• African Cuisine


    This is a list of African cuisines. A cuisine is a characteristic style of cooking practices and traditions,often associated with a specific culture. The various cuisines of Africa use a combination of locally available fruitscereal grains and vegetables, as well as milk and meat products. In some parts of the continent, the traditional diet features a preponderance of milk, curd andwhey products. The continent's diverse demographic makeup is reflected in the many different eating and drinking habits, dishes, and preparation techniques of its manifold populations.[2]

    Central African cuisine[edit]

    Ndolé is the national dish ofCameroon
    • The Cuisine of Central Africa remains largely traditional because of the remote nature of the region, which remained relatively isolated until the 19th century. Some foods, such as cassava (a food staple in Central Africa), groundnuts (peanuts) and chili peppers were imported from the New WorldPlantains are also common in Central African cuisine.Meats, such as crocodileantelopemonkey and warthog, are sometimes hunted in the forests. Bambra is a porridge made from cooked rice, peanut butter and sugar. A jomba is the bundling of foods in fresh green plantain leaves and then cooking them over hot coals or fire.
    • Cameroonian cuisine is one of the most varied in Africa due to its location on the crossroads between the north, west, and center of the continent; added to this is the profound influence of French food, a legacy of the colonial era.
    • Congolese cuisine (Democratic Republic of the Congo) cuisine varies widely, representing the food of indigenous people.Cassava is generally the staple food usually eaten with other side dishes.
    • Centrafrican cuisine in the Central African Republic includes Middle Eastern and French influences

    East African cuisine[edit]

    Ramadan dinner in Tanzania
    • Burundian cuisine - Burundi is situated in Central Africa and has a territory full of mountains, savannas and agricultural fields, with forests in the surrounding of rivers and waters. Agriculture is spread on 80% of the country's surface and it especially includes coffee, tea, corn, beans and manioc.
    • Kenyan cuisine - There is no singular dish that represents all of Kenya. Different communities have their own native foods. Staples are maize and other cereals depending on the region including millet and sorghum eaten with various meats and vegetables. The foods that are universally eaten in Kenya are ugali, sukuma wiki, and nyama choma.
    • Tanzanian cuisine - Along the coastal regions (Dar es SalaamTangaBagamoyoZanzibar & Pemba), spicy foods are common, and there is also much use of coconut milk. Regions in Tanzania's mainland also have their own unique foods.
    • Ugandan cuisine consists of traditional and modern cooking styles, practices, foods and dishes in Uganda, with English, Arab, Asian and especially Indian influences. Like the cuisines of most countries, it varies in complexity, from the most basic, a starchy filler with a sauce of beans or meat, to several-course meals served in upper-class homes and high-end restaurants.
    • Maasai cuisine - The staple diet of the Maasai consists of cow's milk and maize-meal. The cuisine also consists of soups from plants and fruits. More recently, the Maasai have grown dependent on food produced in other areas such as maize meal, rice, potatoes, and cabbage (known to the Maasai as goat leaves).

    Horn African cuisine[edit]

    Injera bread and several kinds ofWat (stew) are typical of Ethiopian andEritrean cuisine.

    North African cuisine[edit]

    Nile perch are one of the world's largestfreshwater fish and a significant food source.[11]It reaches a maximum length of over six feet, weighing up to 440 lbs,[12]although many fish are caught before growing this large.[13] It is widespread throughout much of theAfrotropic ecozone.
    • North African cuisine includes cuisines from regions along the Mediterranean Sea,[14] inland areas and includes several nations, including Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco, and Tunisia. In North African cuisine, the most common staple foods are meat, seafood, goat,lamb, beef, datesalmondsolives, various vegetables and fruit. Because the region is predominantly Muslim, halal meats are usually eaten. The best-known North African/Berber dish abroad is surely couscous.[15]
    • Egyptian cuisine consists of the local culinary traditions of Egypt. Egyptian cuisine makes heavy use of legumes and vegetables, as Egypt's rich Nile Valley and Delta produce large quantities of high-quality crops.
    • Sudanese cuisine ivaries by region and has been influenced by the cross-cultural influences upon Sudan throughout history. In addition to the indigenous African peoples, the cuisine was influenced by Arab traders and settlers during the Ottoman Empire, who introduced spices such as red pepper and garlic.
    • Tunisian cuisine is the cuisine of Tunisia, a blend of Mediterranean and desert dwellers' culinary traditions. Its distinctive spicy fieriness comes from neighboring Mediterranean countries and the many civilizations which have ruled the land now known as Tunisia: PhoeniciansRomansArabs, Ottoman Empire, French, and the native Berber people.

    Southern African cuisine[edit]

    • South African cuisine is sometimes referred to as "rainbow cuisine"[16] because it is based on multicultural and various indigenous cuisines. Curried dishes are popular with lemon juice in South Africa among people of all ethnic origins; many dishes came to the country with the thousands of Indian laborers brought to South Africa in the nineteenth century. South African cuisine can be defined as cookery practiced by indigenous people of South Africa such as the Khoisan and Xhosa,Zulu- and Sotho-speaking people, and settler cookery that emerged from several waves of immigration introduced during the colonial period by people of Indian andAfrikaner and British descent and their slaves and servants.
    • Botswanan cuisine is unique but also shares some characteristics with other cuisine of Southern Africa. Examples of Botswanan food include PapSampVetkoekand Mopane worms. A food unique to Botswana includes seswaa, heavily salted mashed-up meat.
    • Malagasy cuisine is the cuisine of the island country of Madagascar, located in the Indian Ocean off the southeastern coast of Africa. Madagascans are mostly Malayan Polynesian, along with Africans, Arabs, Indians and Europeans.[17] Rice is a common staple food, and fruits and vegetables are prominent in the cuisine.Pineapplesmangoespeaches, grapes, avocados and lichee nuts are grown on the island.[17] Meats include chicken, beef and fish, and curry dishes are common.[17] A common food is laoka, a mixture of cooked foods served atop rice. Laoka are most often served in some kind of sauce: in the highlands, this sauce is generally tomato-based, while in coastal areas coconut milk is often added during cooking.[18]
    Closeup of large round speckled beans cooked with cubes of pork over rice
    Closeup of stewed green leaves, tomato and tiny shrimp
    Bottles of lemon and mango sauces (achards) are common in the northwestern coastal regions of Madagascar.
    Malagasy cuisine: Two common Madagascan laokas: Bambara groundnut and pork (left) and potato leaves with dried shrimp (center), usually served atop rice. On the right are bottles of lemon and mango sauces (achards), which are common in the northwestern coastal regions of Madagascar.[19]
    • South African cuisine is sometimes called "rainbow cuisine", as it has had a variety of multicultural sources and stages. Influences include indigenous practices and settler cookery that immigrants practiced.

    West African cuisine[edit]

    Yassa is a popular dish throughout West Africa prepared with chicken orfish. Chicken yassa is pictured.
    • West African cuisine refers to many distinct regional and ethnic cuisines in West African nations, a large geographic area with climates ranging from desert to tropical.[20] Some of the region's indigenous plants, such as hausa groundnutspigeon peasand cowpeas provide dietary protein for both people and livestock.[21] Many significant spices, stimulants and medicinal herbs originated in the evergreen and deciduous forests of Western Africa.[21] Ancient Africans domesticated the kola nut and coffee, now used globally in beverages.[21]

    By country[edit]

    Spices at central market in Agadir, Morocco
    A map of Africa
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