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Chopist | Zikoko!
  • They Eat Every Meal With Olive Oil: Impressions From a Nigerian’s First Time in Algeria

    Sola* walks us through his three-day visit to Algeria, sharing the culture shocks he experienced along the way.

    As told to Boluwatife

    Image designed by Freepik

    I’ve never been much of an adventurous foodie or traveller. I’d only been outside of Nigeria once when I visited Cotonou in 2018, and I had access to the Nigerian food I was familiar with. I think that’s why I still haven’t recovered from the culture shock I experienced during my December 2023 trip to Algeria.

    I didn’t just decide to visit Algeria on a whim. I’m a journalist, and the opportunity to visit the country came when the Algerian government invited my team to cover a conference. 

    My first shock was the visa and travel processes. I knew it was a police state and expected restrictions, especially for journalists, but I assumed it’d be straightforward since we were invited. It wasn’t.

    For one week, we navigated a long back-and-forth process with the Algerian embassy in Abuja, filling out forms in English and Arabic. The embassy in Nigeria initially couldn’t get visa clearance for us from Algeria, and we had to fill out another form specifically for journalists. My team and I finally got our visas two days into the conference and had to rush to catch a flight and meet up.

    After a 14-hour fight, including a stop in Doha, Qatar, we eventually got to Algiers, the capital city. We thought it’d be smooth sailing from this point on, but then we were delayed at the airport for an additional two hours. During this time, we were searched and questioned because of the media equipment we travelled with. We were the only black people in the airport, and I noticed we were gradually getting surrounded by security personnel as we were being questioned. 

    The increased security presence was strategic in a we-take-our-security-serious way, but it reminded me of Nigeria. We wouldn’t have had that ordeal if they had a proper line of communication. It was like one arm of the government invited us, and the other arm had no idea.

    With the visa and travel wahala finally behind us, we were free to do our work and explore Algiers. But the next culture shock was waiting: The food. I mentioned earlier that I’m not an adventurous foodie. I don’t do pass myself. My stomach is somewhat sensitive, so even when I briefly consider switching up my diet, it typically ends at just that — a consideration.

    Algerians eat olive oil with everything. Maybe it’s the hotel we stayed in, but people could be drinking tea and have olive oil by their side. I was so confused. And the bread? It was hard as rocks. Coming from Nigeria, where soft bread is the standard, I was definitely unprepared. 

    A plate of plain bread, crepe and chocolate bread.

    The official languages of Algeria are Arabic and Berber, but they also speak French because France colonised them. The food in the hotel was labelled in French, and I had to use an online translator before ordering. That wasn’t necessarily an issue, but the food itself was mostly always cold and quite bland. No salt or pepper, and there was olive oil and onions in everything. There was also a heavy water shortage. There were different types of drinks, but when it came to water, we’d only get one bottle of water for five people. It was strange.

    A side of purple cabbage and cream to accompany a rice and pasta dish.

    But it wasn’t all bad. On one of the nights, we went to a lounge where a colleague ordered a medium-rare steak. It was the largest steak portion I’ve ever seen in my life. It took my colleague a whole hour to finish it. So, I guess portion-wise, they held nothing back. I had chicken myself, and it wasn’t bad.

    The roads are also amazing. I didn’t see one pot-hole. One night, when we returned to the hotel, we noticed something was wrong with one side of the road. By the next morning, we saw machines fixing it. 

    Did I mention Algeria is a rich country? Almost everyone wore designer outfits – even the security officers wore Rolex watches. Almost everyone smokes too, which I chalked down due to the cold weather. They have a four-day week system, so their weekends start on Thursday. I definitely wasn’t mad at that.

    The Martyrs’ Memorial monument serves as a reminder of the lives lost during Algeria’s fight for Independence.

    I spent three days in Algeria, it’s a really beautiful, well-put-together country. It would have been a 10/10 experience if there wasn’t the food debacle and other culture shocks. Now that I know what to expect regarding the cuisine, I won’t mind visiting again. Maybe by then, I’d have properly researched where to get food I can tolerate.


    *Name was changed for the sake of anonymity.


    NEXT READ: Now They Just Come: A Story of Nigerians Living in Cotonou

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  • 7 Types of People You’ll Find at a Jollof Festival

    The ones who just came to eat

    They heard “Jollof” and just knew they had to be there. If food runs out at the festival, they’re most likely behind it.

    The ones that came to look for love

    It’s true when they say the way to some people’s hearts is through their stomach. They came for the food, but they also came to find someone who likes food just as much as they do.

    Jollof historians

    You’re just there to eat and have a good time, but these people want to explain the story of how Jollof was first created in Senegal in the 14th century. Their stories are nice but these people will distract you. Focus on the food.

    Content creators

    Even though no one should ever miss a Jollof festival for anything, it happens sometimes. That’s where the content creators come in. They’ll film everything for those who missed out. 

    Owambe gatecrashers

    These guys will mistake the festival for an owambe and show up. But at least they’ll bring the owambe energy with them.

    The cooks

    These ones will swear they can cook Jollof rice that’ll make you emotional. They might not be wrong sha, especially if they use great seasoning like Knorr.

    The Knorr itself

    What’s a good plate of Jollof without the best seasoning? Knorr knows this, so they’re hosting the Knorr Jollof Fest to celebrate food culture. Knorr is encouraging people to Eat for Good by incorporating more healthy options like veggies into their foods, so come ready to eat. There’ll be lots of food from different chefs, lots of games, and a lot of fun to be had. If you know you like food, you definitely want to be there.

    It’s happening on July 23, 2023, at Muri Okunola Park, Lagos. To register for the event, just visit the Jollof Fest website, and make sure you show up.

  • QUIZ: Eat for a Day, and We’ll Tell You if You Have Home Training

    From your food choice, we’ll know if you still have home training or drop when there’s a hot gist online.

  • The Cold Truth: What the Content of Your Fridge Says About You 

    One day, you visit a friend, only to find out that they store garri in their fridge. Friends and family, I’m here to tell you that just because your mum does something doesn’t mean it’s correct to do it too. 

    Here are some things that shouldn’t be in your fridge, and if they’re, what it says about you. 

    Garri 

    If you store your garri in the fridge, people shouldn’t joke with you at all o. You’ll defo break bottle on your head to remind people you’re not normal, at least twice a week. I’ve never met a normal person who actually likes garri, so carry on.

    Jollof rice 

    Jollof rice should be eaten hot and fresh, with heat nearly blinding you. Why are you eating jollof that has lost its essence from multiple defrosting? Are you against enjoyment?

    Yam 

    Yam is already hard and void of love. You now want to store it in the fridge so it can get harder? It’ll turn into a rock-hard weapon that’s impossible to cut or peel, like you and all the layers of wickedness in your heart. Sheesh.

    Plantain chips 

    If you store your plantain chips in the fridge, you’re definitely a first born used to hiding food from your siblings. Storing them in the fridge will ruin the experience, abeg.

    Suya 

    Suya is supposed to be eaten hot, preferably on the road to your house, so you don’t share it. Anyone who can eat cold suya can eat a human being. Yes, I said it.

    Bread

    Your taste buds stopped working when you were ten years old, if you store bread in the fridge. Imagine choosing to defrost bread, might as well soak it in water and eat it like cereal.

    Onions

    Onions need to breathe somewhere dry. How do I know? The Zikoko Bureau of Statistics, of course. I just know you don’t allow the people in your life to breathe when you’re around.

    Honey

    Storing honey in the fridge is like locking your puppy in a closet — it’s cruel and unnecessary. Honey lasts forever; chilling it will just make it thick and difficult to use.

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  • You Already Love These 8 Foods, But Have You Tried Them in a Salad?

    Garri

    First of all, who said eating garri had to be basic? Garri can be bougie too, you know. Add water to your garri to soften it, then pour over any salad mix, stir together and you’re good to go. 

    Suya

    We know what you’re thinking – “Is Zikoko okay at all?” –  But hear us out, you already eat suya with plenty of onions and pepper. Why not add all the ingredients of a salad to it to make it a little healthier?

    Raw pepper

    If you’re Yoruba and you enjoy eating salad, we know you’ve thought about doing this before. Don’t be scared to try it. You know you want to.

    Shrimp

    If you’re the type of person who wants to throw hands when they hear seafood slander, press your haters’ necks with a shrimp salad.

    Nuts

    Groundnut, tiger nut, and hazelnut, we all love to snack on these foods. Why not add them to your salad too? Unless you’re allergic to nuts, this is a whole meal.

    Spicy Chicken

    Chickens weren’t made to live on top of jollof rice forever. You need to get out of your comfort zone and try new things with it. Like using chicken to make a spicy salad. 

    Yam

    Yam can be boring on its own. But you can’t deny that it slaps when you imagine it being nicely diced and mixed with other ingredients in a salad. It just fits right in. 

    Catfish

    You might think the only appeal catfish has is pepper soup. But that’s because you’ve not tried grilling it and using it to make a salad. You’re eating fish on one hand, and on the other hand, there’s no other hand, it’s just fish salad.


    The best thing about all these foods, is you don’t have to make them by yourself. So Fresh has made a set of new salads with unpredictable and exciting foods like Catfish, Suya, Pineapple salsa and Beans. You can find all the best combos on their website and make your pick.

  • “I Feel Seen Because of You” – Love Letter From Gizzard to Dodo

     In the spirit of valentine,  we decided to give four foods the chance to write love letters to who they care about. This is Love Letters to Food


    Dear Dodo, 

    I’m thinking about the first time we met as I write this letter. It was the day my life changed.

    Before you, very few people liked me. Anytime they heard gizzard, they acted like someone just gave them semo. I was always picked last from a pot of stew, and if I was mistakenly served on a plate, I had to deal with the fear of being pushed aside and ignored. Do you know what it feels like to always expect rejection? Semo does, and only semo should. I was really going through it, and I felt so alone. Then you came into my life. 

    From the moment we started dating, we were the power couple. Everyone wanted us around; we got invited to so many events and served to all kinds of people. 

    Now, I’m in places I never would’ve dreamt of. I even get treated more special than small chops, and it’s all because of you. You’re a blessing to not just me but to everyone around you. Your friends — beans, egg and jollof rice — can testify to how much of a blessing you are. 

    The more they cook and serve us together, the more I fall in love with you. Every moment we spend together is magical. Whether we’re served at a wedding, a 70th birthday, a  bridal shower or even a burial, whether we’re alone or served with our friends, as long as I’m with you, that’s all that matters.  

    In this month of love, I want to say thank you for creating magic with me and making us Gizdodo. It’s so crazy how, despite our opposite textures, we work so well together. We were meant for each other. The only time we fight is when people leave us out to spoil, and that’s because we’re both fighting for our lives. But that rarely even happens. 

    You’re an incredible partner and soulmate, and I love you more than I can ever express. I can’t wait to spend the rest of my life with you on different plates at more events. I love you from one owambe to the other.

  • Why Eating Rice With a Fork Is the Only Way to Go

    As an adult, why are you still using a spoon to eat rice? When you’re not a three-year-old being forced to finish your food before the school bus comes. 

    Here are 7 valid reasons why you should grow up and switch to a fork today.

    To show you’re not greedy

    I mean, why are you using a spoon to eat if you’re not a thief? For the same work rate, you might as well use a shovel.  

    RELATED:  Interview With Spoon, Fork, & Knife: “Why We Usually Disappear”

    To show you respect your ancestors

    Forks will never disrespect your ancestors the way spoons do. The prongs were designed to let some food fall down for the gods. If your life is not doing okay, it’s because you use a spoon and your ancestors feel neglected.

    To show you respect the food

    Only people who don’t respect food would eat it fast. Good food should be approximated and chewed slowly to show you love how good it tastes, and you’re willing to be patient.

    Because you’re an adult

    For God’s sake, why would you rush your food like that? Ever seen a teenage boy heap food with a spoon? Yeah, that’s what you look like. 

    So the forks don’t get lonely

    It’s just human decency to use the fork as much as you use your spoon. You don’t want them feeling left out and disappearing just because. Just be kind, abeg.

    To chook anyone who tries to beg for food

    Can you protect yourself with a spoon? No, but you can always use a fork to scare off those who don’t let others eat in peace. 

    It’ll never betray you when you wash it

    One thing a fork will never do is spray water all over your body when you try to wash it. Do with that information what you must.

    RELATED: 8 Things That Taste Better When They’re Free

    Starting next week (January 31st, 2023)
  • Perfectly Normal Nigerian Smoothies That Would Slap

    As an adult, if you don’t have food sensory issues, you should be exposing your palate to new food experiences. Why? Why not? You already play it safe in your relationship and your job, so why not try these very Nigerian smoothies I think would slap. 

    Agbalumo smoothie

    Imagine taking the first sip of that sweet and sour blend of flavours. It might take a lot of agbalumo to make this smoothie, but it definitely slaps. Trust me. 


    RELATED: For Everyone Who Agbalumos Have Given Trust Issues


    Garri smoothie

    Some of you already drink garri with milk and sugar. So if you’re feeling adventurous, simply top it up with fruits like strawberries or pineapples and other unnecessary things. You might as well blend it and carry it in a bottle to work. But if you fall asleep there, you’re on your own. 

    Corn smoothie

    What is a corn smoothie if not ogi persevering? If you can find joy in drinking ogi as an adult, this should work too. Buy the brown ogi, add your milk or yoghurt and top it with sprinkles. Perfection!

    Bitter-leaf smoothie

    If you can drink blended kale and all the other green atrocities, you can drink this. Add a bit of malt soda, milk and sugar, and your Nigerian mum would be proud of you for once. 

    Groundnut smoothie

    Peanuts and groundnut are basically the same thing. If the former can taste great, then groundnut smoothie should slap to the highest heavens. You can even do a garri and groundnut smoothie, or a corn and groundnut smoothie. Nah, y’all need to pay me for these recommendations. 

    Jollof rice smoothie

    It’s already your favourite food, so it might as well become your favourite smoothie too. Think of it as jollof on the go. If nasty things, like letting people spit in your mouth, don’t bother you then eating blended rice should be fine. 

    Every soup in the fridge smoothie

    Here me out, instead of throwing away all those small plates of soups in your fridge, why not turn them into one big cup of juice? You’re being less wasteful and eating healthy. What could go wrong?


    RELATED: Instantly Upgrade Your Zobo Drink With These 7 Recipes

  • Meal Prepping Is the Biggest Scam of This Generation

    Every micro-influencer and their grandma has a “GRWM: meal prep for the week” video on Instagram or Twitter. At this point, if I see anymore of these videos, I’ll scream. I thought we were all struggling and stuff. Isn’t the economy crashing in your area?

    Food is supposed to bring you joy, especially now that life is tough. I tried to meal prep for a week, and here are my thoughts.

    I’ve eaten everything in one day. Now what?

    What happens when you meal prep those super small portions, and now, you’ve eaten five out of ten plates before they even freeze? Food is nice the day you cook it, and your brain will just keep saying, “Just one more bite”. Next thing, it’s all gone. Not me, though, but y’all be safe.


    RELATED: Everyone Loves These 10 Meals, Until It’s Time to Prepare Them


    Is meal-prepping sibling-proof?

    I’m a big believer in not tempting people to do things that might make me want to commit unalive. Anyone with siblings knows you can’t even leave water in the fridge without them drinking it, and now, you’re saying I should basically leave them a feast? Be fucking for real, abeg. 

    Eating the same thing is boring!

    Didn’t we all want to stop being kids so badly so no one could tell us we couldn’t eat whatever we want whenever we wanted? You’ll eat dry spag and sauce for lunch for one-week straight and wonder why your brain keeps telling you to fight your coworkers. Sis, it’s unahppy. 

    Have you eaten defrosted rice?

    As a Nigerian, half our foods are rice. So you too, imagine making a big batch of village or coconut rice and deciding to portion it out to last a week. By the third day, the sad state of the rice will make you want to cry. Sad food doesn’t slap!

    The time you said I’ll save, I’m wasting it

    They keep pushing this propaganda that meal prepping helps you save time, and I’m yet to see how. Cook one big batch of food that it does to make small tiny meals every day. Don’t ask me how I know. I just know. 

    What if it’s tastes bad?

    We all make mistakes sometimes, what if I make a big batch of food, and it tastes horrible? Now, I have to suffer in silence for a week? Small portions will never do that to you. 

    Do you have shares in NEPA?

    How will you guarantee they’ll bring light consistently enough for the food’s quality to remain intact in the freezer? What about when I’m ready to eat, and I need to use the microwave? Does meal prepping come with a different NEPA perk?


    RELATED: If You Don’t Use These 7 Ingredients to Cook, You Have a Problem

  • Nigerian Food Boards That Should Exist 

    First, we saw a charcuterie board, and it was fine; cheese, crackers and fruits — it ate. Then TikTok people started making sushi boards, butter boards, etc, and it made me wonder, what if we had Nigerian food boards? Which one would bang? Well, I have thoughts. 

    Abacha board 

    I mean, come on, this is greatness waiting to happen. Each side of the board would have different toppings — ugba, garden eggs, fish and ponmo. Every bite would be a burst of flavours. This needs to happen yesterday, for my sanity. 


    RELATED: Is Abacha Overrated? 7 Nigerians Argue


    Swallow board 

    Imagine if you went to a restaurant to try some random soup, and a swallow board accompanied it. Sometimes, you’d want the softness of wheat  after eating pounded yam, or eba after a couple of spoons of amala. A little bit of everything at your fingertips, god, abeg.

    Plantain board 

    Do I even need to talk too much? As someone who recently saw the light in plantain, I say this should already exist. From good old fried plantain — it must be soft by the way — to plantain chips, unripe porridge, gizdodo, plantain and beans, the possibilities are endlessly sweet. 

    Assorted meat board 

    If you close your eyes, you can almost taste the beef and chicken suya, asun and Isi Ewu. Let your imagination run wild, and just sprinkle yaji pepper on top. I’d willingly break the bank for this instead of overpriced breakfast platters. 

    Puff-puff board 

    With chocolate-drizzled puff-puff and puff-puff sprinkled with pepper, every angle of the board would be a treat. We could experiment with puff-puff and stew. Puff-puff is bread that studied abroad, after all. 

    Old-school snacks board 

    Imagine pako and okin biscuits, baba dudu and co, all on one platter. All our childhood causes of toothache in one place sounds like bliss to me. 

    Rice board

    This board takes “There’s rice at home” to another level. One thing Nigerians are great at is making several different types of rice. Our Jollof slaps, vegetable rice is heavenly, and there’s even concoction rice for when sapa has you in a chokehold. Just imagine them spread out on a board. 


    READ ALSO: We Ranked 10 Nigerian Rice Meals From the Best to the Most Unnecessary

  • If You Don’t Use These 7 Ingredients to Cook, You Have a Problem

    Since we have the best opinion on food on the internet, we compiled a list of ingredients that shouldn’t be missing from your next meal. If you like, don’t help your tastebuds to grow up, we’ve tried our best. 

    Love

    You can taste when something has been made with premium wickedness. You don’t even have to eat it first to know. Sometimes, just looking at it will tell you that it tastes like wickedness. Try cooking with love today, it’s a game-changer. 


    RELATED: 7 Meals You Can Eat on Sunday Instead of Rice


    Garlic

    Were you a vampire in your past life? No? Then why are you cooking without garlic? Please, explain what you’re afraid of in two seconds. If somebody offers you food without garlic, you’re probably dessert and not in a good way. 

    Onions 

    Aren’t you too old to be afraid of something because it makes you cry? The same tears you shed up and down for people who don’t deserve you? Please, respect yourself. Eat food made with onions. 

    Pepper

    Except you have a medical condition, what sort of adult eats food without pepper?  Pepper makes everything better, trust us. From avocado toast to garri, pepper spices up any meal. Help us help you.

    Iru

    You’re missing out if you don’t like iru. So what if it smells? Cover your nose. After cooking, you won’t smell anything, and your food will be 100 per cent better for it.

    Crayfish

    Crayfish works in everything. If you like, call it the “cockroach of the ocean”. They are very tasteful cockroaches. You haven’t lived until you’ve eaten crayfish blended with ice cream and a pinch of salt. 

    Green Peas

    When it’s not like you’re 10 years old, picking out all the green peas from your fried rice. Green peas are so good and require little effort. They are great as sides and even better in any meal of your choice. Think of it as one small step for you, one giant leap for your stomach. 


    READ ALSO: The Only Types Of Food You’re Allowed To Eat On Weekends

  • 7 Foods You Can Eat When Your Salary Has Finished

    Now that your salary has finished one week after you’ve collected it, you’ll need to stretch your last ₦5k until the next salary week. We’ve compiled a list of seven foods you can eat while you count the days. 

    Sacrifice

    If it’s good enough for the gods, it’s good enough for you. 

    Food in your dreams 

    Dream food is always delicious and it leaves you feeling full. The only downside is your destiny might be at risk, according to those street prophets, but na person wey dey alive fit get destiny. 

    RELATED: If You Receive Any of These Foods in Your Dream, Don’t Reject Them

    National Cake

    They’ve been eating from the national cake since before you were born. Now that your salary has finished, try to find where they’re sharing it. 

    The forbidden fruit 

    This one is easy because nobody else wants to eat what’s forbidden. 

    RELATED: If Adam and Eve Where a Nigerian Couple

    Food in television ads 

    Look for any of those companies that make spices and condiments for food and volunteer to help them clean up the set after they’re done cooking for the camera. That’s free and delicious food.

    Concoction 

    Gather all the foods in your house and turn it into a meal. Garri and ketchup can slap if you put your mind to it. 

    Tears 

    You can drink your tears to satisfy your hunger now that you’re broke. Whenever you’re hungry, look at your account balance and weep. 

    RELATED: Interview With Nigerian Internet Service Providers: “Let Us Explain”

  • Coconut, Jollof and Fried Rice Fight for the Title of Best Rice in Nigeria 

    Moderator: Today at Zikoko HQ, we have three debaters — fried, jollof and coconut rice — going against each other for the “Best Rice in Nigeria” title. There are two rounds. The three parties will present their arguments to the judges in the first round. 

    They have two minutes each to make their arguments, so they need to be as brief as possible. In the second round, they’ll go toe-to-toe. May the best rice win.

    Coconut rice, you’re up first.

    (Coconut rice walks to the stand) 

    Coconut rice: Good morning my able panel of judges, accurate timekeeper and moderator. My name is coconut rice, and I’m here to assert the motion that I’m the best rice in Nigeria.  

    Jollof rice: 

    Coconut: Unlike my colleagues, fried and jollof, I’m the healthiest rice. The coconut milk used to make me has anti-viral properties and is good for brain development and bone health. I am not fried or cooked in oil like my opponents here, who can clog people’s hearts from the amount of fat inside them. Also, I’m highly sought after because I’m not common. Also, have you ever walked into a room where I’m being cooked? The aroma is so divine it’ll make you crave me more. I can be eaten alone or with my friends: shrimps, prawns, carrots, peas, beef and co. Whichever way you choose to eat me, I’ll taste great. 

    (Coconut rice walks back to its seat as Jollof walks to the stage) 

    ALSO READ: 5 Types of Rice Nigerians Need to Respect More

    Jollof: Good morning, my able panel of judges, accurate timekeeper and moderator. My name is Jollof, and I’m here to assert that I’m the best rice in Nigeria. Now, I’m not going to come here and mention health facts that I Googled five minutes before getting on stage. 

    (Jollof smirks and looks at coconut rice)

    Coconut: 

    Jollof: I don’t need to say too much. I’m the most popular rice out there. I’m so famous that African countries constantly fight about which version of me is the best. No event is complete without me there, whether it’s a wedding, office party or burial. Even in game nights, I’m there. I’m a delicious necessity; people just can’t do without me.

    Thank you. 

    (Jollof rice walks back to their seat as fried rice mounts the stage) 

    Photo credit: JCI

    Fried: Good morning everyone. My name is fried rice, and I’m here to tell you that I’m the best of the best. I may not be at every event like Jollof, but sometimes we end up sitting side by side on plates.  When that happens, people tend to eat me more because they’re just tired of Jollof.

    Jollof: 

    Fried: I’m famous in Africa and worldwide. I can be made in many different ways, and you’ll never feel like you’re eating the same type of rice. You can’t get bored with me. Families love me during special occasions like Christmas, Ramadan, birthdays etc.  And on that note, I hope I have been able to convince you and not confuse you, that I’m the best rice in Nigeria. Thank you.

    (Fried rice walks back to his seat, and the moderator comes back to the stage) 

    Moderator: Well done on the first round. Now it’s time to face one another. You have five minutes.

    Jollof: Fried rice, if you’re so popular worldwide, why are you here trying to fight for the title of the best rice in Nigeria. 

    Fried: Because Nigerians are yet to properly acknowledge my greatness. And if the judges rule me as the best rice, people will stop serving your mediocre ass at events.

    Jollof: I can never stop being served. I am the king of foods in this country, I’ve been around the longest, and I deserve to be voted as best rice. 

    Coconut: You realise that all you bring to the table is tomato and pepper. You’re literally white rice and stew mixed together. 

    Jollof: What’s this one saying? Elders are talking, and you think you can put your mouth? 

    Coconut: Such a classic boomer move, trying to use age to win an argument.

    Jollof: Yes, as long as I’m older than you, I deserve to be the best.

    Coconut: 2+2 = water bottle. What are you even saying?

    Fried: What even gave you the audacity to be here in the first place? Nobody eats you like that. How are you here, and white rice isn’t?

    Coconut: How can white rice be here instead of me. White rice can’t even stand without stew. 

    (White rice walks in through the doors and goes straight to the moderator)

    (All the other rice look confused)

    White rice: Good morning sir. I just found out there was a debate about the best type of rice in Nigeria, and I don’t know why I wasn’t invited. 

    Moderator: I’m very sure we sent you an invite. 

    White: I didn’t see anything in my e-mail.

    Moderator: Maybe it’s your network. What network do you use? 

    White: Glo — shit!

    Moderator: You see. Anyway, you’ve already missed the first round, but you can join now and make your case. 

    (White rice walks over to where the other debaters are)

    White: I can’t believe all of you are gathered here to argue about who’s the best rice when I exist. 

    Coconut: You that depends on other people’s sauce to be eaten?

    White rice: That may be true, but the other people I come with are bad bitches — pepper sauce, turkey stew, curries, vegetable stew and so forth. 

    Fried rice: But you still rely on others 

    White rice: Don’t you rely on curry and thyme and your many ingredients that take forever to cut? As for jollof, you think you’re big because you’re served at events? I’m a staple food in all Nigerian homes. Hello? Have you heard of Sunday rice?. 

    Jollof: And that’s why people get tired of your old ass. You may come with many “bad bitches”, but the most common one we know you with is tomato stew that comes with one small piece of chicken. 

    Coconut: You this baby-boomer rice, you need to rest. Your time has passed. Gen-Z rice is here to take over. 

    Fried, Jollof and white: Shut up!

    Moderator: Okay, that’s enough. Time’s up. Let’s take a short break and give the judges time to collate the results and decide on a winner. 

    White: But I didn’t even have enough time to make my argument!

    Moderator: That’s not on us, blame Glo

    White rice: (storms out in anger)

    (One of the judges walks to the stage) 

    Judge: You all did well in your arguments. Unfortunately, one person came late, but we’ve judged according to the arguments they were able to make within the time they had. A winner must still be decided. 

    Judge: And the best rice to exist in Nigeria is…Fried rice!!!

    Fried rice: 

     ALSO READ: Port Harcourt Bole and Lagos Boli Fight for the Title of “Best Roasted Plantain” 

  • Wait, Who Invented Chapman?

    I resumed work yesterday after shaking my ass on a yacht a two-week holiday in Dubai. And the first thing that came to me was… chapman. Maybe I’m not ready to return to work. 

    But as life will have it, it turns out, there’s actually a fascinating history around chapman. I’m about to give y’all a history lesson no one asked for. 

    I used to think chapman was one of those drinks created abroad that Nigerians started making here. It turns out, chapman was actually created in Nigeria by a Nigerian. 

    It’s been up for debate about who invented this mocktail. Legend has it that chapman was created at the Ikoyi Club in Lagos, Nigeria, by a bartender who was requested to mix something special for a British client named Chapman. After doing serious research, it turns out this is false.

    Who actually invented chapman? 

    The Ikoyi Club was not where chapman was created, nor was it created for a Mr Chapman. It was invented by Mr Sam Alamutu, a renowned professional hotelier who, at one point, was referred to as the doyen of Nigeria’s hospitality sector.

    Sam Alamutu was a well-known professional Hotelier. He was among the few young Nigerians to be offered a scholarship to study in the UK, where he studied catering and hotel management at the Huddersfield Polytechnic, Yorkshire, from 1955 to 1958.

    He later became the director of the Nigeria Tourist Board and the first national President of the Nigeria Hotel and Catering Institute. 

    He spent most of his time in top Nigerian hotels and was the director of a few of them: The Lagos Hotel, Hill Station Hotel, Jos, Western Hotel and Cross River Hotel Limited.

    Image source: Kiki Foodies

    How did Chapman come about? 

    The creation of chapman is a story of love. Mr Alamutu was a man who loved to attend social events, where he’d drink the finest of wines or champagne. He’d usually attend these events with his wife who didn’t drink alcohol. It bothered him because he thought the love of his life deserved better than soft drinks, so he decided to create something more exotic that she could drink at events, especially those hosted by him. He experimented with different beverages and eventually came up with a mix of lemon and orange with a dash of Angostura bitters. She loved it. 

    ALSO READ: We Ranked Local Nigerian Drinks

    With the positive feedback he had received, he went one step further and added cucumber, a lemon slice, and a cherry on a toothpick; this is how the renowned cocktail came to be.

    The reason it’s associated with Ikoyi, it’s because one of the first places Mr Alamutu created the mocktail for public consumption was at the Ikoy Hotel, Lagos. Due to his influence in the hospitality industry, he was able to take the drink across different hotels in Nigeria. Because of its unique taste, more bars and hotels continued to adapt the recipe, and now chapman has become one of the most popular drinks this side of the world. 

    Give Mr Alamutu his flowers.


    ALSO READ: 7 Delightful Nigerian Drinks That Will Make You Thirsty

  • For Actual Snail Lovers: 7 Tricks to Get Cheap Snail in an Expensive Economy

    The Big Brother Naija Season 7 host, Ebuka Obi-Uchendu, tweeted a very valid question asking how people are still eating snails in this economy. And we’re here to tell you exactly how to eat snails without breaking the bank.

    Pepper is expensive, bring your own

    To enjoy the rich and moist flavours of snail, you need to pair it with pepper sauce; it’s best served hot and spicey. So bring the pepper from your house and maybe the chef will reduce the price. But I can’t say eating them raw doesn’t bang as well.

    Start catching them yourself

    If you think the price of snails is too much, you need to start catching your own. You and the chef will have a feast because who doesn’t want free snails? So the more of them you find, the merrier.

    Ask them to serve you with the shell

    You know cracking off the shell of a snail is not like breaking open an egg, right? It’s time-consuming and you’ll almost always end up with a cut from trying to get it off. I’d say the solution is for restaurants to start serving the snails with their shells on. You can’t deny that there’s some appeal to the stress of finally stripping off a hard shell.

    Quit your job and become a snail farmer

    Snails are easier to find during the rainy season, so restaurants charge that much because they’re seasonal. So what you can do is quit your job and become a snail farmer. Harvest as many as you can and start a supply chain. 

    Find a 30+ man that loves local bars and beer

    Snails are expensive because 30+ men love to order them with beer while watching football at their local bars. So to find cheap snails, I’ll advise you to start going to local bars and attach yourself to 30+ snail lovers. Avoid Manchester United fans sha, they don’t have any joy.

    RELATED: 8 Things That Taste Better When They’re Free

    Offer to help the chef clean it

    Another stressful step to prepping snails is getting rid of that sliminess. You can offer your expertise to local restaurants and offer to clean them. Preferably after they’ve at least been steamed.

    Just make more money

    Snail is not a local champion and probably deserves the hype it’s getting. In France, they’re called escargots and 6 – 12 pieces can cost between $15 – $50 (₦6k – ₦21k). So as you can see, snail is a world-class dish and not for the poor. 

    If you read this article with any other thing in mind, I’ll advise you to check yourself.

    ALSO READ: The Chopists Guide To Getting Free Food

  • I Wish These 17 Foods From Animations Existed in Real Life

    I have no idea why food seems more appealing when animated, but if you’re like me, you’ve wanted to try almost every food you’ve seen in animations. I’m convinced that the real-life replica doesn’t taste as good as they make it seem but we’ll take what we can get. From the tubby custard in Teletubbies to everything from Spirited Away, here are 17 cartoon foods I wish existed in real life. 

     Everything in Spirited Away

    I remember watching the scene where Chihiro’s parents saw all that food that didn’t belong to them and just started eating. All the while, I was  thinking, “God forbid, but also, same.” It’s impossible to watch this movie and not be hungry. Why did everything have to look so good, though?


    RELATED:  10 Popular Studio Ghibli Animes, Ranked 


    Krabby patty from SpongeBob SquarePants 

    Have you ever sat down to eat a burger, and your brain tells you it’ll never come close to a Krabby patty? Because this is me all the time. Those fish people in bikini bottoms could sell their kids to buy this burger, and I too might sell my siblings. I don’t want to hear anything about how the secret formula is Mr Crabs meat; please, I’ll still eat it. 

    Pink doughnut from The Simpsons 

    There’s just something about how Homer eats this doughnut up in one bite that assures me it slaps. Why hasn’t someone tried to recreate it yet? I’m sure it’s full of sugar, so I’m willing to risk my life to try this. 

     All the bugs in Lion King

    Don’t lie; we’ve all wanted to try them at a point. The bugs kind of looked like gummy worms even. What if bugs don’t taste so bad, ya know? I feel like Simba would never lead us astray because that’s not very king-like behaviour. Timon said they tasted like chicken, so we can’t beat it till we’ve tried it. 

    Sleeping Beauty‘s sad-looking cake 

    You know how people always say, “All the best people are broken”? That’s precisely my sentiment with this cake. You just know that it tastes like love. No, I will not be explaining further. Plus, it was baked by fairies, so it’ll have to taste like magic.

    Ramen in Ponyo 

    Every time it rains, I start craving noodles, and I blame Ponyo. Because no matter what I cook, it’ll never look like this perfect bowl of ramen. And with the way the kids ate it, you just know it slapped. Look at that broth! Life is not fair to people who aren’t animated.

    Bowl of ramen in Naruto

    In this life, there is mai shai, and there is ramen from Ichiraku ramen shop that  Teuchi made. My biggest flaw in life was coming as a human being instead of an animated character that exists in every universe. Just look at this perfect bowl of ramen. I’m jealous. 

     Winnie the Pooh‘s golden Hunny

    I don’t even like honey, but the one in Winnie the Pooh looked like liquid gold. Why’s it so thick? How can anyone eat honey for every meal? This bear carried a jar everywhere because of how great it tastes, I’m sure. He should release the names of the bees he gets it from, in two days, or we riot. 

     Pizza in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 

    Why does no one make pizza that’ll rival the ones these green reptiles eat? Why does real life cheese never look that good? Why’s our pizza never as soft? Why isn’t the pizza they eat real? I, too, would make liking pizza my entire personality if it tasted and looked half as good as the ones on this TV show.

    Shaggy’s sandwiches from Scooby-Doo

    Shaggy might have been a lot of things, but he’d always create a masterpiece of a sandwich. It’s how he always tries to eat a full sandwich in one go for me. How good can a sandwich taste that you’d want to tear your mouth to eat it? No sandwich will ever come close to Shaggy’s sandwich, and that’s the problem with real life. 

     Bugs Bunny’s crunchy carrot from Looney Tunes

    Does he plant it himself? Does he use special manure? Because real life carrots can’t taste that good, and the only time they actually taste nice is in carrot cake. Still, I want to try his carrot sha. Maybe It’ll give me all the energy this bunny uses to be a menace because I need it.


    RELATED: QUIZ: You Can’t Call Yourself a Lover of Animations if You Don’t Get Up to 15/30 on This Quiz


    Every single thing that Other Mother makes in Coraline

    See, the titular character, Coraline, is not a serious person. So what if they removed her eyes? So, what if the Other Mother was a witch that wanted her soul? Wasn’t it a better offer than living with neglectful parents? Can’t believe that babe didn’t trade her soul for junk and button eyes.  It could never be me — bad decisions all the way!

    The iconic plate of spaghettI from Lady and the Tramp

    Spaghetti and meatballs piqued when Lady and Tramp had the most romantic diner in the history of romantic dinners. I specifically want to eat the spaghetti for that moment where someone’s child and I are both sucking on the same spaghetti strand from opposite ends and meet in the middle. What is love without sharing food, after all?

     Ratatouille from Ratatouille 

    Growing older and realising that ratatouille is just a bunch of vegetables stacked on top of each other should make it unappealing, but no, I still want to try it. Maybe not the one cooked by a rat — I don’t care how good Remy is at cooking, rats are unsanitary. But I’d like to eat food that transports me to someone else’s good memory. 

    Special sentient sandwich from Adventure Time

    If you think about it, it’s not like the sandwich itself was sentient — just the ingredients. It had no feelings but I’m not going to defend myself for wanting to eat it. BMO’s cooking instructions might have added to the craving for this sandwich but let’s not talk about that. So many meals from Adventure Time, but this is the one I’ll sell my left kidney to taste. 

    This bug thing from The Emperor’s New Groove

    See, you can’t even judge me because why does it look so good? If you people know anywhere they sell this, better link me up. I’m counting on you. 

    Bonus: Jawbreakers from Ed, Edd n Eddy

    This is technically not food, but you’re a liar and a dirty bitch if you didn’t want the specific jawbreaker from Ed, Edd and Eddy. Because after begging my mum for years, she bought it for me from a supermarket. It did not hit because it wasn’t as big as the one from the show mtceww. 


    READ ALSO: You’re a Dead Guy if You Didn’t Watch These 10 Animated Films Growing Up

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • All the Many Different Ways You Can Get Free Food in This Economy

    I wanted to buy bread yesterday, and the store attendant told me it was ₦800 per loaf. ₦800 for bread? Help me o, this economy dey carry me where I no know. 

    Everything is so expensive now that people are struggling to eat. And this is why I’ve come to tell you about the different ways you can acquire free food in this trenches economy. 

    Become a beggar 

    If nobody gives you food, at least they’ll give you money that you can use to buy food. Why do you think there are many beggars in this country? Not all of them are homeless poor people. Some of them are middle-class people hustling for free food. 

    Attend church events 

    Church events always have food, especially Anglican churches during Harvest season. If you’re in Lagos, attend a church event on the island, and you’ll think you’re at an owambe. 

    Lie that you’re sick

    Let your Nigerian family members or even friends hear that you’re sick. The first thing they do is buy you malaria drugs, then later stuff you with food. Whatever it is that you want, they’ll give you. Just do small shakara like you don’t want to eat. 

    ALSO READ: A Post for Nigerians Who Love Food, by Nigerians Who Love Food

    Become a newcomer in every church

    Churches are always very excited to welcome newcomers. Whether it’s jollof rice and chicken they give or just meat pie and coke, you’ll sha get food. Although there are churches that give notepads and pens, so good luck. 

    Get a job at a restaurant

    There’ll almost always be leftover food to take home and eat. Especially if you work at a fast food restaurant. It may not necessarily be the food you like, but you can’t be a beggar with a choice. It’s even better if you’re a server that works for a catering company. Servers always carry leftover food from events and even enjoy more than party guests. 

    Visit family members one by one 

    Family members will never let you leave their houses without at least having something to eat. But you need to be careful about which family member’s house you visit. Because you may land in the house of a relative who can only offer you chin-chin and juice. 

    Befriend a chef 

    Chefs are constantly always cooking and experimenting with food in their homes. Become friends with a chef, and always go over to their house to visit them. Just say, “Oh, I was passing, and I just said let me stop by and greet you.” They can ask you help taste their new recipe Once in a while, call them to ask how they are. The more they think you’re a good friend, the more they want to show you love the one way they know how to — by feeding you. 

    ALSO READ: You’re a Certified Chef if You Watch These 7 Cooking Shows

    Attend events with Item seven

    Attend weddings, birthdays, burials etc. — any kind of owambe, just go and answer present. All these events almost always have food. Don’t worry about not knowing the person hosting the event. Just dress up and enter with your full chest. Make sure you carry bag that’ll allow you to carry extra food back home. 

    Eat the sacrifice foods they leave at junctions 

    Have you seen what is inside the bowl of food that people leave as sacrifice to the gods? Beans, eggs, meat, rice, moi-moi, plantain etc. That’s three square meals in one. My dear, stand at a T-junction this night and collect any food you see. The gods will be fine; they’re immortal and they understand there’s sapa in the land.

    ALSO READ: 11 Ways To Know Your Food Has Been Poisoned

  • If You’re Really a Sweet Tooth, Try Eating Honey with These Foods Today

    If we can get you drunk with honey, just imagine the endless possibilities with it. Here are eight snacks you need to try with honey for the ultimate sweet tooth experience.

    Honey and ice cream

    The star of the show. Caramel is a pretty nice topping, but there’s something about the natural taste of honey and vanilla ice cream topped with crushed wafers that just works.

    Honey and oatmeal

    Pick honey over sugar next time you want to have oatmeal. The trick is to add more water to dissolve the thick honey paste. I promise you’ll never go back to sugar after this.

    Honey and pancakes

    I don’t get why people bother with syrup when honey exists. It’s much healthier than pancake syrup, so you don’t have to feel guilty pouring it all over your pancakes.

    RELATED: A Very Nigerian Pancake Recipe

    Honey and Golden Morn

    Don’t knock it till you try it Golden Morn and sugar with lots of milk is already a hit and you’ll only contest this if you’re a semo lover. But Golden Morn and honey? That’s something you need to try while snuggled in on rainy nights.

    Honey and apples

    Peanut butter and apples work as a midnight snack if you’re feeling peckish, but if you’re looking for something sweet, honey and apples are your go-to. And if you now blend that combo with cucumber, you’ll get a really nice smoothie as a breakfast meal.

    Honey, Greek yoghurt and chopped fruits

    Parfaits are already sweet because of the natural sugar in fruits. But if you’re a sweet tooth like me that wants to pretend to be fitfam and enjoy a sweet snack, add a teaspoon of honey to the yoghurt and thank me later.

    RELATED: If You Love Yoghurt, You’ll Relate To These 7 Things

    Honey and popcorn 

    Regular salt and sugar popcorn can get pretty boring, so honey-flavoured popcorn has been my new addiction when I go to the cinema. The only place I’ve had one is at Grand Square in Abuja, so maybe try this homemade version?

    Honey and puff puff

    I don’t rate puff puff, but glaze it with honey and it becomes a 10. Bonus points if it’s chocolate or red velvet puff puff.

    ALSO WATCH:  Puff Puff VRSUS Poff Poff

  • Creator Spotlight: Mitya, the Mukbang Creator Who Tells Stories Through Food

    Hi, I’m Mitya, my pronouns are she/her and I’m a food critic and tourist. My food ick is I have a problem with people who soak garri with groundnut and milk. And for an Igbo person, I don’t like ukwa. Something people don’t know is I’m reticent. I’m always expected to be outgoing and the life of the party, but I’m that millennial you’ll find sleeping at the club by 4 a.m. 

    Confession time. I remember seeing you on my timeline, always eating a lot of eggs 

    Oh no. You know the crazy egg lady. I used to talk about her like she never existed and tried to deny her. Those were dark times. But eating eggs is a big part of my diet. I support Ghanaians; eggs can go with anything. Egg in pepper soup, ogbono, banga and okro soup slaps. I’ve decided not to be in the egg closet anymore, so I’m coming out now to say I’m proud of it.

    I… Wow. Was that how you got into mukbangs?

    In 2020, I went on my first food tour of Akwa-Ibom. While I was there, we got the news COVID had hit. I was with my sister and friends, so we had to return to Warri. It didn’t take long before there was a lockdown. I’ve always had a passion for food, so when I couldn’t travel to create content, I decided to start making mukbang content. For me, it was trying to show the world what I’m capable of through eating, basically, for bragging rights. I got into mukbangs because I love food. Food for me is better than love. It’ll never break your heart.

    Mitya’s first mukbang.

    How many states have you created content in since then?

    I’ve made content in Asaba, in Delta state, which is where I live. I’ve been to Port Harcourt, Yenogoa, Oshogbo, Abuja, Lagos, Maiduguri, Ilorin and Ibadan. Just seven so far. 

    How did you stay safe in Maiduguri?

    After I went to Maiduguri, I realised all the rest of Nigeria sees is stories about the bombing and crises. I’m not a fearful person; I have a lot of passion for what I do and a “you only live once” mindset, so I don’t care if I die doing what I love. So yes, I went there because I needed to tell their story differently from what mainstream media shows. I understand it’s dangerous, but there’s a lot more happening in these places. 

    You’re fearless o

    Actually, Maiduguri was peaceful when I was there, but the surrounding towns weren’t. In fact, after I left, I heard about a bomb blast in Maiduguri. But before you ask, I can’t wait to go back there, that’s how much I enjoyed it. It’s a secular state, and while I tried to blend in by wearing a hijab, there was no need to. I met friendly people, and they have Christians there too.

    And what about the language barrier?

     I kept meeting people who spoke English. Many people speak Hausa there, but it’s not a major dialect in Maiduguri. I wouldn’t have known that if I’d never visited. I also got to eat a bunny there. 

    What does a bunny taste like? Wait, don’t answer. What are some other weird foods you’ve eaten?

    I wouldn’t say weird, but the most challenging thing I’ve tried was the edible worms/tree lava called “Bayelsa suya”. It’s a major delicacy in Bayelsa, and while I wasn’t crazy about it, it’s an acquired taste. In Maiduguri, there were locusts which tasted like dried shrimps, camel meat slow-cooked over gas and a roasted bunny rabbit.  

    The poor rabbit.
    Mitya with edible worms.
    Her eating locust.
    Mitya eating a monitor lizard in Ilorin.

    Does your day job fund your mukbangs?

    Yes, but it’s not a nine-to-five. I co-own a food consulting company. We hire staff for restaurant development, social media management/strategy, staff training and tour guides. I mean, travelling and eating are expensive.

    What’s the most and least expensive state you’ve been to so far?

    Both my Abuja food tours were costly. The cheapest was Osun state. At a point, I was even begging people to take my money there. 

    Travel to Osun, noted. Do you have a favourite state you’ve visited? 

    No. Every state has its special memory and amazing food, and I wouldn’t compare them. Eating local dishes in their states of origin hits different. It’s like the dish is telling you a story, and my job is to tell stories about the culture of people through food. Nothing connects people like food, not even football.

    What are the best and worst things people have said about your mukbangs?

    People have told me I’ll die soon, or be hospitalised, and I’m wasting money. Some have said I only do this because a man is funding me. Despite all that, I love when my old followers are proud of me and acknowledge my growth. Or when I leave food reviews, and people tell me it helped boost sales. 

    There’s also my dada. Being my biggest fan, he’d comment on every post and help me shoot videos; he still does these things. I got him to participate in a mukbang contest one time, and he won. People loved it. He’s where I got my appetite from. 

    How fulfilled do you feel?

    I don’t always feel fulfilled — sometimes, I get imposter syndrome — but what I do makes me happy. If I wasn’t creating mukbang, I’d be a poet. In fact, I’m a poet. I just didn’t blow with that one. All I want from life is to keep doing things that help me express myself. 

    What’s something you wish food content creators would do?

    I feel like sometimes, we are passive about our Nigerian dishes. I don’t see the excitement or flair we give western foods. I’m very pro-African food; my social media is full of it. Afro-fusion is nice, but our dishes are magical on their own. All of us as content creators need to shine more light on Nigerian Cuisine. 

    That’s why when I travel I make sure to showcase the traditional dishes of that particular region. There’s much more to Nigerian cuisine than suya, Jollof rice, Egusi soup and fufu, and food content creators across Nigeria can help showcase that.


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  • 9 Cooking Hacks You Need to Know Before 30

    I never thought one of our biggest stressors as adults would be what to eat. But If you’re like me and hate stress, here are nine kitchen tricks to make life faster and easier — And obviously a banging meal.

    Invest in a pressure cooker

    I know they’re expensive, but pressure cookers cut your cooking time in half. And I promise it’ll make your kpomo as soft as Iya Sukirat’s own. 

    Garri thickens soup

    If you’re out there making watery banga or white soup, add small garri and it’ll thicken up. Nobody needs to know you made River Nile soup dear.

    Fry your eggs on the lowest heat

    You know when you fry four eggs and it ends up looking like one gorgeous merger? Yeah, cooking eggs on low heat makes them fuller and fluffier. You sha need patience to wait for the eggs to cook properly. But it’s worth it. 

    Get rid of excess oil with tissue paper

    Put kitchen rolls at the bottom of a sieve to take out the excess oil from your fried plantains, yam or potatoes. It doesn’t change that you’re still eating oily and unhealthy food but you can enjoy it, guilt-free.

    Rice cookers can actually cook anything

    If you can’t stand the idea of buying so many pots and pans, just get a rice cooker. The really bougie ones come with settings to also grill and make sauces. 

    RELATED: 7 Meals You Can Eat on Sunday Instead of Rice

    Stop adding more water to your rice

    If the water in your rice dries up, reduce the heat on the gas cooker and cover the pot with foil paper. Stop adding gallons of water as if it’s tuwon shinkafa you’re making.

    Don’t throw your pasta water away

    Instead of tossing your pasta water away, leave a little inside to make it easier for the tomato sauce to thicken when it’s added in. Also, because the water is salted, it helps the pasta retain its flavour.

    Don’t waste time breaking spaghetti 

    If you’re still breaking spaghetti in 2022, I don’t even know what to say. First of all, that’s not how the Italians do it and they’re the OGs of pasta. They will actually fight you. Also, trying to break spaghetti always leaves bits of pasta flying around. Just put the spaghetti in the water like that. It’ll soften into place on its own. 

    RELATED: This Low-Budget Spaghetti Jollof Recipe Will Have You Feeling Bougie

    Keep your potato skins

    Irish potato is one meal that just takes an unnecessary amount of effort to prep. A hack is to leave the skins on and season with black pepper, salt and dried red pepper.  It makes it tasty when you fry or grill your potatoes

    Blend your tomatoes with yellow, red and green pepper

    Jollof rice is one food that can disgrace you, especially when you’re cooking for friends. But a hack I’ve gotten into is blending my tomato and habanero peppers with yellow, red and green peppers. They’re not spicy peppers, but they have a ton of flavour and it’s taken my jollof game from zero to one-hundred.

    Add potatoes to salty food

    Some of you add salt based on the instructions from your ancestors. And it’s left you eating salty food. Next time, just add some peeled potatoes to the sauce or stew. The starch in them makes it easy to absorb the excess salt.

    Here are tips from one lazy cook to another: Cooking Tips From a Lazy Nigerian Cook

  • I Tried Shawarma for the First Time at 23 Because I Fell in Love

    For someone who was nick-named baby elephant as an overweight kid, I was quite a picky eater. I still am. Getting into a relationship changed a lot for me, particularly with food. And I don’t think we talk enough about how falling in love can change what we’re willing to eat. You find yourself wanting to try their favourite flavour of ice cream, or like me, somehow contemplating why plantain may not suck.

    Before you fight me, let me explain. I’ve never enjoyed eating foods like plantain, bread, custard or pap and sweet potatoes. Plantain was too sweet, I only liked the crust of brown bread, hated the lack of texture with custard and pap, and sweet potatoes just don’t need to be sweet. I also liked my food in a specific way if I was going to eat it. For instance, my bread had to be toasted, and specifically, without butter. And if I was going to come close to fried eggs, they needed to have chopped tomatoes and onions to be enjoyable. 

    I think what stressed my mum out the most was feeding me rice or pasta. I could never eat either if they got soft. Let’s just say I knew pasta needed to be al dente without knowing what it even meant. And when every inch of my white rice wasn’t covered in stew, you were practically wasting your time trying to get me to eat it.

    RELATED: These Pictures Are Proof Rice and Stew Is Jollof’s Senior Brother

    Things got worse when my parents took me along for holiday trips to Cardiff, Wales, in 2000. My father was enrolled as a master’s student at Cardiff University, so I spent quite a bit of time travelling with my mum to visit. I loved the rush of being in the airport, getting on the trains and exploring huge malls. But the food was my least favourite part of our trips. Those memories of exploring cuisine outside eba and ogbono, my favourite soup, became clearer in 2003 when I was five years old.

    The first time I was given mashed potatoes and chicken nuggets, I wailed. I didn’t like the idea of eating food that looked pre-chewed. Of course, being abroad hadn’t taken out the Nigerian in my mother, so she force-fed me through the tears. Then, oh, when I tried hamburgers at McDonald’s for the first time? I didn’t understand the concept of eating a thick piece of meat in between dry bread. I also didn’t like the taste of the mayonnaise and ketchup. My dad wasn’t going to let me waste the pounds he’d just spent, so I deconstructed the hamburger and ate only the meat. That was my last time at McDonald’s.

    So I wasn’t the most exotic human when it came to food as a kid. My palate didn’t evolve as a teenager. When I was 15 and travelled to Ethiopia for a school trip, I was so adamant about sticking to rice and meat. The most interesting thing I ate off the buffet list was pancakes and sausages. 

    Ghana was probably the only country where I allowed myself to try new foods. And it was because of the similarities with our cuisine. The difference was how they were paired. For instance, yam and egusi were a thing, and I absolutely loved the taste. I also fell in love with waakye and shito because it was basically rice, beans and pepper sauce when I skipped the garri, spaghetti and egg that’s typically mixed into the waakye. 

    RELATED: 6 Ghanaian Foods Nigerians Love Eating

    As I got older, going on dates was very difficult. I didn’t eat pizza because I didn’t like the look of cheese, or shawarma, because of the cream. My go-to snacks were scotch eggs, meat pies or muffins. And at restaurants, if I wasn’t ordering small chops — without the puff puff — as a starter and jollof rice as my main dish, then I’d order chicken and chips. Yes, I was basic.

    I was also not the type of girl to take to big events because I’d shamelessly pick at my food or spend the whole evening loading on cocktails and finger foods like samosas. Maybe I wasn’t made for a man with exquisite taste in food. 

    When I got into my first real relationship at 19, it was with a guy who wanted to try everything. The funny thing was how opposite he was when it came to trying new things outside of food. He preferred a routine and strict pattern, but I was more laid-back and open-minded. Too bad none of my spontaneity translated to food. I was still searching for jollof rice wherever we went.

    But my next relationship completely took me out of my comfort zone with food. I met Akinola* at uni when I was 20, but we started dating two years later. He was way more outgoing than I was, so I’d found my match when it came to spontaneity in a relationship.

    RELATED: Eat These 7 Comfort Foods When You’re Fighting With Your Partner

    But when it came to food, we clashed a lot in the first few months of dating. He always wanted to share a plate with me and I couldn’t stand the way he ate his food. For instance, rice. The guy preferred to eat raw onions and tomatoes with his than just plain old white rice and stew or jollof. And unlike me who spread stew across rice or pasta without mixing, he needed to furiously mix the stew in the food — I disliked the sight of it.

    I think the hardest experience with Akinola was trying coleslaw for the first time. I never liked the sight of vegetables soaked in cream but the guy made it seem like the next best thing since ogbono. And now, I can’t imagine eating rice without coleslaw.

    The most shocking thing I allowed myself to try with Akinola in 2022 was shawarma. The guy couldn’t let go of the fact a human being had never tried shawarma. Heck, it pained him to order shawarma alone when we went out. One day, I just gave into the pressure and tried it. 

    I think my best experience was trying pasta at his birthday dinner in March. I never understood the Twitter pasta craze — I still don’t — because it doesn’t seem right to douce it in cheese. It took me like 15 minutes to finally pick penne pasta because it was the only option with a tomato base and no cheese. His birthday and our date trying Indian curries at Cilantro in June are memories I’m happy we created rather than my default decision to turn down new food.

    Maybe pasta is overrated and you need new options: Nigerian Women Need to Leave Pasta Alone and Try Out These 8 Other Meals

    Honestly, Akinola has helped me learn to compromise with food a little bit. It’s been nine months of dating, and I’ve crossed so many lines, especially with how I cook. Never in my life did I imagine chopping spring onions and carrots into my chicken pepper soup or dicing up tomatoes in my rice for anybody’s son. 

    Plantain, sweet potatoes, amala, custard and pap are food boundaries I’m not willing to cross. And a new addition to my list is bread and akara because two dry foods shouldn’t be forced into one. How does it pass your throat without choking?

    While I’ve started exploring foods my boyfriend enjoys, I’ve also forced him to fall in love with my go-to meals like fried yam. Eating roadside yam and sausages has even become our favourite pastime. But cooking together has been the best part of exploring our relationship. I wonder what food adventures love may take me next. Maybe I’ll give amala a shot since I’m stuck with a Yoruba man.

    Read this if, like me, you’ve never tried amala: A Step-by-Step Guide to Loving Amala

  • How to Become a Beer Lover if You Hate It

    It’s international beer day it’s the perfect excuse to start drinking before 5 p.m! For those who aren’t fans, II bet you didn’t have a clue. I get it —. I was once among the beer haters, but here are seven ways to get you to finally see the light.

    Get into malt first

    If you’ve never let yourself try a sip of beer, just know it’s too far off a slightly bitter version of malt. Every brand of beer you’ll try is made from yeast-fermented malt and the taste changes based on the additional ingredients included. But that foam? It’s from the malt.

    Flavoured beer should be your bestie

    I used to think beer was a pretty flat drink, as it lacked any notes of flavour to me. But flavoured beer got me from thinking that beer was just bitter foamy piss, to something I need to end a long day of capitalism. You can try the grapefruit beer from Star Radler or chocolate beer from Three Philosophers.

    Get beers with a spirit base

    Alcohol is generally bitter, but spirits give a bit of a kick that makes you want to take another sip. So try options like Desperado’s flavoured tequila beer.

    RELATED: Let’s Get You Drunk on Honey With These Cocktails

    Drink beer with authentic beer lovers 

    If you really want to love beer, you need to have at least one 30+ friend that understands the power of a few bottles and premium gist after a hard day’s work — preferably a friend that can cover the bill sha because those brands are expensive.

    RELATED: Beer Deserves All the Hate It Gets. Here’s Why

    Add whipped cream

    If you’re a coffee head, you’ll get the vibe of cold iced coffee and cream. You can do the same with beer. Top it off with whipped cream to cut back on the bitterness.

    Pretend

    If you can’t beat them, join them. Gone are the days of drinking Capri Sun and Ribena; act your age and drink beer like your mates.

    Take this quiz to find out what kind of drink you are: What Kind of Drink Are You?

  • 7 Snacks From Your Favourite Films I Bet You Want to Eat

    Imagine your favourite shows and all the food you’ll never get to eat. I’ve compiled some amazing foods from seven shows I bet you were obsessed with at some point.

    Willy Wonka’s chocolate

    Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory was a legendary movie and if you haven’t watched it, then at least you must have heard the cool millennials talk about it. Yeah, I’m one of the cool kids and the Willy Wonka Chocolate factory is the Heaven I once wanted to go to when I die. A part of me still hopes that there’s a chance.

    Scooby Snacks

    Scooby-Doo and Shaggy were the OG foodies of all time. They ate a bunch of food, but the one thing I wished I could jump into the TV to taste was the Scooby snack. Didn’t you also want to know why Shaggy was so crazy about dog treats?

    RELATED: 7 Childhood Snacks You’ll Miss if You Grew Up in Northern Nigeria

    Turkish delight from The Chronicles of Narnia

    Seeing a talking lion from a mystical closet play a father figure was one of the high points of my childhood. I really want to know what made Edmund Pevensie ready to sell his birthright for white-coated sweets from a white witch.

    Direwolf bread from Game of Thrones

    There wasn’t much to see about Hot Pie, the baker at the inn. But that bread? How did it make it look so perfect when I can barely draw straight lines with a ruler?

    Hotpie's Wolf Bread, take two – The Inn at the Crossroads

    RELATED: What’s the Best Thing to Eat Bread With? We Ranked Them All

    Krabby patties from SpongeBob

    You can’t tell me you watched SpongeBob without wondering what a krabby patty tasted like. It should be everyone’s dream to live in a pineapple under the sea eating burgers made by a cranky crab.

    Donkey’s famous waffles from Shrek

    Imagine a talking donkey making you fluffy waffles when you’re having a bad day. 

    Pizza balls from Dr Strange in the Multiverse of Madness

    Beyond wanting to hitch a ride to any world where I’m definitely not Nigerian, I’d like to get a taste of the pizza balls America Chavez ate while she was trying to escape impending doom. Clearly, she had misplaced priorities but I would too if I saw tiny cheesy pepperoni pizza balls.

    Eggos from Stranger Things

    Eggos are basically frozen waffles from the 1980s. And for someone who knew very little about the real world before escaping her psycho father, El has been obsessed with eggos since season one of Stranger Things and I need to understand why.

    Now that we’ve gone through foods you’ll probably never get to eat, read: All the Exciting Ways You Can Eat and Drink Your Eggs

  • Nigerian Women Need to Leave Pasta Alone and Try Out These 8 Other Meals

    Ask a Lagos woman what she wants to eat and her first answer is “I don’t know” Her next answer is, “… pasta.” I need us to take a break for a bit and try out other meals. Beginning with meals from our beloved Nigeria, I’ve listed eight foods from different tribes across the country below. Try them and your life will never be the same. 

    Ekpang Nkukwo

    Ekpang Nkukwo is cocoyam porridge, and it’s one of the traditional meals of the Akwa Ibom and Cross River State people. It’s made with freshly grated cocoyams wrapped in tender cocoyam or ugu leaves. It’s a meal that can be very stressful and time-consuming to make yourself. So take advantage of your next lunch/dinner and order ekpang, instead of ordering pasta for the third night in a row.

    Gbanunu soup

    Gbanunu soup is a traditional soup from Ondo state. There are no words to describe how delicious this soup is. As I’m thinking about it, I’m looking for where I can order a plate today. Eat gbanunu with pounded yam or pupuru (cassava flour) which tastes just as good as any other swallow out there. 

    Ji mmiri oku 

    You’re ordering pasta when there’s hot, sweet yam pepper soup? Ji Mmiri Oku is a traditional meal of the Igbo people, and it tastes amazing — Yam pepper soup that’ll take you to a different realm entirely. Eat it on a rainy, cold day and experience it hit you differently. 

    An interesting fact: in Igbo land, this is usually the first dish given to a woman immediately after childbirth. It’s mostly prepared by her mother, who comes to take care of her for the first few months after childbirth (Omugwo).

    RELATED: We Ranked Nigerian Pepper Soups From Worst to Best

    Abanga 

    Abanga is unripe plantain pottage. A traditional dish of the people of Brass and Nembe in Bayelsa state. Eat it with palm oil and pepper soup with an assortment of seafood inside, if you want maximum enjoyment.

    Miyan taushe soup

    Food from northern Nigeria is not as appreciated as it should be, and we need to change that because they taste great. Miyan Taushe (pumpkin soup) is one I wish I could eat as often as possible. There’s just something about the flavours in the soup that makes it taste as great as it does. It may have something to do with the combination of pumpkin and groundnut. The soup can be eaten with tuwo (rice fufu) or any other type of swallow. 

    Ukang ukom 

    Another plantain porridge meal, but Efik edition. If you ever go to a Calabar wedding, you’d find this meal being served there. It’s how Lagos people see Amala; a ceremony isn’t complete without Ukang Ukom on the menu. This shows you how special this food is and why more people need to eat it. I encourage (read as: order) you to enter a Calabar restaurant today and order this. Stop looking at the creamy pasta on that restaurant’s menu that will most likely only come with only two tiny pieces of chicken. 

    ALSO READ: These Are the Easiest Nigerian Soups to Make, According to Ifeoluwa 

    Afia efere soup

    My first experience with afia efere (white soup) was when I visited a friend’s house and found her eating it. It’s a soup popular with the Efik people. Since that day, I haven’t looked back. Eat afia efere today and neither will you.

    Ofe Onugbu 

    This is a very popular Igbo soup made from bitter leaf and cocoyam paste. It’s so interesting how something so delicious comes from something so bitter. I recommend this soup to anyone and everyone. To enjoy it well, eat it with very hot eba. 


    Now that Pasta has been dealt with, let’s look at 7 Meals You Can Eat on Sunday Instead of Rice

  • 7 Healthy Things You Can Eat Like a Thief in the Night

    Even though we’re out here experiencing heavy rain, there’s a global consensus that we need summer bodies. But haven’t you spent most of the year eating like a thief? It’s okay, me too. These seven foods will take away that guilt of eating at 2 a.m. and allow us to pretend we’re on the summer body journey too.

    Cabbage fufu

    You know that 2 a.m. eba has to stop right? But cabbage fufu is a compromise. It looks like swallow, smells like swallow, and most importantly, has much lower calories than swallow, so you eat your way through without thinking too much about your waistline. 

    Oil-free okra soup

    Something has to go with cabbage fufu, and it can’t involve soups cooked with lots of palm oil like banga or egusi. And okra is one soup you can cook without the extra calories from oil.  

    RELATED: A Very Strong Case for Eba and Okro Soup

    Watermelon barbeque steak

    Now hold on a second. Do you know many calories are in chicken skins alone? Almost 100 for just one tiny piece and you haven’t even gotten into the meat. Think of watermelon barbeque as a distant cousin of Tofu that’s meant to mimic the texture and smell of meat. 

    Pepper soup

    It’s basically water, spice and some boiled meat or fish. No oil is needed and no frying is involved, so pepper soup is great, tasty addition in pretending you’re part of the fitfam crew.

    Carrot pancake

    It’s pancakes made from vegetables. So technically, it’s healthy. You need to confuse the calories. 

    RELATED: 5 Meals That Make Nigerian Men Think They’re Chefs

    Cucumber noodles

    It sounds crazy but is it really? Rather than eating hungry man-size noodles and adding one chopped carrot to deceive yourself, cucumber noodles are clearly the healthier version. 

    Popcorn

    One cup of popcorn without salt, sugar or sweeteners is like 31 calories, so a bucket of it won’t kill you.

    If you really want to eat and confuse the calories so they can’t affect you, read: 8 Practical Ways to Reduce the Calories in Your Food Before Eating It

  • 9 Low-Budget Recipes You Can Make With Ingredients in Your House

    Nigeria is hard these days, and things are getting more expensive day by day, but man must chop. These nine recipes work with tight budgets and ingredients you already have in your kitchen or can easily be sourced.

    Plantain fufu 

    When you’re tired of eating staple swallows like eba, pounded yam, etc. It’s also a lot healthier and lighter. Enjoy with your favourite soups. 

    Find the recipe at Chef Lola’s Kitchen


    ALSO READ: What’s The Best Way To Eat Plantain? We Ranked Them All


     Garri chips 

    An interesting way to eat garri that I totally recommend. It’s not every time you have to drink garri and groundnut. Sometimes you have to try things outside the box. I doubted the recipe until I tried it, and I haven’t looked back since then.

    Find the recipe at Ife Grace

    Plantain and ice cream 

    I’m including this recipe here because I’ve tried it and it bangs. There’s a whole video of me trying it, and I was shocked at how good it tasted. The recipe isn’t complicated; just fry plantain and eat with vanilla ice cream. 

    Find the recipe on TikTok

    Spaghetti Jollof 

    I like to believe that spaghetti Jollof is a staple in every Nigerian home. In my house, we make it at least twice a week, because it’s easy to make and doesn’t cost much. But just because it’s quick to make doesn’t mean you should cook it anyhow. Here’s a recipe that’ll have you feeling bougie. 

    Get the recipe on Zikoko

    Agege bread French toast 

    I know this may sound strange, but the French toast slaps much harder if made with agege bread. It slaps even without nutmeg or vanilla extract.

    Get the recipe at Dobby’s Signature


    ALSO READ: Which Bread Is the GOAT? We Ranked Them All


    Egg toast 

    This is one of the ways Indians like to make bread and eggs. It’s sort of the same way you make French toast, but you add a few other ingredients like tomatoes, onions and pepper. 

    Get the recipe at India Healthy Recipes

    Yamarita without flour

    Most people include flour when making yamarita, but I just found out that you can do without the flour and it would still taste great. I’m very excited about this because I stopped making yamarita due to the high price of flour, but now I’m back. These are the things I love to see. 

    Get the recipe from Adanna’s kitchen

    Plantain chips 

    I genuinely thought the process of making plantain chips was a long, difficult one until I read the recipe. Please why have I been buying plantain chips instead of making them in my house? 

    Get the recipe at Precious Core 

    Jollof rice with corned beef

    The day my mother cooked this at home, I wondered what was going through her mind. Why did she think mixing rice and corned beef was a thing to do? Then I tried it and all my doubts went out the window. Try this recipe out today. 

    Get the recipe at Telande World 


    Also try out some of the chocolate recipes: 8 Homemade Chocolate Recipes for World Chocolate Day

  • Creator Spotlight: Wetalu Obi Thinks Cakes Are Magic

    Hi, I’m Wetalu Obi, the 22-year-old co-owner of W’s Bakeshop. I never wanted to work. I always wanted to be a hippie, but here I am. I’m obsessed with smelling like food, so if anything is vanilla, mango or cocoa scented, that’s my shit. Want to hear something wild? I baked my first cake when I was eight. 

    You were eight? What made you interested in baking? 

    I loved watching Nigella Lawson bake on BBC’s food network. She’d mix up a bunch of stuff, put it into the oven, and it always looked delicious. That’s my earliest memory of wanting to bake. 

    I was obsessed with how it looked and unaware of the actual work behind it. But I was already in too deep by the time my eyes opened.

    Tell me about that first cake you baked

     Also, I was eight when I baked my first cake, so it was awful. It was supposed to be a basic vanilla butter cake, but it came out as one big, dense pancake. It was still special to me, but it was pretty horrific.

    This sounds like you have supportive parents. Has that helped? 

    I do and it helped initially because they didn’t have gendered expectations for my sisters as kids and me. So if I wanted to bake, cook, sew or knit — and I did all that — they didn’t make a fuss about it and that opened my mind. I felt like I could do or be anything I wanted.  They were pretty supportive until I got into university. From then on, they wanted me to focus more on my studies than on my “hobby”, and that’s when we clashed. They are pleased because I’m out of school and went straight to managing a bakery with my sister after graduation. I think they are happy. 

    Did they have a specific reason to worry? 

    They did. I studied chemical engineering. It was very demanding, and my parents feared I’d spread myself too thin. They wanted me to just focus on school and get a good GPA. I told them I wouldn’t do that because time wasted is hard to get back. I knew if I started working after school, I would never get back to baking, so I didn’t listen, and they didn’t like that. 

    I graduated from uni this year and co-own a bakery, so these problems are a thing of the past. 

    What does it mean to co-own a bakery? 

    Yes, I do. The bakery is co-owned by my sister, Ella, and we get help from our sister Buogo. We are a close-knit family of seven. Running the bakery together is a family love effort. For instance, whenever I was in school or things were too much for me, Ella would just step in to run day-to-day operations until I was back. 

    Nobody is fighting about running it because we both share the sentiment that we can’t do it alone. So we show up every day.

    As for the day-to-day operations, we have a manager and ten employees, so things would be okay without us, but we still show up every day. But managing a business in Nigeria is tough. There are always power issues and spike in market prices, but that’s life as we know it.

    What’s your favourite thing about baking? 

    I think my favourite thing about baking is how whimsical it can get. I love the feeling of putting my AirPods in and getting lost in my world for hours. I worked for eight hours straight when I made my sister’s wedding cake. I was so happy and relaxed that I could cry. I could never get sick of cakes. They’re so soft and texturally enjoyable.

    Have you ever been in a baking slump? How did you get out of it? 

    When I was in year three, required to take courses from other engineering departments and had like a million units. I was so uninspired and heavy, so I didn’t bake for a whole semester. 

    One day, I went to a cafe, ordered four desserts to-go, went to a park and sat on a bench to eat them and people-watch. It was such a good day, so I took a sky picture. I returned to the bakery and tried to recreate that colour palette on a cake, and that was it. I can’t find a picture of the exact cake I made, but I have a version of it we modified for the bakery’s cake design catalogue.

    I’m weirdly glad about that slump; it’s a beautiful cake. Do you remember your first positive review? 

    I was invited to a birthday party and asked to bake the cake. It was a double chocolate fudge cake. People would take a bite, and I’d watch them open their eyes in disbelief and smile. It was amazing to witness. I think that’s my favourite thing about baking; sharing the finished product with people and watching them act like happy children.

    What’s the weirdest ingredient you’ve baked/wanted to bake with?

    I’ve baked with mayonnaise. It’s a moisture/flavour enhancer, so it’s an excellent substitute for fat/eggs in most recipes. I only experiment with our personal recipes because I can’t experiment with other people’s food.

    I want to bake with chilli pepper one day. I still haven’t wrapped my head around the sweet/spicy combination, so it’ll take a while.

    This is a safe space. What are the worst cake flavours, and why is it chocolate and/or funfetti cake?

    Right?? Chocolate is not my favourite. I love a good vanilla cake, maybe a red velvet, but I can’t eat chocolate. It’s ironic because it’s our most requested cake flavour, so it’s our most done recipe. 

    But funfetti? No, please. I love a good funfetti! Especially with creamy white buttercream frosting. Such a classic!

    RELATED: These 7 Types of Cakes Should Not Exist

    I’m judging you, but go off. Would you be willing to share an easy cake recipe with your fans?

    I don’t have “fans”, please, but I have a recipe I learnt from our grandmother’s Betty Crocker book that’s burned in my brain. 

    It’s the 1-2-3-4 vanilla butter cake recipe:

    1 cup butter

    2 cups sugar

    3 cups flour

    4 eggs

    2 tsp baking powder 

    1 tsp vanilla extract

    1/2 tsp salt

    1/2 cup milk 

    Knock everything into a mixer and whip for six minutes. Batter into a pan and bake for 30/45 minutes.

    You make the type of cakes I see on Pinterest. Do Nigerians appreciate them? E.g., your mini cakes and the strange planet cakes?

    When we started on those cakes, this was our initial worry. Did it seem too minimal/quirky to catch anybody’s attention? But surprisingly (and fortunately), people like them. And we made the snack cakes with a very special set of people in mind. People who wish they had a whole birthday cake to themselves. I love the idea of a single-serving birthday cake. It’s so practical.

    In all of this, how fulfilled do you feel?

    Baking is my life. I always knew I would do something pastry related, so ending up where I am now is something I expected. The bakery is where I love to work. I love the relationship my sisters and I have with each other. It’s our safe space. Yes, I feel fulfilled. 

    READ ALSO: Quiz: What Kind of Cake Are You? 

  • How to Make Korean Cucumber Kimchi Like a Pro

    If you love watching K-drama like me, you’ve probably seen them eat different types of Kimchi and wanted to try it. You might have even gone to eat it at a restaurant, and even though you loved it, your bank account did not. So, you decided to learn how to make it instead because how hard can it be, right? Yes, this is about me. 

    Lucky for you, you don’t have to try different recipes because I’ve found the perfect one.

    Ingredients for two servings: 

    • Eight small cucumbers
    • Sesame oil
    • Sesame seeds
    • Green and red onions
    • Salt
    • Rice vinegar
    • Minced garlic
    • Sugar
    • Gochugaru, aka chilli powder 

    Preparation:

    1. Go to the market, argue with your local mallam about the price of your cucumber but not too much, so you don’t get bitter ones. He’ll most likely be selling the onions too. Go to the supermarket to get sesame seeds, oil, and rice vinegar. If you’re impatient, don’t try to learn how to make that rice vinegar online. It will end in tears. 
    1. Cut up your cucumbers into thin slices in a bowl. Marinate in salt to draw out the moisture, mix well and cover it up for at least 15 minutes. 
    1. While it marinates, mince your garlic, green and red onions, and set them aside for later. While waiting, you can test your knowledge of iconic K-drama lines
    1. After 15 minutes, drain the bowl. Rinse the cucumber once and strain it for twenty minutes or until you’re sure it’s dry. If you have to ask yourself if it’s dry, leave it for another 10 minutes.
    1. Add two tablespoons of rice vinegar or three cause I know you will add extra. Add two tablespoons of sugar and two tablespoons of sesame oil. Mix well. 
    1. Add your minced garlic, onions, a tablespoon of sesame seeds and three to four tablespoons of chilli pepper. Please give it a good mix. 
    1. Taste it and adjust the seasoning to your preference
    1. Here’s the most challenging part. Refrigerate it overnight. Or you can eat it in thirty minutes. Who will judge you? 

    Cucumber Kimchi is a sweet and tangy meal served as a side dish and eaten with rice or meat. If you’re like me, you can eat it like that. Serve it and watch all your family members try to taste and eventually finish your food. Sorry in advance. 

    READ ALSO: Every K-Drama Fan Wants to Try These 7 Dishes

  • Port Harcourt People Are Sleeping on These 7 Underrated Bole Combos

    Port Harcourt people swear by the awesomeness of bole (roasted plantain) and fish. But after asking a couple of people about their favourite bole combinations, I realised two things: Nigerians have questionable food choices and Port Harcourt people will fight anybody who calls it bole instead of boli. 

    So side note:

    Boli: The Lagosian version of roasted plantain eaten with groundnut.

    Bole: The Port Harcourt version eaten with stew and fish.

    Now, while you debate on what the true name is, here are seven things Nigerians need to start eating with boli (or bole). 

    Ice cream

    I’m as worried as you may be, but we’ve seen our very own Zikoko writer join the TikTok trend of eating ice cream with fried plantain and maple syrup. So, why not this? 

    Efo Riro 

    First of all, efo riro goes with anything, even pancakes. Yeah, don’t knock it till you try it because I have. And I know it’ll work with juicy roasted plantains. 

    Avocados 

    Mash it up, throw in pepper and you’ve got low-budget guacamole for a dip. You’re welcome.

    RELATED: What Avocado Eaters Think They Are vs What They Really Are

    Ketchup

    Ketchup is a hoe and won’t say no to blending in with any type of finger food. The trick is to add suya pepper and you basically have tomato sauce. 

    Coleslaw 

    If you add in suya and go crazy with the cream, you’ll have a mini shawarma plantain feast. So what’s not to love? 

    Egusi

    Fried yam and egusi have proven themselves to be an underrated dish that needs the limelight in Nigeria. But roasted plantain and egusi are next level, and the people who get it, get it. 

    Palm Oil

    This is for the more traditional taste bud. Dice in onions, throw in some salt and fry for like three minutes. This is the kind of food you eat shirtless to be one with your ancestors again.

    ALSO READ: These 7 Foods Always Taste Better at 2 a.m.

  • The Best Types of Coffee For An Authentic Nigerian’s Tastebuds

    Many Nigerians say coffee is trash, but that’s because they lack good taste. This article is for those who want to live a little. I’ve spent the last two years trying out coffees at home and at cafes, so I know what I’m talking about. What’s the best coffee for a Nigerian in Nigeria? Find out at number one.

    10) Nescafe aka coffee for crackheads

    If you drink Nescafe, you might as well sniff crack. This coffee tastes like burnt cardboard dried under Abuja sun then ground into pieces and sold in a container. I understand Lagos people that drink this because they need all the energy they can get to sit in traffic all day. But for people who live elsewhere (or Lagosians who work from home), why put yourself through this??

    9) Latte

    Just drink milk.

    8) Tea (Milk + chocolate beverage + sugar)

    What are some traditional foods from Nigeria? - Quora

    Because why drink coffee when you were colonised by the British? And then why drink British teas when you have coconut head? 

    7) Cappuccino

    The spellings of cappuccino in this article were brought to you by Grammarly. And that is this coffee’s first problem; the name is too difficult to spell. The second problem is that it has no character and is a forgettable bitch. It almost didn’t make this list, even.

    6) Americano

    I really don’t think anyone should be drinking anything with “American” in the name. It’s giving self-hating Nigerian and goes well with a spoonful of the real Nigerian dream: to be better than your neighbour. Everything is okay as long as someone is suffering more than you. I see you, Americana.

    5) Iced Latte

    Just drink milk with ice.

    4) Mocha

    This would be number one if it wasn’t so hot. Still better than most. 

    3) Iced Frappucino

    No amount of air conditioning can convince me that people who drink hot coffee in this country are not in an unhealthy relationship with suffering. The weather is too damn hot. The right amount of sun, whipped cream, and coffee makes this taste like hot ram suya on a rainy evening in Kubwa.

    2) Espresso

    You need espressos to withstand the madness of Nigerian employers. You can also use this to practice tequila shots. I stan a multitasking babe.

    1) Iced Milo Mocha

    The only thing better than coffee is iced coffee, and the only thing better than iced coffee is this. An iced milo mocha feels like getting the email of your visa approval. Even Nescafe becomes elite once you add milo. Try it today and start seeing life in technicolour. 

  • Are You Really an Adult if You Eat Any of These 7 Foods?

    Some of you are shameless. Because why are you eating baby food? And you have the nerve to call yourself a full-grown adult.

    Golden Morn

    If you feel attacked, it’s because you’re probably eating a bowl right now. Golden Morn is made for people that can’t chew — you know, like babies? It’s like pre-chewed cornflakes? So, why? 

    Custard and pap

    I’m here for the people drinking five litres of pap. Why? If you can’t drink garri with your moi-moi or akara, you need to walk around with a pacifier. 

    RELATED: Ranked: Yellow, Brown, or White Pap?

    Mashed potatoes

    Some of you aren’t ready for this but the hour has come. The word “mashed” is enough for you to put it down. You can keep calling it an “acquired taste”, but it’s really just for rich kids — those ones that cost their parents 600k per term for creche.

    Beans

    You can’t grow any taller, so why are you still eating beans as an adult? 

    Semo

    I found people somewhere on the internet turning semo into pap. Creativity needs a limit abeg. But since pap is already baby food, this one sef follow. Do better.

    RELATED: Interview With Semo: “My Slander Is So Forced”

    Smoothies

    There’s no explanation for why you’re drinking things you can chew. The fitfam crew may want to throw hands but that’s their business. If you’re blending fruits rather than sitting down to chew them, you should be in the kiddies’ corner. 

    Soup

    As an adult, you’re made for the harder things of life and can’t be slurping up soups. What you need to do is eat the eba or amala straight. That’s how to test that you’re ready for life’s reality. Stop being a baby.

    ALSO READ: If You Don’t Like Any of These 10 Foods, You’re Bad Vibes

  • 7 Meals You Can Eat on Sunday Instead of Rice

    Every Sunday, Nigerians gather in their houses to eat different variations of rice. We have decided to put a stop to that. That’s why we’re suggesting other meals you can try instead. 

    Custard 

    Sunday is for sleeping, and nothing puts people to sleep faster than custard. Make a big bowl for the family and rest afterwards. 

    RELATED: You Should Only Cook These 8 Meals When You’re Alone

    Peppersoup

    If you want to be in the best shape possible before the work week resumes, then peppersoup is where it’s at. After you sneeze away all the rubbish in your system, you’d be ready to give your 20% to capitalism. 

    Food from the dream world 

    Instead of stressing yourself by cooking, why not just eat the one someone else has made? Evil spirits don’t give people rice in their dreams, so prepare for some spiritual delicacy. 

    Bread 

    There’s no food more versatile than bread. That’s why you should eat it. Find a version of bread you like and just enjoy yourself.

    RELATED: These Meals Just Taste Better as Leftovers

    Tears of your enemies 

    Nothing more delicious and nutritious than drinking the tears of your enemies. Add it to your Sunday meal plan, today! 

    Any variation of swallow 

    Sunday should be a day of recollection. Of looking back at what was and what will be. That is why we should eat swallow on Sundays. Not only do we get a chance to connect with our ancestors, but it helps us keep the culture alive. 

    Puff puff

    Can be eaten as a dessert or can be eaten with other things to form small chops. Either way, puff puff is great for family building, especially if you decide to make it yourself. 

    RELATED: 6 Nigerian That Are Perfect for the Rainy Season

    Zikoko is launching a new series where we explore those friendships, familial and romantic relationships that are no longer sailing.

  • Okpa is Much More Than Food in Enugu, It’s Tradition
    Image credit: @obisomto on Twitter

    I grew up in Abuja, and okpa was one meal that I saw all the time. There were always women at street corners with basins and okpa stacked into transparent nylon bags. They looked like light-skinned moi-moi and didn’t seem particularly interesting to me. I didn’t think anyone cared for them but my Igbo friends thought otherwise.

    In boarding school, every day, my mates would jump the fence to buy okpa from an uncompleted building close by.  You could see the unbridled joy on their faces as they tore open the okpa nylons. But why was it such a big deal? I still haven’t been adventurous enough to try it, but I’ve never stopped wondering what makes it so special. 

    So today, I asked Oluchi to explain why okpa excites her Igbo blood. She explained her love for okpa, tricks to preparing it and why okpa has remained constant in her life as an adult.

    As told to Steffi O.

    Okpa was part of my childhood

    Okpa is a local dish made from bambara nuts. As someone from Enugu, okpa has always been a part of my life. One way or the other, it was a treat my family found a way to enjoy in Lagos. If anyone was coming from Enugu, they’d make sure to bring it, specifically the ones from Ninth Mile. It’s said to be the best okpa spot in the East. 

     My mum would whip up a mean batch of the flour for me and my brothers to enjoy. It was a meal we constantly looked forward to having, and then it became much more than a great meal.

    Experiencing okpa in Nsukka

    When I was nine, I spent my first three years of secondary school at Nsukka. It was my first time away from Lagos and my family, so the culture shock hit me when the Nsukka dialect was so different. I was the girl that understood Igbo but couldn’t speak it and I had to learn quickly. Yet, being amongst my people was interesting even though I’d lived away from home for so long. In between trying to figure out life away from my family, okpa brought some sense of familiarity. I’d literally buy it every day during break time and each bite reminded me that Enugu was my home. 

    Eventually, I realised that okpa was part of the Igbo tradition. During festivals, a major masquerade that roamed the streets of Nsukka was called Ori Okpa which means “the Okpa eater”. 

    RELATED: A Masquerade Flogged a Youth Corper in Kogi and He’s Really Vexed

    In Nsukka, I spent holidays with an uncle who was a traditional man. On one of my mid-term breaks from school, he’d asked if I could cook, and at that point, I didn’t know how. On one of my longer breaks, he wrote a letter to my mother about why it was important for me to learn how to cook as a woman. She didn’t want it to seem like I was being spoilt and so the cooking lessons began. At ten, I started learning to cook.  

    What exactly is okpa?

    To anyone who hasn’t had okpa before, it’s a weird meal. I like to think of it as eating light-skinned moi-moi because of the palm oil that’s mixed into the okpa mix. 

    Okpa is simple to make, but one wrong move can ruin everything. Ground bambara nuts are the main ingredient. Like beans, the bambara nuts are ground without the back being removed and then milled dry. 

    My mother never adds seasoning cubes or chicken stock to the mix. To us, it’s sacrilege. Bambara nuts have a distinct flavour that needs only salt and pepper. My mother also never grinds or blends her red peppers. Everything is finely cut into the okpa as it’s mixed with palm oil and warm water. And unlike moi-moi, okpa is a watery mix. My mum’s trick to keep the flavour while the okpa steams is shaking the nylon or banana leaf right before dropping it into the pot. 

    RELATED: 12 Beautiful Delicacies From All Over Nigeria

    Having a family that dislikes okpa

    Okpa is something I loved to enjoy with my family — it still is.  But unfortunately for me, I married a Delta man that doesn’t care for okpa. The first time I made it on my own was after our wedding, and I ended up eating the whole thing alone. 

    Our son doesn’t like okpa too. Funny enough, the only time my body has ever rejected okpa was when I was pregnant with him. I ate okpa and threw everything up. Imagine me not being able to stand okpa for nine whole months. There was no point trying to make him eat it when he was born. He’d already given me an answer right from the womb: he disliked it.

    At least I still share my love for okpa with my parents and siblings. My brother and I live 20 minutes away from my mother, and every two weeks, we know there’s a bag of okpa waiting for us at her house. It’s become our own tradition here in Lagos. Okpa will always be a constant part of my life because of family.

    ALSO READ: 9 Nigerian Meals We Love to Eat but Never Cook Ourselves

  • You Should Only Cook These 8 Meals When You’re Alone

    People say two heads are better than one, but when it comes to preparing these eight meals, you’re better off on your own. If you try to cook any of them when someone is around, you’re going to fall your hands.

    1. Pap

    Making pap is already a game of Russian roulette. So having someone watch you prepare it only increases your anxiety and your chances of failing. 

    2. Fried eggs

    I can’t explain what happens once you fry eggs for other people. When you fry eggs for yourself, it’s amazing. But when you fry eggs for someone else? Epic fail. It’s either the salt is too much or it’s completely tasteless. Why?

    3. Jollof rice

    Sometimes jollof rice is only out to offer premium disgrace. When you cook it for youself, it’s red as blood and tasty as fuck, so much that you want to eat the plate. But the moment someone is in the kitchen with you, it’ll decide to mess up and look like white rice with red lipstic ear and dear. 

    RELATED: 9 Types Of Jollof Rice That Slap

    4. Pancakes

    This is the one food with audacity. Even when you’re alone, pancakes can disgrace you. So just imagine when someone is now watching you. Imagine when you now flip it and it lands on the floor. 

    5. Poundo yam/amala/fufu

    Some things should be left to the professionals. And by professionals, I mean Iya Sukirat down the road. If anyone decides to show up at your house to ask to eat poundo yam or amala, just take them there. If you decide to make it yourself, anything you see, take it like that

    RELATED: A Step-by-Step Guide to Loving Amala

    6. Ogbono or okra 

    These two soups will disgrace you and your ancestors. Everything depends on that soup drawing. The moment it doesn’t, it’s game over. Never cook this soup when people are around you. E go fall your hands!

    7. Noodles

    There’s something about making noodles for anyone other than yourself. It either turns out extremely dry or soggy as hell. The worst part is trying to explain how your noodles typically bang on a normal day. 

    8. Spaghettini

    The slimmer the spaghetti, the greater the potential of disgrace becomes. Just like noodles, spaghettini only takes one minute to overcook the whole and end up with sticky clumps. Just play it safe and cook the regular spaghetti when people are around please.

    ALSO READ: Aspiring Nigerian Chefs, Do You Really Need All These Spices?

  • Beer Deserves All the Hate It Gets. Here’s Why

    Everyone has their vices, but there’s no reason why your vice should look like — or in this case, taste like — your problems. Especially as a Nigerian. So, if you like beer and you live in this unreal country, you must really not like yourself sha. And if you’ve been wondering why people hate it so much, here are the reasons:

    1. It looks like urine 

    Other alcoholic drinks try to be neat or attractive with their colours, so you’ll feel better about yourself when you drink them. But beer couldn’t even be bothered to try. It just went and decided to look like piss. That says a lot.

    RELATED: Quiz: What Type Of Alcohol Are You?

    2. It smells like ass

    It tries to be kind to you by warning you in advance about its terrible smell, but the warning is never enough. Nothing should leave your breath smelling like spoilt eggs mixed with palm wine, but beer does that out of the wickedness of its heart.

    3. It makes you bloated

    Lowkey, every alcohol bloats you but beers own is just razz because why is it doing too much when you didn’t even enjoy drinking it in the first place? Honestly, beer could learn a little humility, Idk. 

    4. Everyone has a problematic uncle that likes it

    That’s a big red flag tbh. Notice how only people with bad vibes like beer. Or how, in Nollywood movies, the wicked man always drinks beer before coming home to beat his kids for no reason. Art mostly imitates life, and that’s on periodt. 

    RELATED: QUIZ: If You’ve Drank 16/28 Of These Drinks, You’re An Alcoholic

    5. Beer drunk is embarrassing 

    If you get drunk after drinking beer, it’s never the cute type of drunk that makes you flirty or giggly. It just goes straight to agbero or makes you think about your life. So razz. 

    6. It tastes like horror

    If you’re going to drink alcohol, the least you can do is drink something that tastes sweet. You’re trying to avoid your problems or just get drunk for the sake of it, so why would you drink something that tastes like disappointment? 

    READ ALSO: What Your Favourite Alcohol Says About You

  • 5 Reasons Plantain is the Most Overrated Food

    Dear plantain lovers, 

    Plantain is overrated. 

    Yes, I said it. 

    Whether it’s eaten as kelewele in Ghana, alloco on the streets of Cote’d’voire or makemba in the homes of the Congolese people, plantain is plantain and we’re all expected to love it. Why? I’m still unsure. But I’m tired of pretending to love this overrated meal. So even though an army of misguided plantain lovers will drag me, I’m finally ready to unapologetically admit that I hate plantain. 

    1. We were forced to eat it as kids

    As kids, plantain came with almost every meal: rice, beans, eggs, boiled or fried yam and sometimes even pap or oatmeal. Just thinking about it makes me tired. Was it necessary to shoehorn plantain into everything?  

    One of my earliest memories of eating plantain was sitting at the dining table as my mother suspiciously watched to make sure every piece of plantain went down my throat. “It has vitamins,” she’d say. Of course, I couldn’t argue. It was better to eat than end up being punished for not finishing my food. My only escape was school. In primary school, I’d either toss my plantain in the bin or dash one of the plantain lovers in my class. So imagine my annoyance when I’d go home to meet plantain in a cooler again. Is it by force?

    When I went to boarding school, my only consolation was being able to trade my plantain for anything: for a few more spoons of rice or even boiled egg for the next morning. That’s how bad I wanted to be rid of plantain. 

    RELATED: We Ranked Plantain Dishes From Worst to Best

    2. Finding good plantain is stressful

    Like pasta, plantain needs to be prepared a certain way to make any sense. If it’s too soft, it soaks up all the oil and ends up as a soggy mess. When it’s unripe,  plantain tastes like cardboard — except you’re over 50+. So why not just live life without the stress of searching for sweet-in-the-middle plantain?

    That’s why yam fries and potato chips rank higher on the food chain. 

    3. Plantain smells weird

    Let’s be honest, every time you fry plantain, you end up smelling like a farm animal. You have to take a bath and wash your clothes to get rid of the smell.

    4. It ruins everything it touches

    I’ve accepted that I can never love plantain. Even plantain lovers need to admit that the puff-puff version of plantain — mosa — in small chops is an epic fail. 

    RELATED: We Went from Losing Weight at the Gym to Eating Puff-Puff Together

    5. It’s overrated because it is

    And that’s on period.  Plantain lovers should stop acting like semo lovers who want everyone to love semo just because they love it.

    Plantain haters deserve a safe space too, and I refuse to hide my distaste any longer. So like I said in the beginning, “I hate plantain.” 

    ALSO READ: Interview With Semo: “My Slander Is So Forced”


  • These 7 Types of Cakes Should Not Exist

    Nothing on earth could have prepared me for the terrorism that bakers have been doing with cakes that look like other things. But that’s a conversation for another day. Today I want to drag cake makers for ever baking these seven types of cake. Why do these people like doing the most?

    1. Coffee cake

    Coffee cake is a cake that went to cake school and came last. It’s the 40+ millennial amid Gen-Zs that thinks it’s cool. Of all the things to taste like, why would you choose to bake something that tastes like wickedness? 

    RELATED: QUIZ: What Kind of Cake Are You?

    2. Funfetti cakes

    A funfetti cake is a vanilla cake with an annoying amount of sprinkles. The cake also dares to be baked with sprinkles inside, which is bold because sprinkles taste like suffering and should not exist.

    3. Carrot cake

    Firstly, a carrot is a vegetable, and vegetables have no business being in cake. What’s next? Cabbages? If it even tasted nice, I would understand, but carrot cake tastes like carrot and that’s the problem.  

    4. Chocolate cake

    Anyone that likes chocolate cake is a liar and lives a fake life. It never tastes like chocolate and they’re always trying to spice it up with oreos and wafers. Why’re you trying to make up for?  

    5. Any cake with fondant 

    Notice how they only share cakes like these at burials or school anniversaries, basically places that don’t have joy. What’s the point of cake if every part‌ can’t be eaten? 

    RELATED: 7 Cake Pictures That Will Annoy Every Baker

    6. Rainbow cake

    If nothing was a flavour, it would be rainbow cakes and to be honest, it shouldn’t exist. Thank you for the colour and all, but can you maybe give each tier a distinct flavour, or make it taste like something nice, like strawberries?

    7. Fruit cake

    As in, a cake that has actual fruits stuffed inside or fruit flavoured cakes. If you need to eat something healthy, maybe just eat the actual fruit? Why would you drag cake into it? 

    We don’t cake-shame enough as a society for me. And we need to start throwing tomatoes at people that like these cakes.

    READ ALSO: Ranked: Chocolate, Red Velvet or Vanilla Cake?

  • Compilation of the Most Ridiculous Nigerian Food Superstitions

    Nigerians believe the weirdest things. From women that are half fish, and snake swallowing money, to how rubbing agbalumo on the wall makes it sweeter. Here are the most ridiculous Nigerian food superstitions I’ve ever heard. 

    1. If you eat sugarcane at night and don’t sweep it away, you’ll have bad luck and craw-craw 

    I was already screaming at the thought of having bad luck just because I forgot to sweep and they had the audacity to add craw-craw to the mix. 

    2. If you swallow an orange seed, it’ll grow in your head

    If I count all the orange seeds I’ve swallowed in this life, I should have an orchard chilling on my head by now.  

    RELATABLE: We Are Sure You Heard These Horror Stories as a Child

    3. If you eat two plantains joined together, you’ll give birth to twins

    So by this logic, if I cut that plantain into two… 

    5. If you eat mango and garri, you’ll die 

    Why would you even eat mango after you eat garri? Why are you making two bad bitches fight for dominance in your stomach? Is that not wickedness?

    6. Eating snail and grasscutter makes children sluggish 

    First of all, why are you even eating a grasscutter? They look like rat’s and I’ve never seen a rat and wanted to eat it. As for the snail, that one is their business. Sluggishness no dey kill. 

    RELATABLE: 7 Lies Nigerian Parents Tell Their Kids

    7. Eating the butt of a chicken will make you a talkative

    Look at that person in your life who talks too much and now you know why they are the way they are. It makes no sense, but if you’re eating something that bitter, the least it can do is give you the ability to talk about it in detail. 

     8. Fish head and gizzard are for the firstborn 

    I’ve always known that being a first child comes with some perks because, yes, I agree. It’s true. Let’s leave it like that.

    ALSO READ: 17 Pictures That Perfectly Describe Being the Oldest Child in a Nigerian Family

  • These Underrated Life Hacks Will Make You Enjoy Food More

    Looking for ways to enhance the taste of your food? Well, look no further! With these six random items, the taste of your food will definitely improve. 

    1) A plate that is also a bowl 

    Eating food from a small plate with a deep center elevates the taste of any dish. Flat plates makes food bland.

    2) Eating with a fork 

    When you eat with a fork, you’ll take smaller portions into your mouth per time. That means you’ll  be able to savour every sensation and revel in every single flavour. You’re giving your tongue time to actually taste the food, unlike shoving everything down your throat with a spoon. 

    3) Air Conditioner 

    When the air from the air conditioner is cooling your brain, you can process the taste of food better. Imagine eating hot food in a hot room? Life no suppose hard like that.

    RELATED: People That Say They Like Hot Food Are Liars

    4) Money 

    There’s this thing chefs do that they use gold when making their food. Since you don’t have gold, you can place stacks of dollars beside you while you eat.  With riches come more dignified taste and the ability to appreciate the finer things in life. 

    5)  Eating from the pot 

    If you don’t know where to get a bowl that is also a plate, then we suggest eating from the pot. Eating from the pot brings out the best part of the food, as you’ll feel closer to the flavours. Especially if it’s jollof rice. 

    RELATED: Cooking Tips From a Lazy Nigerian Cook

    6) Your enemies’ tears 

    There’s no sweeter taste than the defeat of the people that conspired against you. Something about preparing your table in the presence of your enemies. But if you can go one step further to bottle the tears of your enemies and sprinkle them on the food you’re about to eat, expect a tantalising delicacy. 

    RELATED: Aspiring Nigerian Chefs, Do You Really Need All These Spices? 

  • Nigerians, Here’s What Your Favourite Street Food Says About You

    As a Nigerian, your favourite street food says a lot about you. Every recruiter should ask for your favourite street food in their hiring process because someone that likes kuli-kuli will be difficult to work with, for example. Why would you like to suffer on purpose? 

    1. Suya

    If Suya is your favourite street food, you’re a generous person because that’s the only reason ‌why you’ll like something that no one lets you enjoy in peace. Everyone always wants a bite. 

    2. Kuli-Kuli

    You’re a strong head. Also, wicked. How can you just casually like chewing something as hard as human bone, with a straight face? Your future ambition as a child was to become a civil servant — the kind that makes you wait at the reception for the whole day, only to tell you to come back in a week. 

    RELATED: 7 Ways To Know a Wicked Nigerian Civil Servant

    3. Akara 

    There’s no reason why beans should be fried, but if it’s your cup of tea, I guess. Unlike the Suya lovers, they share out of the kindness of their hearts and not because they’re forced to. Akara lovers are kind people that aren’t kind to themselves and that’s okay. 

    4. Bole and groundnut 

    The only way to eat plantain is soft. Bole is never really soft. Let’s also talk about how people who like it either have a choking kink or are one impulsive thought away from hanging onto the back of a danfo for fun. Please, try to choose life‌. 

     5. Boiled corn and pear

    If you like boiled corn and pear, your tastebuds sabi. Corn was not created to be burnt. People who boil corn have a heightened palate. They also like avocados and think they’re better than everyone. They’re not wrong. 

    RELATED: What Avocado Eaters Think They Are vs What They Are

    6. Puff-Puff

    You get easily peer pressured. I get it, puff-puff is tasty and as a Nigerian, life can be pretty tough. It’s easy to choose the sweetest option, but at what cost? Half bottle of oil in your mouth with each bite? Come on. 

    7. Abacha

    There’s something very scary about a person who risks their life eating a meal that may harm them if not cooked properly. People that like Abacha live life dangerously and I have to stan.

    8. Ewa agoyin

    Not the one you buy in a restaurant for ₦10k; the one those Togolese women hawk in small iron pots for ₦50 per scoop. If you like ewa agoyin, you’re definitely a minister of enjoyment and your life’s motto is “here for a good time”. Please, show us the way. 

    READ ALSO: Interview With Raw Beans, Baked Beans, & Ewa Agoyin