beng (Sanur — legendary fried fish version, serving since 1941); Warung Men Weti (Ubud); any local warung