African Cuisines

get these nets

Veteran
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
53,622
Reputation
14,554
Daps
201,671
Reppin
Above the fray.

My life in food: Idris Elba on African cuisine and cooking with his mum​

The actor discusses African cuisine, personal chefs and learning to cook with his mum.​



Published 27 Jan 2023
Idris Elba.

Idris Elba.
Photograph by Alex Piper
Food from Sierra Leone, where my dad’s from, has been a big part of my life. Sweet potato leaf stew is something my mum would cook all the time, it was my absolute favourite. Coming home after school to those home-cooked meals is a fond memory.
I can cook. I love to make groundnut stew with chicken and I’ve been told it’s good. It’s my mum’s recipe, she taught me to how cook it in the kitchen of my childhood home in London. She would talk me through all the ingredients and the importance of the cooking sequence
— that’s the key.
When I started making my own breakfast as a kid, that was a big deal. Although it was pretty much just cereal and using the toaster, it gave me a huge sense of pride. Maybe this is why cooking breakfast is still so important to me
— I love whipping up breakfast. I was always big on food presentation, too, from a young age.
Giving up red meat has changed my relationship with food. It’s made me think about alternatives a lot more. I have to get creative in the kitchen and think innovatively, because red meat was such a big part of my diet before.
The most memorable meal of my life was in Rwanda. I was making Sometimes in April in the capital city, Kigali, back in 2003, and we had an intense and tight seven-week shooting schedule. When you’re in that situation with the same people all day every day, your downtime becomes incredibly important. One night I decided to walk around — I like veering off the tourist track to find what’s good — and came across this local place doing the most amazing freshwater fish. I ordered the tilapia — it was whole and huge. It had just been steamed and stuffed with onions, garlic, herbs and hot peppers. I can still remember the whole experience of being there.
I love African cooking but Jamaica is my favourite country for food. It has so much spice and flavour. I love escovitch fish [spiced, fried fish with veg and a vinaigrette], curry chicken, festivals [sweet fried dough] and fried dumplings. I went over earlier this year to record music, and have shot two films there, so I’ve spent a lot of time getting to know the island.
I’ve eaten grilled crocodile. I’ll try anything once, but that’s the most unusual and adventurous thing I’ve had. I tried it while filming in Australia, and it was interesting on the palate because it had a chicken-like texture but tasted more like fish.
I’d order any fish dish at Pitanga. It’s a small Nigerian restaurant run by Nky Iweka, close to where I live, in Fulham. Me and my wife love to visit — it’s my favourite restaurant in London.
I met my personal chef at my wedding. King was brought in to cater for a particular part of the celebrations in Morocco and I loved his food immediately. We started hiring him for other special events and that soon turned into him working for me full-time. His style is an equal mix of African fusion and much-needed home comfort.
I was blown away by the beauty of the Champagne region. When me and my wife, Sabrina, visited, we went to a champagne house called Sanger. It was a sunny day and we started with an aperitif on the hillside, looking out to a horse ploughing the vineyard. We went back to the winery and I couldn’t believe how many underground cellars there were. I also had a try at disgorging a bottle of champagne. It all felt
so traditional.
Details of Idris Elba’s wine brand, Porte Noire, and Porte Noire Restaurant and Wine Bar in London can be found at portenoire.co.uk.
Published in Issue 18 (winter 2022/23) of Food by
National Geographic Traveller (UK)
 

get these nets

Veteran
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
53,622
Reputation
14,554
Daps
201,671
Reppin
Above the fray.



Kahawa 1893 Coffee Brand Founder Strikes a $350K Deal on ABC’s ‘Shark Tank​


February 21, 2023
Photo-credit-3-@kahawa1893.jpeg

Margaret Nyamumbo— Kahawa 1893’s CEO and founder — made her coffee brand’s big debut in California-area Trader Joe's stores. Instagram photo credit- @kahawa1893




Margaret Nyamumbo has been added to the list of Black women reeling in deals on ABC’s Shark Tank.

The founder of the coffee brand, Kahawa 1893, recently scored a deal with British entrepreneur Emma Grede, according to The Star, for $350,000 for eight percent of her company.

[/QUOTE]
 

get these nets

Veteran
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
53,622
Reputation
14,554
Daps
201,671
Reppin
Above the fray.

get these nets

Veteran
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
53,622
Reputation
14,554
Daps
201,671
Reppin
Above the fray.

Former NFL running back turned chef serves up inspiration​



CBS Mornings
Feb 1, 2024
Former professional football player Tobias Dorzon discovered his true passion lies not on the gridiron, but in the kitchen. As part of our series “The Dish,” Dorzon tells "CBS Mornings" co-anchor Tony Dokoupil about his unique career change and how he hopes to inspire the next generation of diverse chefs to pursue their dreams
 

get these nets

Veteran
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
53,622
Reputation
14,554
Daps
201,671
Reppin
Above the fray.
*one segment has her traveling to Ghana

Feb 9, 2024

SFXHx.jpg

Episodes 3-6
 
Last edited:

get these nets

Veteran
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
53,622
Reputation
14,554
Daps
201,671
Reppin
Above the fray.

Feb 2024

d03c46be79e443318c3dab95a13bd88


Low quality preview for 6565f5bff7d94de8824b4629a22f5ab

6565f5bff7d94de8824b4629a22f5ab


1star-1f2c04d7e6738e8a3312c9cda4b64fd0.svg


Chishuru​


  • 3 Great Titchfield Street, Regent’s Park and Marylebone, London, W1W 8AX, United Kingdom
  • £££ · African

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View


One Star: High quality cooking

Having attracted a fanbase with her various pop-ups and presence in Brixton Market, Adejoké Bakare’s West African restaurant found a permanent home in this warm, bright spot which comes with a real neighbourhood feel. Delicious, satisfying and full-flavoured dishes showcase cleverly judged spicing, with sauces proving a particular highlight – whether thick scotch bonnet with ekuru, or caramelised onion and lemon with guinea fowl yassa. It's all accompanied by friendly service and a fun atmosphere.
 

98Ntu

Peace ✌🏿
Joined
Jul 2, 2018
Messages
2,600
Reputation
2,250
Daps
18,505
Multi-ethnic Zimbabwean here- primarily interested in Kalanga and Ndebele cuisines. I am a culinary enthusiast and amateur anthropologist.

I am interested in fusing traditional and experimental ideas. Focusing on indigenous flora, fauna and cooking methods/philosophies while embracing African-futuristic and African modernist aesthetics.

I want to post my explorations in this thread.

In the meantime here is some ethnically Kalanga and Ndebele food :smile:



870200dc6284142b.png

41e955254da5761ff6ed6e34861dd82b.jpg
kiwano-melon-1296x728-feature.jpg

Madombi+with+beef+stew+and+salads_Marang.jpeg

041a138568effc3c1b016f6c63d7d6c397db9d78.jpg

Steaknapples.jpg


1- isitshwala lenyama (savory porridge with beef stew)

2- iDelele (okra stew)

3- sliced Gaka (spiked African melon)

4- Kalanga meal spread of mixed veggies (found in northern Botswana and southwestern Zimbabwe)

5- fried and sliced amaDumbe (southern African yam)

6- Tshisa Nyama (literally “burned meat”; this flank steak of the Eland antelope)

Just a short survey to what Western and Southern Zim have to offer. Thank you! Will post my own stuff later :smile:
 

Skooby

Alone In My Zone
Supporter
Joined
Sep 30, 2012
Messages
25,319
Reputation
10,319
Daps
60,038
Reppin
The Cosmos
Multi-ethnic Zimbabwean here- primarily interested in Kalanga and Ndebele cuisines. I am a culinary enthusiast and amateur anthropologist.

I am interested in fusing traditional and experimental ideas. Focusing on indigenous flora, fauna and cooking methods/philosophies while embracing African-futuristic and African modernist aesthetics.

I want to post my explorations in this thread.

In the meantime here is some ethnically Kalanga and Ndebele food :smile:



870200dc6284142b.png

41e955254da5761ff6ed6e34861dd82b.jpg
kiwano-melon-1296x728-feature.jpg

Madombi+with+beef+stew+and+salads_Marang.jpeg

041a138568effc3c1b016f6c63d7d6c397db9d78.jpg

Steaknapples.jpg


1- isitshwala lenyama (savory porridge with beef stew)

2- iDelele (okra stew)

3- sliced Gaka (spiked African melon)

4- Kalanga meal spread of mixed veggies (found in northern Botswana and southwestern Zimbabwe)

5- fried and sliced amaDumbe (southern African yam)

6- Tshisa Nyama (literally “burned meat”; this flank steak of the Eland antelope)

Just a short survey to what Western and Southern Zim have to offer. Thank you! Will post my own stuff later :smile:
What vegetables are in #4?
 
Top