rijsttafel
English
    
    Etymology
    
Borrowed from Dutch rijsttafel (“rice table”).
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˈɹaɪsˌtɑːfəl/
 
Noun
    
rijsttafel (plural rijsttafels)
- A large meal originating in colonial Indonesia composed of many different dishes with rice as the main ingredient; several side-dishes such as krupuk, acar and serundeng are served.
- 1972 September 11, Gael Greene, “The Insatiable Critic: Ramayana east of Krakatoa”, in New York Magazine, volume 5, number 37, page 85:
- The famous rijsttafel, love-hate legacy of Dutch imperial days—at its most numbing brilliance it required 23 men and a boy to serve— […]
 
 - 1991 May, Guusje Moore, “Windmills and Rice”, in Vegetarian Times, number 165, page 28:
- I was born too late to experience a real Indonesian rijsttafel, but my mother used to tell me about these feasts.
 
 - 2002, Edward D. Webster, A year of Sundays: taking the plunge (and our cat) to explore Europe, VanderWyk & Burnham, p. 85:
- The complete or the lesser rijsttafel? I bet they're both huge, […]
 
 - 2007, George McDonald, Frommer's Amsterdam, Frommer's, page 106:
- The basic concept of a rijsttafel is to eat a bit of this and a bit of that, blending flavors and textures.
 
 
 
Dutch
    
    
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˈrɛi̯staːfəl/
 Audio (file) - Hyphenation: rijst‧ta‧fel
 
Noun
    
rijsttafel f (plural rijsttafels, diminutive rijsttafeltje n)
- A rijsttafel, an elaborate meal or banquet with many colonial Indonesia, specifically Chinese-Indonesian, rice dishes.
 
Indonesian
    
    Etymology
    
Unadapted borrowing from Dutch rijsttafel.
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /rɛi̯stafəl/, /rɛstafəl/
 
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