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A Nigerian dish of millet pancakes containing millet, butter and sugar. Ga'at: Ethiopia and Eritrea: A stiff porridge, made traditionally with barley flour, [4] though in many communities wheat flour is often used. Garri: Cameroon, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Benin, Togo, Ghana (in Ghana it is known as gari) A popular West African food made from ...
It is served in combination with other foods such as Akara (fried bean cake), beans, pepper soup, and other soups. [59] Ogi or akamu is corn pudding common in Nigeria, called ogi by the Yoruba and akamu by the Igbo. [60] Eaten with bread, akara or beans; Egbo is a food made from corn. Mosa is a Yoruba food made from very ripe plantains, eggs ...
Nkwobi is made from cow feet boiled with onion and a variety of spices. [4] [5] The ingredients needed to make the dish include palm oil, kaun (also known as potash), calabash nutmegs, utazi leaves, pepper, and onion, among others.
Inflation means people in Nigeria are spending 60% of their income on food. Some are skipping meals or cutting back on favorites such as jollof rice.
Owo soup. Oghwo evwri is a soup eaten in the south-central region of Nigeria.It is common among the Urhobo and Isoko.The soup is made with Garri soaked in water after palm oil and potash mixture has been added.
Yoruba cuisine is the numerous and diverse foods of the Yoruba people of Yorubaland (Yoruba native regions of Nigeria). [1] Some notable Yoruba food includes Ọ̀fadà, Àsáró, Mọ́í Mọ́í, Ẹ̀gúsí soup, Àbùlà, Àkàrà, Ilá Alásèpọ̀, and Ẹ̀fọ́ rírò with Òkèlè. Asaro Moi moi Egusi Ofada rice Some other Yoruba foods
Asaro, also known as yam porridge or yam pottage, is a traditional dish originating from the Yoruba of Nigeria, Benin Republic and Togo. [1] It is a one-pot meal made from yam, a starchy tuber, and a variety of other ingredients.
Hausa cuisine is traditional and modern food prepared by Hausa people. It is based on the availability of raw food materials they can farm or import from other places. Hausa people often depend purely on the farm products they have cultivated for food preparation. [1] [better source needed] Kosai, a breakfast dish.