Africa’s fine flavours are deliciously diverse and epically ancient. Now, a new generation of chefs are offering innovative interpretations of the continent’s fabulous food genres. In this issue, the fourth of a five-part series, we savour the splendours of modern southern African gastronomy
Angola, Botswana, Comoros, Eswatini (formerly Swaziland), Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe comprise the southernmost part of mainland and island Africa. Typified by cities and super-highways, as well as villages and mud tracks, they also have forests that merge into grasslands and deserts that become mountains, while rivers flow into seas. The region’s human history is equally layered as First Nation Bushman inhabitants were subsequently joined by Bantu-speaking people migrating from further north in Africa, then by European and Asian settlers. As such, the resulting food cultures are infused with a variety of influences and ancestry but, for every point of difference, there is also a striking similarity.
Across southern Africa, sorghum and millet were the original indigenous grains. In the modern era, maize has become the staple starch.
On mainland southern Africa, key cultural and community events are often celebrated and/or commiserated, nose to tail – from naming ceremonies to funerals – in beef. Whether slow-cooked like Zimbabwe’s Ndebele-style amangqina (beef trotters) and South Africa’s Xhosa umsila wenkomo (oxtail stew) or speedily seared as steaks at an Afrikaner braai, beef marks major collective moments. With cows comes dairy – most commonly fermented and variously known as amasi in South Africa, omaere in Namibia and madila in Botswana. Chicken, which is also largely consumed across the region, often appears as simpler street foods like Lesotho’s grilled maotwana (chicken’s feet) and Mozambique’s frango Africano (piri-piri chicken). The chilli-laden heat of piri-piri reappears in Comorian poutou hot sauce, the palate-spiking perfection that is Mauritian mazavaroo and South Africa’s Durban-style, mother-in-law masalas.
Bu hikaye Food & Home Entertaining dergisinin September 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Food & Home Entertaining dergisinin September 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
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