Africa's exotic delights

Updated: 2013-05-26 06:03

By Mike Peters(China Daily)

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While China has become an international marketplace, with restaurants flaunting fare from around the world, eateries that feature the foods of Africa are not easy to find.

Guangzhou, with its long-established African communities from many nations, is an exception - but elsewhere, except for the occasional Moroccan or Ethiopian outlet, the entire continent struggles for a culinary foothold.

Exotic ingredients are one challenge. Another is the vast diversity of Africa itself, where more than 50 countries have their own tastes and recipes.

It's precisely the diversity that a group of African diplomats' wives in Beijing wanted to celebrate this year, as they looked for a special project to support charity.

Africa's exotic delights

So they compiled a colorful cookbook featuring more than 60 recipes from 34 countries, which they launched at a gala dinner last month that raised 120,000 yuan ($19,560) for victims of the recent earthquake in Lushan county, Sichuan province.

"The big challenge," says Rwanda's Anne Marie Ngarambe, president of the Group of African Ambassadors Spouses Beijing, "was to express what we do in a way that readers here could understand and use."

"For myself," adds Ethiopia's Felege Hiwot Berhe, "it's enough to say, use this amount of 'Ethiopian spices', but for people cooking in China we needed to explain this is a mixture of thyme, cumin, cardamom and other herbs."

An Ethiopian staple, the spongy flat bread injera that's used to scoop up savory meat stews and vegetables, is made at home with Teff flour, a tiny grain indigenous to the country's highlands.

That's not a market staple even in cosmopolitan Beijing or Shanghai, so the cookbook editors noted how to change the recipe if self-rising wheat flour is substituted to make the fermented batter.

Other items, such as couscous and the bamboo or banana leaves used to steam some popular dishes, are no problem to find in China.

To showcase Africa's diversity, the cookbook organizers offer China Daily readers several different takes on a common main ingredient: chicken.

Doro Wot from Ethiopia symbolizes the timeless joy and beauty of hospitable traditional values of Ethiopian people. This spicy chicken delicacy is remarkably redolent and a special favorite, served during New Year and religious celebrations for good luck and prosperity.

Chicken with Nut Butter from Rwanda is a traditional and a special dish of Kibungo, in the eastern province of Rwanda. People honor friends and guests with this delightful cuisine on important occasions. The use of the hot pepper akabanga (akabanga means "the secret" in the Rwandan language) makes this dish particularly delicious and unique.

Other chicken dishes include Jollof Rice from Ghana, with ingredients including chicken, stewed tomatoes, rice, ham, cabbage, beans and onions; and Dambou from Niger, with ingredients covering chicken (or fish), semolina couscous (or rice), onion, Spinach and chili pepper.

The African Delicacies cookbook was sold on May 25 at the 50th anniversary celebration at Beijing's Kempinski hotel. It can also be purchased though the embassies of Rwanda, Ethiopia and some other African embassies.

michaelpeters@chinadaily.com.cn

(China Daily 05/26/2013 page13)