Monday, December 21, 2020

From Nigeria To Dixie

I've fallen in love with Chef Lola. There, I said it.

Chef Lola is a Nigerian woman with a cooking blog. In pulling the culinary thread of cuisine from Dixie to West Africa, I came across her site. I blogged in the past about her excellent Easy Chicken Peanut Soup. In the last week, I've made her Poulet au Yassa and Ewa Riro. Check them out.

Pulet au Yassa is the Southern dish, Chicken Country Captain, but without the currants.

Ewa Riro is Dixie's Hoppin John with a couple of vegetable subtitutions.

Chef Lola's cooking blog is a bit small, so I'm closing in on the last of her recipes I want to try. I think I'll do three more, at most. In any case, I've discovered that West African cooking is certainly worth further exploration. I'm glad of that as I'd begun to despair before finding Chef Lola. I had bough a pair of West African cookbooks and their stuff was universally dreadful.

Meanwhile, the smoker is out back, our neighbors would gladly attend a block party and Food 4 Less has massive pork shoulders on sale for $0.77 per pound.

The proof is left to the reader.

2 comments:

Foxfier said...

I had bough a pair of West African cookbooks and their stuff was universally dreadful.

Hm, I wonder if they did what most of the "education" aimed books I've gotten for the kids did-- change stuff for non-cooking reasons. (like removing sugar to substitute in honey and a mashed banana, for pancakes.)

K T Cat said...

I think these are authentic, it's just that the cuisine is not as good as hoped. I'd say the same thing about classic Southern cookbooks, pre-1980. I haven't found one of them that are any good except as literature.