NIGERIAN YOUTUBER TRIES 3 CAMEROONIAN MEALS FOR THE FIRST TIME AND SHARES HIS THOUGHTS.

Описание к видео NIGERIAN YOUTUBER TRIES 3 CAMEROONIAN MEALS FOR THE FIRST TIME AND SHARES HIS THOUGHTS.

#Canerooncuisine #Achu #Ndole #cameroonfood.

ACHU
Achu Soup (Yellow Soup) & Achu – gloriously yellow, delicate soup prepared mostly in Cameroonian home cooking and fairly common in the Western and North West province. It is always paired with mashed/pounded achu coco (taro).
Achu is the traditional meal of a number of villages in the North West region of Cameroon. It is the specialty of the Bamenda or "Bamda" people as I like to say. It is also widely eaten by the Bamilekes in the western region of the country. Another name for yellow soup is "Ndza Nikki." In French, it is known as "sauce jaune".
The meal starts with some nicely boiled cocoyams (taro), which are then pounded into the Achu fufu (a whitish paste). The pounded cocoyam is eaten with either a black soup made with cocoyam leaves (and sometimes groundnuts/peanuts) or a yellow soup. It is mostly eaten with the yellow soup which made up of "kanwa" (limestone), palm oil and a special blend of spices. In the absence of kanwa, I use baking soda because it has a component that is also present in limestone. Science-inclined people will understand this better. I am not one of them.

NDOLE

Oh-la-la! Somebody say, Ndole! Ndole, how I looove Ndole! This meal which originates from the Littoral region in Cameroon consists a perfect culinary marriage of vegetable (bitterleaf) and protein (groundnuts/peanuts).

It is absolutely irresistible!!!

A combination of peanuts, bitter leaves (substitute spinach), meat (stock fish, shrimp,) crayfish (dried shrimp) and oil. It tastes like stew spinach dip, but even better! With aromatic spices and meat. Can be prepared in so many ways with more or less vegetables and meat depending on personal taste.

If I could eat this every day I would, It is rich, high in calories and loved by many. Often referred to as the national dish of my home country Cameroon.

For my health conscious peeps; cut back on the the oil and peanuts. And go heavy on the spinach. (If you are watching your waistline.)

If using fresh spinach, wash the leaves well, rinse properly and then chop the spinach and blanch for 2 minutes. Frozen chopped spinach works just as well. If you can’t get a hold of bitter leaves then by all means use spinach.

ERU

Eru is a wild plant that is harvested from the forest in Cameroon. In Nigeria, it is called Ukazi or Afang. Natives of Cross Rivers State use it to prepare the famous Afang soup. Afang soup has a striking similarity to Eru but it is more "soupy' and the Eru is ground or pounded prior to preparation. Another soup that really looks like Eru is the Edika Ikong, also prepared by the Calabar people of Cross Rivers State in Nigeria. It looks almost like Eru. Permit me to say that Eru is the grandmother of Afang! I have tasted the two and I know who the mama is and who pikin is. Lol!
I'm yet to see someone who doesn't like this delicacy. It is that meal that will make a responsible man fail to follow the queue when he notices it is almost finished at a party. Lol. But seriously people just love this dish.

-Don't add water after adding in your Eru. It is a 'dry soup' You sure need water to cook your meat/fish but make sure the water is dried before you put in your spinach/waterleaf. The spinach will provide the moisture you need.
-Don't add onions to Eru. I have seen some recipes including onions and that is just out of place. Original Eru needs no onions.
-Don't cook Eru without crayfish. My Mom always says, "crayfish is the ingredient of Eru." No amount of dried fish can replace crayfish in Eru.
-Don't eat Eru with a spoon (okay, I'm kidding on this one!)

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