Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Top 10 East African famous Cousins! (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Ethiopia)


According to a recent research, close survey with friends, we are in this position to release the facts about the top 10 East African famous cousins.

1. Nyama Choma (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda)

Roasted meat is hands down the king of dishes in East Africa. Goat, lamb, chicken, East Africans have a way of grilling them, which maintains all their natural juices and flavors. They even have entire restaurants dedicated to the chomas. Served with a side of kachumbari, a little salt, or just plain, these could make even a hardcore vegetarian reconsider their choices.

2. Kachumbari (Kenya)

Fresh, light, and colorful. Kachumbari is irresistible and a great addition to any meal. It is a mix of fresh tomatoes, onions, and cilantro, seasoned with chili and lime. It is very easy to make and it's healthy. The most fireworks ever are set up on your plate and then sparkle in your mouth.
3. Chapati (Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda)

Chapatti single day I was in Kenya. This version of the Indian roti is omnipresent in East Africa. It is delicious and even though it usually comes as an accompaniment to other dishes, I always ordered an extra one that I would eat plain. It takes some special skills to make very good chapatis, and to my dismay, I have not been able to successfully reproduce the taste or texture of the ones I had in Kenya, but isn’t life all about hope? Maybe one day.

4. Pilau (Kenya, Tanzania)

Pilau is a rice cooked with tons of spices such as cumin, cardamom, cinnamon, cloves (yes, some Indian influences here, too). A good pilau will make you forget what your name is. It is excellent eaten with the wide variety of stewed meats available in East African cuisine.

 5. Maandazi (Kenya)

Maandazi one of favorite breakfast item in Kenya. They are flavorful, with a nice doughy interior and a glorious golden exterior layer. Great with chai (Tea).


6. Sukuma Wiki (Kenya)

Collard greens cooked in a little oil with diced tomatoes and onions. Honestly, I just like the name of it. It is so whimsical. I also like the fact that it is so great for you, entirely made of green leafy vegetables and still so tasty. If you are looking for a way to get your kids to eat their greens, this might be the way. Doesn’t “come eat your sukuma wiki” sound so much more appealing than "come eat your spinach?"

7. Biryani/Biriani (Tanzania)

Many East African dishes are the product of a mix with Indian culture and dishes and biryani is one of them. A Tanzanian friend of mine argues that an Indian biryani and a Tanzanian biryani taste completely different, but honestly, I haven’t been able to tell them apart, so I must have been eating mine at the wrong places. Is there a dinner invitation in my future (wink, wink)? Either way, this is a specialty widely available in East Africa. Unlike pilau, the meat and the rice are cooked in two different pots and then mixed together.


8. Roasted Maize (Kenya)

Roasted maize can be found in many cultures and I wouldn’t necessarily call it a Kenyan specialty, but it featured on the list of a couple of my experts, so if Kenyans want to claim it, let’s give it to them. It is a very simple snack, which heavily relies on the quality of the corn being grilled as not much is added to it. It is nutritious, healthy, and again here, eaten straight from the cob, after it’s taken on a wonderful charcoal-grilled flavor.
9. Doro Wot (Ethiopia)

Ethiopian chicken in red pepper sauce. An all-time Ethiopian favorite. Served with injera, it makes for a pleasant eating experience: carnal, almost sensual as no cutlery is used, only your hands. I am not a fan of hard-boiled eggs with my spicy chicken, so I usually leave those on the side. Do as you please, but do try it.


10. Chai and Coffee

this is well known. The region has amazing tea and coffee. I know, I know, those are not actual dishes, but they can be prepared and enjoyed in a way that gives them the status of a meal, or at least a glorified snack. From Rwanda does hills to Kenya, great taste and flavored coffee is grown and enjoyed. East Africans do enjoy the coffee they grow and I have had some of the best coffee ever in Nairobi. As for the tea, I can’t figure out where its special flavor comes from, but it makes it distinct and very much enjoyable.