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Cooking | Zikoko!
  • Knorr Eativist, Mory Coco, Shares Tips on Eating Healthy And Satisfying Cravings

    In this interview with Mariam “Mory CocoBakre, the popular creative and influencer, she explores her passion for cooking and her best recipes, detailing the best methods that guarantee great results. She also touches on her role as a Knorr Eativist and how that influences her dietary decisions. Join us as we peek into her mind as a Knorr Eativist. 

    Can you share a creative and healthy recipe that your family loves, and how did you come up with it?

    Mory Coco: I wouldn’t call it a sweet treat, but I definitely love a good bowl of spicy tomato-based spaghetti! This dish was born from my desire to find a satisfying and healthy way to indulge my cravings.  It hits all the right notes—fresh tomatoes cooked into a rich sauce with just the right amount of heat and perfectly cooked spaghetti, waiting to be topped with my favourite mix of veggies—bell peppers, carrots, and sometimes even spinach adds essential nutrients and a satisfying crunch.  This meal is a perfect example of how healthy eating doesn’t have to be bland!

    Can you share a creative and healthy recipe your family loves?

    Mory Coco: A staple in our household is turkey pepper soup with boiled plantains. It’s incredibly easy to make, undeniably healthy, and bursting with flavour that everyone enjoys. You begin by sautéing aromatic ingredients like garlic, onion, and ginger. Chopped turkey is added and allowed to release its natural juices, further deepening the flavor profile.  Next, add fresh habanero peppers and herbs and spices like rosemary and thyme.  Add enough water to create a satisfying broth, followed by pepper soup spice mix, a Knorr seasoning cube, and a sprinkle of salt for balance.  It’s ready to be enjoyed after simmering until the turkey reaches your desired tenderness!  Then serve with a side of boiled plantains. 

    As a Knorr Eativist, what’s your favourite healthy ingredient swap in traditional recipes to make it fun and enticing?

    Mory Coco:  As a Knorr Eativist, I’m passionate about finding healthy swaps that don’t compromise taste! There’s a terrible misconception that healthy meals can’t taste good, and that’s definitely not true.  For instance, when making jollof rice, I ditch the regular vegetable oil and swap it for olive oil. I sometimes go even further by using herb-infused olive oil with notes of rosemary, thyme, garlic, and chillies. This simple switch adds complexity and a delightful nutritional boost, making every bite delicious and good for you!  It’s a perfect example of how small changes can impact healthy and flavorful cooking.

  • QUIZ: Forget Christmas Chicken if You Can’t Pass This Simple Cooking Quiz

    If you know the road to your kitchen, this quiz should be a breeze for you. If not, just forget Christmas chicken. You don’t deserve it.

    Take the quiz and prove yourself.

  • Cooking Tips From a Lazy Nigerian Cook

    Sometime last week, a conversation came up during a work call about ijabes. If you don’t know what an ijabe is, it’s a short broom traditionally used to blend ewedu after it’s been boiled.

    A few of my coworkers couldn’t wrap their heads around using what they consider a broom to cook, but I tried my best to defend my heritage and explain that it’s not a broom. It just makes cooking easier. In fact, this article was supposed to be me proving that the Ijabe is the best tool for making ewedu till it occurred to me that I’ve actually never used it before. 

    I’m not very great at cooking. You’ll always find me doing the faster method that provides the best possible results. Feel free to call me lazy. If you do, you won’t be far from the truth. 

    When you’re like me, who hates to cook, but loves to eat, you find yourself on multiple Youtube channels and Instagram pages learning tricks and here are some of the cooking tips I learned and prefer. 

    1. Food processors are better and faster than the traditional mortar and pestle

    My mother didn’t teach me to make pounded yam in a mortar. She even jokes that her mother didn’t teach her either. I don’t know what she means when she says that. I’m sha sure she’s not insinuating I learn it myself. I won’t be caught near a mortar, so I’m obviously team food processor. There are many other things I can use the time for pounding yam to do — like learning about Web3 or scrolling on Twitter. Also, is it the wood from the mortar that makes the pounded yam sweeter? 

    RELATED: Pounded Yam and 4 Other Nigerian Foods That Enjoy White Privilege

    2. Whatever a grinding stone can do, a blender can do better

    If I have a conversation with someone and find out they prefer grinding stones to blenders, I’ll simply stop talking to them before they have time to show me pepper. Anyone who prefers grinding stones to a blender is capable of going to great lengths to hurt your feelings. If they can hurt themselves without care, imagine what they can do to you? There’s nothing that can be ground on a grinding stone that can’t be blended with a blender. Please. 

    3. Mixers can be used for making amala

    My life changed the day I learned you can make amala in a mixer. (I’m being dramatic, I’m yet to try it). I want to fuck with the idea of making your amala with a mixer, but it’s a no from me. The amala can’t be sweet if some of the sweat of the person making it hasn’t entered into it. There are methods for amala-making and I’m choosing to preserve the tradition. Thanks. 

    4. Anything works for moin-moin

    When it comes to moin-moin, I believe anything works. I don’t get the argument of moin-moin in leaves being better than the rest. Once it’s done right, it’s done right. 

    5. Peeling beans with your hands is unnecessary

    If you want to have your hands in water, please, go to the pool. There’s no need to spend so long peeling beans when there’s an easier and faster way to get it done. Trust me, if food processors existed in the past our mums would have used them too to save time. 

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

  • Why Did These Nigerian Men Learn to Cook As Adults?

    In today’s world, more and more men are breaking the stereotype that the kitchen is a place for women. I talked with five Nigerian men who didn’t always know how to, but had to learn to cook in their adulthood, and now prepare meals regularly. 

    Learn to cook

    “Cooking helped me cope with depression and loneliness”

    — Femi, 23

    As a child, my parents were always dragging me for not joining my mum in the kitchen. He would say, “Na so you go dey buy food when you go university because you no sabi cook.”

    I’ve always been a staunch believer in online learning, so I was pretty sure I could get away with not learning to cook until I was ready. I’d done it with writing and school work anyway; was it ordinary food that would stop me?

    When we became teenagers, my parents started making my brother and me cook. My mum stopped cooking regularly because of her work, so it was either we cooked or starve. And then, she expected to eat when she came back from work too, so talk about learning on the go.

    I found a way around it by inviting a friend whose mom ran a foodshed, for a game of table tennis. As we played, I’d quiz him from time to time about cooking to see if he was any good. He didn’t know I was just extracting information, hehe.

    I learnt to cook beans but struggled with jollof rice. Stews and soups were a no-go, and my mom would rather not eat poison, so she made those herself when she could.

    In university, I started cooking more but for an unlikely reason: cooking helped me cope with depression and loneliness. I spent time watching cooking videos online and practicing. I learnt a lot and quickly started creating my own recipes, even though I was broke then and there was only so much I could do with the little money I had.

    I’ve improved a lot with my cooking and now that I can afford it, I’ve set up my kitchen in a way that helps me try new foods, create new recipes, and experiment more.

    RELATED: I Feel the Most Fulfilled When I’m Cooking — Man Like Rotimi Alabi

    “I used food to bond with my wife”

    — Efe, 41

    Omo, I had to start learning to cook because of my fitness goals. Eating out isn’t sustainable because most fast-food restaurants cook unhealthy stuff. A few years ago, before I met my wife, I needed to lose belly fat and the only way was to control the food that enters my mouth. So I had a dietician (who doubled as my fitness trainer) draw up a food plan. Most of those foods would have to be homemade. 

    Initially, I hired someone to do my cooking but somehow I occasionally ran out of meals. I had to at least learn how to cook basic stuff myself just in case. Over time, I started to get really interested in food. I found that I enjoyed food more when I made it. I also started to experiment with cooking styles. 

    It’s funny because food helped me bond with the woman who is now my wife in the early stages of our relationship. Now I’m married and I cook with my wife on weekends. A massive W.

    RELATED: 11 Things Every Nigerian Man Who Is an Average Cook Will Get

    “I went viral for cooking the River of Babylon”

    — Emmanuel, 20

    I grew up in a household with a lot of women so I barely did any chores.

    Fast-forward to when I started university and had to fend for myself: the first time I made jollof rice, I mixed the rice with the sauce without first draining the starch from the rice. After the rice water dried, it was like I’d added super glue to the rice. 

    Later, I tried to cook beans and didn’t throw away the beans water. I poured palm oil on the beans, added chopped onions and seasoning. After eating, I unleashed fart bombs on my roommates for the next three days. 

    Then there was that time I made “stew” that went viral on campus. I’d visited a friend who needed to step out for a bit. He told me he had a little stew in his fridge and I could boil rice to eat with it. The stew was very little so I offered to increase the quantity of the stew. I would just add a little water and some spices and it’d be okay, right?  

    After he left, I turned on the gas cylinder, placed a pot on the cooker, poured palm oil in it, added chopped onions, pepper and water. I also added the small bowl of stew in it and brought it to a boil. I expected the broth to thicken after a while, but it never did. I added more seasoning and spices in desperation like it would change a thing. But, no, the river of Babylon was staring at me.

    Just then, my friend came back with some other hungry friends. He went straight to the pot of stew, opened it and burst into laughter. Then he pulled out his phone and started filming.

    The video ended up in my faculty’s WhatsApp group chat and went viral within hours. I couldn’t go into campus the next few days.

    That was it. I had to learn how to cook.

    I started by asking friends and coursemates who knew how to cook for help. I wrote down recipes and step-by-step instructions. After two years and lots of handholding from friends, I can now make a decent meal.

    RELATED: Interview With Food: “Are Nigerian Men Possessed By The Spirit of Hunger?”

    “Restaurants in this Lagos cook rubbish”

    — Nduka, 28

    Omo, it’s sapa o. It’s not that deep for me. I had to learn to cook because eating out every time is so expensive. And most restaurants in this Lagos dey cook rubbish. The evening I spent ₦4k on pasta that tasted like rubber bands, I decided I was going to learn how to cook pasta myself. I headed to Shoprite and bought groceries. When I got back, I video called my girlfriend to walk me through the process of cooking stir-fry spaghetti. It didn’t turn out great but at least it was a start.

    I’ve gotten better at cooking but I still don’t like it. It’s just a necessary evil at this point in my life. The day I can afford to hire someone to take care of my meals 24/7, I’ll not waste time.

    “It’s either really good or really bad”

    — Samuel, 28

    As a child, I always spent time in the kitchen with my mother and sister where I helped out. I even cooked a meal or two occasionally and found it fun. 

    But after moving out, it was different. I had to relearn how to cook as it’s no longer an option but a necessity. I no longer liked cooking because it took so much time and effort, and I had to do it every time.

    These days, sometimes, I watch a Nollywood movie on Netflix and I see food that looks good. I know I can cook it but I don’t know how to. So I just look the meal up on YouTube, get as many ingredients as I can and attempt to recreate. The Maggi or the salt may be too much sometimes, I but I’ll sha eat it like that.

    I learnt most of my cooking from YouTube and even with that, it’s still 50-50: it’s either really good or really bad. But how man go do?

    CONTINUE READING: If You Don’t Like Any of These 10 Foods, You’re Bad Vibes
  • Quiz: This Random Kitchen Knowledge Quiz Will Stress You if You Can’t Cook

    Think you can stand the heat? Prove your place in the kitchen by getting more than 6 answers correctly in this quiz.

    How many teaspoons make a tablespoon?

    Which of these groups does thyme belong to?

    How many minutes does it take to fully cook a hard boiled egg?

    Which of these is not a raising agent?

    Which nutrients are found in egg, fish, meat?

    How do you “season” a new pan before you cook in it?

    Which of these foods would be dangerous to cook in a microwave?

    What do you add to the pot to make pasta boil?

    What should you do if a recipe instructs you to “mince” carrots?

    What is the term for squashing dough with your hands to make it smooth and elastic?

  • QUIZ: Only Master Chefs Can Identify 9/13 Of These Seasoning Brands

    People who enter the kitchen all the time will easily know these seasoning brands. Are you one of them? Take the quiz:

  • 8 Nigerian Women Talk About Why They Hate Cooking

    Cooking and food in general is an interesting topic. Some people find fulfilment in it, while others find it a source of tension. It is the latter group of people who have prompted this article.

    You might be curious: are there women who do not find the process of putting a meal together day-after-day enjoyable? Yes, there are, and I spoke with 8 Nigerian women on why this rings true for them.

    Amaka, 22

    I dislike cooking and would rather not engage in it. Growing up, one of my biggest fears was that I wouldn’t be able to cook for my husband or children. My mum and man both cook for me, but that’s only because I trust them and they cook fire. If I was to have friends over they’d either have to eat before coming or I cook. Depending on my mood and how it turns out, they’ll eat it like that. If the people coming over are more than four, we might have to get a cook, because I can’t go through all that. It’s not that I can’t cook, I can when I have to. But if I can, I will avoid it entirely. Also, cooking shouldn’t have to be a gender role. I have this guy friend who didn’t know how to cook and his sister would always starve him when they fought. I had to teach him because it was getting out of hand. Some men just want to marry women who’ll cook fresh meals every day for them. Mai dia, the soup is at the bottom of the freezer, you know how to use the microwave. Biko, I don’t like stress.

    Patricia, 29

    I cooked actively from age 14 and I thought I liked it until I started living by myself. Now, I look forward to having an inhouse cook. On top of the million and one things I have to do work and business-wise, there’s kitchen duties waiting? I’d rather avoid that when I can.

    Osas, 23

    Cooking is a motherfucking scam. All that stress for how many minutes of eating? I’m always so worried I’d flop and the food will come out nasty. That’s one of my insecurities. Funny enough, I enjoy making moi moi. I don’t care about people’s expectations of me to cook for them because I’m a woman. My ex couldn’t cook, so I cooked while we were together, but he wasn’t super selective and helped out. However, he knew I don’t like cooking and would rather eat out. My present man is a good cook, he’s been cooking all the time we’ve been together. I only make the odd noodles now and then. We’ve not been together for so long though. So let’s see how long it’ll last. I’ve made it clear I can’t cook and would outsource if I could. I keep saying it so it won’t shock him when I refuse to cook. He was talking to his sis the other day, and she was asking if I could cook. I just laughed, it cannot be me! Whenever I start seeing someone new, I simply say, “I can’t cook, I like to eat out.” I’ve heard that I’m wasteful, but how does that affect anyone’s bank account besides mine?

    Angel, 21

    How does cooking for 2 hours just to eat in 10 minutes sound to you? Mind you, the dishes have to be washed after too! All for a few minutes of pleasure! By the way, the price of raw rice and cooking ingredients alone will buy me food for one week. One can even still cook, and the food might not be sweet again. Nope, I’m not up for that. I’ll pass. Although, cooking once in a while can be fun.

    Samantha, 23

    Cooking for me largely depends on my mood, and when I do cook I prefer doing it in bulk. For example, I could cook a pot of stew, soup and other stuff for the week, to avoid stressing over what to eat. So, while I don’t outrightly hate it, I do it out of necessity. I have friends who come alive when cooking, good for them. Everyone’s wired differently, I guess. What I can’t stand is how entitled Nigerians are, especially the men. I once called a couple of my guy friends out for always expecting me to cook whenever they came over to mine, or I theirs. If there were no women on earth, wouldn’t you figure out how to make a meal? It’s a freaking survival skill and I’m tired of people acting like it’s a gender-specific thing to do. Grow up, I’m not your mama.

    Dera, 24

    I do not like cooking; the smell, heat, cleaning up after. I don’t even wear the clothes I’m wearing to work in the kitchen. As a result, I eat out about 2 – 4 times a week, but I don’t eat a lot, so there’s that. I and my sister stay in the same estate, so she feeds me like 4 times a week and I pay her to arrange stew for me. We have a kind of arrangement – as long as I make pancake for her she will feed me.I don’t really do relationships, so I don’t know if my hatred for cooking might end up being an issue. But my mum has repeated it so many times that if I end up in a serious relationship, she’ll inform the persons family, “My child doesn’t like kitchen. If she doesn’t feed you, it’s not like she’s being wicked. It’s just not her thing.” (In Yoruba )

    Uju, 23

    I hate cooking sometimes, and other times I tolerate it. It is also one of the things I hate about being home during school breaks. My mum would just look at me and go, “What are we eating this night?” That question kills me everytime, because then I have to go to the kitchen and start cooking. She’s obviously not pleased with me about that. Lol. On the other hand, if I was to live by myself, I’d hardly ever cook. I’ve also realised that I don’t mind cooking for others, especially when I have guests over. It’s just something I catch myself doing naturally, but to cook for myself? Not so much. Lately though, I’ve been forced to cook a lot because the restaurants around here suck!

    Titi, 20

    I hate cooking and only tolerate it when I’m probably trying to impress someone I like. The thing is, I can cook, but if I have the opportunity to avoid it entirely, I’d definitely do that. I hate the stress that comes with it. Maybe because I was always forced to cook while growing up. My mum legit choked me with the “You’re a girl, and the first daughter. You have to know how to cook for your husband” narrative so much that I grew up to resent it. Now, I really don’t like getting my hands messy.

  • I Feel The Most Fulfilled When I’m Cooking — Man Like Rotimi Alabi

    What does it mean to be a man? Surely, it’s not one thing. It’s a series of little moments that add up. Man Like is a weekly Zikoko series documenting these moments to see how it adds up. It’s a series for men by men, talking about men’s issues. We try to understand what it means to “be a man” from the perspective of the subject of the week.

    Check back every Sunday by 12 pm for new stories in the Man Like series. If you’d like to be featured or you know anyone that would be perfect for this, kindly send an email.

    Today’s Man Like is Rotimi Alabi, a 29-year old Afro-Asian fusion chef. He talks about his mother’s influence on his decision to become a chef, how his father’s absence helped him define masculinity on his own terms and how sibling favouritism drove him to independence.

    rotimi alabi

    What was growing up like?

    My dad was mostly absent because he had another family, and we didn’t get to see much of him. My mom raised my sister and me, for the most part. My sister and I looked alike, but we couldn’t be more different. She’s more of a “Naija” babe while I mostly consume foreign content. She’s not very adventurous with food, but I love trying new foods. 

    .

    What was growing up with your mum like?

    Due to my father’s absence, I have a very strong bond with my mum. She’d come back from work all tired and still go through my homework with me. She also made me interested in reading books.

    Our bond meant that my mum talked to me a lot. She confided in me about everything. She told me stuff about her life experiences that a seven-year-old had no business knowing. Though she didn’t mean any harm, this meant that I matured too quickly because she burdened me with issues that I was too young for. It made my childhood really short because it made me start to think differently too early.  

    Did you feel the absence of your father?

    Not really. He wasn’t exactly absent; he just spent more time with his other family. His presence came with a tense atmosphere. He was a dictator, so my sister and I were really afraid of him. As kids, when we heard his car at the gate, we’d run to our rooms and pretend to be asleep. We avoided him most of the time but when he was in a good mood, he was fun to be around. Because I was close to my mum and two of my cousins lived with us, I didn’t miss him much.

    Were you dependent on your mum?

    No. I read something recently about how over-independence is a trauma response, and I think that’s what’s up with me because I’m incredibly independent. When I was a kid, I’d ask my mum for things I wanted — a new toy or some gadget I wanted. More often than not, I got “no” for an answer. Conversely, when my sister asked for the same things, she’d get them instantly. Every time I brought it up, they’d say, “You know she’s a girl. We have to make sure she gets everything she wants so she’s not enticed by a predator.” While I understand that sentiment, it didn’t change that I felt cheated all the time. These experiences made me draw into myself, and I became a recluse as a teenager.

    At 17, I entered UNILAG to study botany, and for the first time in my life, I felt a sense of freedom. This, however, came with an overwhelming sense of responsibility. I realised that if I wanted to call the shots, I had to be ready for the consequences of my actions.

    So, botany…

    LMAO. That, I did not plan. Another thing I didn’t plan was to become a cook/chef. I  was with my mum in the kitchen a lot. I’d watch her meal prep meticulously and cook meals. I’d steal a slice of tomato or a chunk of dried fish. Sometimes, she’d scold me, other times, we’d laugh about it. These experiences made me realise that I really enjoyed being in the kitchen. I was eight when I cooked for the first time. I tried to cook fried rice. My God, what a disaster that was — the rice was too soft, there was too much curry, everything was wrong. I thought I’d never cook again. But I continued to observe my mother while she did.  

    I also had an aunt who liked to cook new dishes. I’d go to her house on Sundays to watch her cook and ask questions. Then I watched a lot of cooking shows and studied cookbooks religiously. I was obsessed with cooking and just couldn’t stop trying to learn more.

    Before I was 10, I knew the three things that were the core passions in my life — cooking, fashion and media. I later worked in fashion, but I found out quickly that it is a brutal industry. I was betrayed by people, and some still owe me for jobs. I’d much rather not work in fashion unless I’m doing so on my own terms. I also worked in media for a while. But of the three, I’ve found that I feel the most fulfilled when I’m cooking. I love it when I create dishes and people love it. Watching someone getting wowed by something I cooked is intensely gratifying. No matter how tired I am,  I’m always in the mood to cook because I know that whatever I’m making is going to make someone happy. Perhaps, it appeals to the eight-year-old in me.

    When did you decide you wanted to become a chef?

    I didn’t think I was going to make cooking my profession because I thought it would take the joy away. One day, a friend of mine, Lade, tasted my food and she pushed me to start cooking commercially. Whenever she had an office event, she’d ask me to make meals and pay me for them. In 2018, she recommended me to a co-worker for a party they were planing. It went really well, and so I thought, “Maybe I could do this for a living.”

    How do people react when they find out you cook?

    I think the most common one is where people say, “Oh, you’re a chef? Come and dash me food.” No, I won’t. Other people hear that I’m a chef and ask me if I can really cook or if I’m just a poser. But I don’t have anything to prove to them. If they want me to prove anything to them, they should order my food.

    LMAO. Would you say your career defines your identity?

    No. When I became a chef, my identity was already solid. I knew who I was. Being a chef is just an extra facet of my personality. I’m simply a guy who can cook, not the guy who cooks. There’s a lot more to me than my profession.

    Interesting. What kind of person are you in relationships?

    I tend to put the other person first, even ahead of myself. I’m the kind of person that carries people on my head, especially in friendships. It all ties into my idea of what it means to be a man.

    What does being a man mean to you?

    To be a man means to be dependable emotionally, mentally, financially and physically. When I got into uni was the first time I realised I was a man. It means to be responsible and above all, have sense. Don’t be unfortunate. 

    What’s something you splurge money on shamelessly?

    Perfumes. I currently have 32 perfumes in my collection. My best friend must not catch me saying this, but I can spend my last dime on perfumes. I also like spending money on my friends.

    I’d like to be your friend.

    LMAO. Maybe one day. 

    I’ll take that as a yes.

    LMAO.

    Check back every Sunday by 12 pm for new stories in the Man Like series. If you’d like to be featured or you know anyone that would be perfect for this, kindly send an email.

    Are you a man who would like to be interviewed for a Zikoko article? Fill this form and we’ll be in your inbox quicker than you can say “Man Dem.”

  • What She Said: Men Joke About Marrying Me Because Of Food

    The subject of this week’s What She Said is Thelma Egbe, a 28-year-old woman who loves cooking. She talks about growing up in a family where the men and women cooked, growing a food blogging and catering business, and how adulting almost made her stop.

    What was your childhood like?

    I spent a part of my childhood in Calabar before leaving for the UK. Calabar is known for good meals — if you know you know. My parents are both great cooks so it was easy to fall in love with cooking. I lived around a lot of family so I watched my uncles cook as well.  It was when I joined Twitter that I found out that Nigerian fathers didn’t cook. 

    Around when I turned 12, I started assisting my aunt in the kitchen. I hated it at first, but I learnt how to prepare dishes during that time. I became fascinated with how you could put three or four ingredients together and come up with something really tasty. Sometimes when I was cooking, I would pretend that I was on the Maggi cooking show, which was one of my favourite shows. 

    Do you remember the first meal you made on your own?

    It was palm oil rice and I got paid for it. I was 13.

    How did that happen?

    My godmother is a big caterer and she noticed how much I loved cooking. One day, she asked me to make her native rice. After she ate it, she gave me money as a well-done gift. I don’t remember how much it was, but it was big money at that age. 

    What happened next? 

    Cooking became more exciting when my family and I moved to England. My parents were happy to invest in ingredients for me to learn more. I looked up culinary schools, saw how expensive they were and I backed out.  

    When I turned 16, I was sure I wanted to do something food-related. During this time, we were doing a course at school that required us to use Blogger. I thought food blogging would be a good way to document my cooking journey but I was worried that no one would read my work. 

    I eventually started in 2015 because my friends and family thought I would be great at it. When I started, it was fun to me and for a while, it was the only thing that got me excited. 

    Did you make money from it? 

    For my mum’s 50th birthday, I cooked up a storm. I made jollof rice, fried rice, barbeque chicken, white rice with stew, and small chops for over 50 people. She was so happy she cried — it was a surprise. The guests at the party loved the food. Some of them even asked for take away packs. That felt like the sign I needed to go into catering. 

    After that, I started catering and selling to university students, but I had to stop because it was interfering with school and work as well. I decided to focus more on blogging. I also worked on my social media pages to look like a business page so I could work with other brands.

    Did that work out? 

    2016 was a major year for me because I got a lot of recipes out but focusing on blogging wasn’t easy. I found it difficult and time-consuming. Cooking is easy but documenting the process is the enemy. 

    What are some of the challenges you experienced while documenting your process?

    My family had to eat late because I had to write down everything I did or used along the way and photograph the process as I went. Before I put out a recipe, I had to make the meal at least three times to make sure the recipe I wrote was accurate. This cost a lot of money. 

    In between 2018 and 2019, I reduced the frequency with which I put out content. I barely wrote recipes during that time. 

    Why? 

    2018 was when I started adulting properly and it was overwhelming. I stopped living with my parents, so I didn’t always have extra money to spend. Also, I didn’t have as much access to kitchen gadgets that were a huge part of my process. My job was exhausting as well. 

    In 2019 I got pregnant and I was always tired from work, so my weekends were specifically for resting. 

    How did you feel about being away from food blogging? 

    I felt like I was letting myself down because I had invested in it. One of my new year resolutions last year was to work my way back to consistent content. I planned to write more recipes and create more video content on social media. 

    How is that going so far? 

    It’s been good. I think the pandemic helped because more people had time and wanted to learn how to cook more. My social media engagement numbers are climbing. People send messages thanking me for the recipes and requesting more.

    What is being a mum while blogging about food like?

    At first, I thought it would affect me because motherhood is a lot, but my partner made everything a breeze. He would carry my son away from me so I have enough time and space to do my work. When I am done, I join them. 

    That’s amazing. I’m curious about what it feels like being a woman that loves to cook and somewhat conforming to what society expects of women. 

    People love to eat and I love to feed them. But I hate it when men send me weird messages wishing their women could cook like me. Some men joke about marrying me because of food. Most of the comments annoy me because, in a bid to compliment me, they are insulting other women who don’t care about cooking. 

    What are your future plans? 

    I am currently in the process of going back to selling food. I am also collaborating with a brand. This time, I am taking my time to plan well so everything runs smoothly.

  • QUIZ: If You Get 12/20 On This Cooking Quiz, You’re A Serial Killer

    We published an article telling you cooking habits of serial killers. Now, we have a quiz for you.

    If you do up to 12 things on this list, you’re clearly a serial killer.

    Select all the things you do:

  • 10 Of The Most Annoying Cooking Habits Ever!

    If you have experience cooking, then one or two of these things have definitely annoyed you before.

    Let’s start:

    1) Not cleaning as you cook.

    The single most annoying thing ever. How can you cook if everywhere is scattered?

    2) Using the same oil to fry like five different things.

    Imagine your egg tasting like fish.

    3) Not tasting your food as you cook.

    The only time you are allowed to do this is when you’re fasting.

    4) Letting dodo burn.

    Golden brown dodo or anything.

    5) Using the fast burner to cook everything.

    Why? Why pls? Some things need the simmer option to cook well.

    6) Overloading the frying pan while frying.

    Social distancing in the pan, pls.

    7) Not salting your fish before cooking.

    This should actually be a criminal offense.

    8) Pouring meat or chicken stock away.

    Another criminal offense.

    9) Frying without first boiling.

    Laughs in intestinal worms.

    10) Touching my gas while I’m still cooking.

    Too many cooks spoil the Jollof rice. Stay away.

  • Interview With Cooking Gas: “Why I Choose To Finish On Sundays”

    Interview With… is a Zikoko weekly series that explores the weird and interesting lives of inanimate objects and non-human entities.


    For many years, Cooking Gas has been one of the most trusted and dependable workers in the average Nigerian home, but while it almost always gets the job done — cooking our meals to perfection — it also seems to have a slightly vindictive streak.

    Many Nigerians across the country have noticed that Cooking Gas always waits for the worst time to finish: Sunday mornings. So, we decided to sit down with Mr. Gas to ask if this is an intentional ploy to frustrate or merely a series of stressful coincidences.

    Zikoko: Hello. It’s great to have you here.

    Cooking Gas: Thank you so much for having me. It’s great to be here. This might sound hard to believe, but this is the first major interview I’ve ever done. I was shocked when my manager told me.

    Really? But you’re such a vital part of our lives.

    Yeah. I think it’s just a very bad case of ‘see finish’. People rarely pay me any attention, until it’s time for a refill. Before then, I’m usually just stuck in a dusty cylinder at the corner of the house.

    Damn. Before we get into it, how has this pandemic affected you?

    It’s been so hectic. Everyone is shouting “work from home”, but my work has always been from home. So, the cooking has been non-stop. I rarely get a moment to rest, and still, no one has said a simple “Thank you”.

    How does that make you feel?

    It hurts, but the disrespect is not new to me. It’s actually why I decided to start finishing on Sundays. It’s the only time I feel in control. After being under-appreciated for months, it’s my way to get a little payback.

    Oh wow. And you never give a little warning?

    It wouldn’t really count as payback if it was expected, would it? There are even times I almost finish on a random weekday, but I hold it out. Boil a few pots of rice until Sunday reaches. Then I bounce.

    Damn.

    Yup. I actually love to do it right in the middle of cooking a meal. That one tends to pain them a lot more. It’s always funny to see them scrambling to refill me, so they can finish cooking their soggy pot of beans.

    What if they decide to use an electric cooker?

    Lmao. An electric cooker? With which light? They should use it na. I’ll be here waiting for the reality of Nigeria to slap them across the face. Then I’ll still punish them by finishing a few Sundays earlier.

    Ouch. Before we go, is there anything you’d like to tell your users?

    Clean my cylinder more, it’s my home, and say thank you when you’re done cooking every meal. If I see that happening across the country, then maybe, I’ll rethink my timetable.


    Check back every Friday by 9AM for new Interview With episodes. To read previous stories, click here.


  • 11 Things Every Nigerian Man Who Is An Average Cook Will Get

    As a Nigerian man who is an average cook, I know how real the struggle can be. So, I made a list of things that you’ll relate to if you love mixed vegetables and feel a sense of pride whenever you add green pepper to anything.

    1. You, trying to decide between cooking rice and spaghetti again:

    It can only be one or the other.

    2. Your not-so-secret weapon:

    What’s a meal without this?

    3. How you feel after adding green pepper to anything:

    The chef jumped out.

    4. You, bragging to everyone about how great your Indomie is:

    “No one does it like me.”

    5. When you boil water without burning the house down.

    The husband material is abundant.

    6. You, adding every seasoning you find in the house:

    Nothing must waste.

    7. You, after adding two sausages to anything:

    You can never go wrong with sausages.

    8. Your kitchen, after you finish frying egg:

    What the hell?

    9. When you chop onions without slicing off your fingers.

    You better put some respect on my name.

    10. You, trying to properly plate food when you have a guest:

    Cornflakes à la something.

    11. You, patting yourself on the back after making another stir fry:

    It’s not easy, abeg.

  • QUIZ: How Good Are You At Cooking?

    Are you a genius in the kitchen, or does your skill end at making Indomie? Well, all you have to do is pick some of your favourite foods, and we’ll tell you how good you are at cooking.

    Take to find out:

  • Whoever Knew Yetunde Kuti Was A Damn Good Chef? Meet Chef Yeide Who Wow’ed Us! 

    We got an expert mixologist to help us bring one of our sponsored VRSUS videos to life by mixing varieties of chapman. Little did we know she was also a chef until we got in a conversation with her, while sipping our sublime drinks; no they were not spiked.

    Apparently, Yetunde Anikulapo Kuti, professionally known as Chef Yeide, is not just a mixologist, she is also a chef and what we would call a versatile creative; how else can we describe the fact that she can sing, dance, mix great drinks and cook mouth-watering dishes?

    What began as a passion for cooking creative and tasty dishes at age 12, under the guidance of her late grandmother led her to open her new restaurant-Kuti’s Bistro- which caters Intercontinental and West African cuisines in a contemporary and fine dining atmosphere

    Chef Yeide studied Music at MUSON Center, Lagos in 2009, becoming a backup singer and dancer with Seun Kuti and Eypt 80 before she thought to pursue a culinary career, going back to her first love for cooking. This was why she went on to learn cake making and cookery at Yetkem Institute of Catering and Hotel Management in 2010. Her zest for more culinary knowledge had her making French and Senegal cuisines in a French restaurant when she moved to Paris in 2013. 

    Being widely traveled and bagging a  degree in Culinary Arts, an Advanced  Diploma in Food Preparation and Cookery,  and a Higher International Diploma from Westminster  Kingsway College Centre, England, United Kingdom prepared her for the role of an Executive Chef at Barrel Lounge and Restaurant, Ikeja, Lagos in 2018, where she worked for more than a year before establishing Kuti’s Bistro.

    Our advice? You should try the chef’s special when you go to Kuti’s Bistro; signature dishes like the Seafood Ofada, the SK (a fish special), the multi-coloured sauce special, they taste superb. Kuti’s Bistro is at located at 9, Ogundana Street, Ikeja, Lagos. 

  • What She Said: What Happens When You Are Raised In A Kitchen?

    Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it’ll amaze you how similar all our experiences are. Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here. 

    I don’t cook. For some reason, I always feel the need to reiterate this inconsequential fact about myself to anyone I meet in the first hour of conversation. Young or old, female or (mostly) male, we could be talking about the fact that the sky is blue and I’d just slide it in there. I have a couple of theories as to why I do this, but none of them have ever rung true. 

    With potential suitors, I tell myself it’s so they know right off the bat that I don’t conform to traditional gender roles. More often than not, my declaration is met with a scoff and something along the lines of – “I’m sure I’d be the one to change your mind.” After 6 odd years of dating, it still hasn’t happened. 

    On the other hand, I have never been able to figure out why I do it with women and casual male friends. I came up with a theory recently. Cooking has been an integral part of my identity for as long as I can remember. Even as I revolt against it, I cannot help but associate myself with it in some way. Women who don’t cook, don’t care enough about it to go on and on about it the way I do, but I do because I was raised in a kitchen. 

    “The only part of the house that is firmly etched in my memory is the kitchen.”

    At the time I moved out of my parents’ house, we had moved houses three times. We moved out of the house where I spent my formative years in 2012. Details about the house have already begun to fade from memory, but I remember there were two African fruit trees and an avocado tree in the garden and that I used to pick the efirin for pepper soup from the garden. I don’t remember much else. My mum has a bit of a green thumb and likes to grow some of her vegetables. In a recent conversation with her, she complained about how she has never been able to grow plantain as she used to in my childhood home, and only then did I remember that we grew some plantain trees. 

    The only part of the house that is firmly etched in my memory is the kitchen. I remember the pantry with its weather-beaten wooden shelves and endless stacks of repurposed butter buckets. I remember the laundry with its old fashioned sink that was never used for laundry, but came in handy when we made ogi from scratch. You see, I remember the kitchen so well because I grew up in it. 

    How young is too young to start cooking? 

    The first time I was left to prepare a meal on my own, I was 10. My mother had travelled for work and left just my dad and I behind. It was just a 24-hour trip, but it meant I was responsible for catering to his lunch and dinner until she came back the next day. She had made some soup for lunch and I was only meant to prepare Eba to go with it. I made it so badly my dad had to go to the kitchen to rectify it. That was 14 years ago and it’s the only time I’ve ever seen him make anything in the kitchen. I could probably count how many times I’ve even seen him walk into the kitchen. 

    The first time I told a friend I had been cooking since I was a ten-year-old, she told me it was impossible. We were both 18 and for her, cooking was completely optional and only something she did to amuse herself. Even though her mother bore the sole responsibility of cooking, she didn’t want her daughters to be pressured by it. She didn’t particularly enjoy it, but it was her own cross to bear. At home, we had gotten to a point where I wasn’t just expected to take on my fair share of the cooking responsibility, I was expected to completely own it. You see, my mother had paid her dues and it was time for her to pass the baton to her daughters. My sister who was in medical school was barely around and even though I was in school, I soon found myself tailoring my holiday schedules around my father’s mealtimes. 

    When making personal plans I was obligated to factor in the fact that his breakfast must be put on the table by at least 10 am. I had to be back by 3 pm to make his lunch and his dinner went on the table by 9 pm. As any 18-year-old would, I revolted. On some days and they weren’t very many, I’d take off in the morning and not come back till just about the time dinner was to be ready. On most of those days, I only did this to escape the kitchen. But for the most part, I carried out my obligations dutifully. I was in school for most of the year, and the holidays only ever lasted a few weeks. So I’d grit my teeth and make pots of soups and bowls of rice. 

    It was a given that no more than a week into any holiday, my mother and I would be at each other’s throats over whose duty it was to cook. My father never got involved as long as food was put on the table when he expected it to be, our little tiffs were really no concern of his. I don’t remember the details of all our arguments, but I remember the one and only time she got physical. She had woken me up at 5 am to wash the skin off some beans so we could make Akara for breakfast. Sulking at being woken up so early I washed the beans halfheartedly hoping she’d tire of my slow progress and do it herself. Instead, she snapped at me and I snapped back, telling her that cooking for her husband shouldn’t be my responsibility. She threw a plastic bowl at my head and lunged at me. Luckily a house help was there to intervene but the bowl had left a cut. When tempers simmered down, we went right back on cooking and breakfast was on the table at 10 am.

    The most peculiar thing about how much cooking we did at home was how little eating went on. My mother cooked for herself separately, because she and my father had very different palates. And it was very rare for all 5 children to be at home at the same time. For the most part, aside from my parents, it was usually only my younger brother -who was exempted from kitchen duties because he owned a penis-  and I at home. So how were we spending seven to eight hours in the kitchen? 

    My father is a very picky eater. Except he’s out of town, he only ever eats at home. He doesn’t like pepper and likes his food fresh. He’s very health conscious so his meals have to be a perfect balance of carbs, greens, proteins and fruits. He doesn’t like to eat the same meals two times in a row. So if he has Jollof rice for dinner today, he’d prefer to have potatoes the next day. He also didn’t eat very much, and odds that he finished all of the food put before him were slim. When you put all of this into consideration, it’s easy to see how one can spend seven to eight hours a day cooking for one person. 

    Don’t kiss the cook, feed her

    I’ve always found cooking to be such a chore, I have little or no energy for anything else after. And that includes eating. There just something about standing for that many hours chopping, boiling, pounding and frying that takes away my appetite. So the more I cooked, the less I ate and I inadvertently lost weight whenever I was home. I soon learned to survive on half a meal a day and was so slim, it still surprises me when I notice my newly acquired love handles in the mirror. Cooking made me miserable and I figured out pretty early on that the only way I could avoid it was to move out of my parents’ house. And so at 22, I did and even though they are still in the process of coming to terms with it, it’s the best thing I’ve ever done for myself. 

    On acceptance

    Moving out gave me some insight into a couple of things. For a very long time, I held my mother responsible for my cooking woes. After all, no one else’s mothers was asking them to come home from school on the weekend to cook for their fathers because they had to be out of town. The way I saw it, she was only doing it to punish me. Now I realise she was doing it because it was the only way she knew how to cope with the impossible role she was occupying. She was a woman who at the peak of her career with a full-time job was expected to also play the role of full-time housewife. Even though she grumbled and complained, she performed and she expected the same out of me because she couldn’t imagine things being done any other way. I like to think that in my rebellion I’m finally showing her that it can be.

    I no longer resent how much cooking was a part of my life growing up, on some days I’m even grateful that I can whip up a pot of Banga half asleep. But these days I’m more focused on the eating side of things and focusing on letting all of the other wonderful and things that also define who I am take the spotlight. 

    Hi there! The HER weekly newsletter launches on the 6th of March, 2021. A new newsletter will go out every week on Saturday by 2pm. If you have already subscribed please tell a friend. If you haven’t, you can by clicking this button. It will only take fifteen seconds. Trust me, I timed it!

  • Foodstuff And Meals Every Nigerian Student Should Know

    There are certain life skills you need to survive Uni. You need to know how to lie and cry for when you forget to do your assignment and you’re begging your lecturer. You need to know how to wake up at 8:50 am and still make it to a 9 am class. Most importantly, you need to know how to cook, especially for the days when you need to stretch the last 2k in your account for two weeks. Here are the foodstuffs that will be essential for your survival in a Nigerian university, and eight meals you can prepare using them.

    Foodstuff you should have as a Nigerian student

    • Instant Noodle aka Indomie
    • Spaghetti
    • Rice
    • Garri (Yellow or White)
    • Bean
    • Eggs
    • Plantain
    • Yam
    • Sweet Potatoes
    • Groundnut
    • Milk
    • Sugar
    • Grounded Pepper
    • Maggi
    • Salt
    • Curry
    • Thyme

    8 Meals You Need To Know How To Cook To School In Nigeria

    Indomie and everything

    Indomie and corned beef, Indomie and sardine, Indomie and egg, Indomie and suya. If you are really skilled you can eat Indomie 7 times a week and it’ll taste new every time

    Jollof spaghetti

    You know that spaghetti you make with tin tomato onions and one pot. If you are feeling fancy you can add any other senrenre.

    Concoction rice

    It’s not Jollof, it’s not fried , It’s not coconut rice, no one is sure what it is but we love it like that.

    Risky burger

    This one doesn’t even require any skill buy your Agege bread and fry egg and combine the two. If you have extra money, add suya to your combo. Don’t forget to use your frying pan to toast the bread.

    Eba and anything that resembles soup

    It could be just stew, or you could buy 50 naira okra to combine with the stew or if na you dey cook pass you can even make some type of vegetable soup.

    Almighty plantain

    You can fry it you can boil it you can add beans to it and make plantain pottage.

    Garri

    There are two types of Garri you can make in Uni. When there’s still money in your pocket you add groundnut sugar and even milk. When there isn’t you have to learn how to make garri meant for one person to swell enough to feed three people.

    Ogi/Akanmu/Pap

    Please custard, cornflakes or oats is cost, those ones are reserved for the first week you get pocket money from your parents.

    Make beans

    All you need is one pot, small onions, tin tomato, and Maggi and you can make magic. When you are tired of eating the beans you can boil rice to join or eat it with bread or garri.

    Egg stew

    The beauty of egg stew is that it goes with anything, rice, bread, plantain, yam, anything.

  • When you calculate how much you spend buying food in a month just because you don’t want to cook

    I don’t believe my eyes

    This is how you struggle to eat indomie for the tenth night in a row

    God deliver me from this affliction

    How you show up at your friend’s house who likes to cook every weekend

    Surprise! It’s me again, what’s for lunch?

    Everyone at the food place near your house knows your name, surname and birthday

    Customer!!!

    You parent’s are tired of you showing up every weekend to beg for homemade food

    There’s just nothing like your mum’s jollof rice

    This is you on the rare occasion that you have to cook

    Why do bad things happen to good people

    And it’s not as if you don’t know how to cook o you just don’t understand why it has to be so stressful

    The stress

    You’ve not refilled your gas cooker in 3 years because the only thing you use it to cook is indomie

    At least you are saving money there

    How you feel when you get into a relationship with someone who loves to cook

    The Lord is good

    You’ll rather soak garri for breakfast, lunch and dinner than enter the kitchen to cook

    Garri never killed anybody

    How you feel when you manage to boil rice once a month

    Nobody talk to me, please

    This is what your fridge always looks like

    You don’t even have stew

    When your friends come over and ask you what you have to offer

    Will you like indomie or indomie?

    While you don’t like to cook we know you love to eat. So how do you feel about jollof rice?

  • Nigerians are forever full of advice for house wives. But what of house husbands?

    It’s not like they don’t exist. I mean what will you call your Uncle Tade that has refused to look for a job for the last ten years while his wife works to provide for the whole family?

    Because nobody ever talks about it, house husbands in Nigeria don’t seem to know their roles.

    Nigerian parents and pastors are oddly silent on this topic.

    Since no one else will offer it, I’m here with Sage advice for all the house husbands in Nigeria.

    Now, gather round. It’s time to learn how to be a really really good house husband.

    First of all, it’s your sole responsibility to get the kids ready for school, drop them off, pick them up, supervise their homework and feed them.

    Because if you really love them, then you have to do it.

    You have to wake up before her so that you can start doing one or two things around the house before she wakes up.

    Who will make her breakfast before she goes to work? Or you want her to go to work on an empty stomach?

    Make sure there is a hot meal waiting on the table for your wife before she comes back from work.

    And it must always be freshly made. Stale food is for losers. And you’re not a loser, are you?

    If she decides out of the goodness of her heart to help you around the house you had better be grateful.

    Do you think it’s easy? After all the hard day’s job.

    On top of cooking, cleaning, taking care of the kids and running the whole house you have to remember to always look good for your wife.

    Did she marry you with a pot belly? If you are not careful she’ll leave you for a better-looking man. A beard is great, but you better trim it properly.

    Remember to stay on top of your sex game. You might be tired from having to keep the house running by yourself but can you be more tired than the person putting food on the table?

    You’re not expecting this to be over in 10 minutes, right?

    If she ever cheats by mistake you have to forgive her.

    It’s probably not even her fault. Examine your conscience. You must be the reason she cheated.

    Never question her authority, after all are you the one paying the children’s school fees?

    An obedient husband is a happy husband.

    Now go forth and flourish as the good husband we know you have the potential to be.

    Any questions? Feel free to drop more advice if you have any.

    While we are on the topic of Nigerian men, find out if they care about romance at all in this video.

  • 1. When your parents start looking for your wedding venue the minute you start walking.

     Can you just let me suck breast first? 

    2. When they buy toy car for your brother but buy you kitchen set.

    I didn’t come to this life to cook plis

    3. When they are sharing chores, this is your list while your brother’s list only has wash car on it.

    4. This is the summary of the sex talk your mum gave you when you started your period

    Just like that.

    5. You can’t make any small mistake in your parents’ house without hearing is this how you’ll do it in your husband’s house.

    Small mistake o

    6. How your parents reacted when your brother managed to make noodles for the first time.

    And it wasn’t even sweet sef

    7. How they react when you make Jollof Rice, Asun, Fried Chicken but forget to fry Plantain to add

    That’s how you’ll go and disgrace us in your husband’s house

    8. How your parents reacted when your brother brought home a female friend

    YOU’RE THE TRUE SON OF YOUR FATHER.

    9. How they reacted the first time a boy just used side eye to look at you

    If I see that boy again.

    10. Once your mum noticed you were growing breasts these are the kind of clothes she started buying for you

    You won’t disgrace me.

    11. Meanwhile at school all the boys forgot where your eyes were located

    Abi do you want Amadioha to punish you?

    12. Going to buy bread down the street and before you even lock your gate one Emeka has come to profess his love to you.

    I’m not interested please.

    13. When a guy who was just toasting you starts abusing because you said you weren’t interested

    So confused.

    14. When you hear that a boy in school is telling everyone you slept with him because you shook his hand one time

    But how?

    15. When your parents spent your entire childhood chasing you away from boys now they’re asking you for husband.

    As if they sell husband in the market.

    16. When your parents’ reply to anything you do is ‘But when will you marry?’

    Matriculation? When will you marry Graduation? When will you marry? NYSC?  When will you marry? It never really ends, does it?

    17. Ever had the sex talk with your Nigerian parents? This is probably how it went.

  • 9 Life Saving Hacks You’ll Appreciate If You’re Lazy AF

    1. Making okro soup or and don’t want to start cutting? My friend, blend that thing!

    Who has time for cutting or grating?

    2. The floor of your house needs to be cleaned and you don’t have time for that? Please find the mop!

    Is it not the same thing as sweeping?

    3. Do you hate washing the yama yama blender as much as we do? Just add small soap and water and blend something sharply.

    Blender that will want to wound you sef.

    4. Hate washing those white sneakers for hours don’t you? Just carry small brush, add toothpaste and use it to clean all the dirt away please.

    We bet you didn’t know you could do that.

    5. Use take away packs to eat so you never have to wash plates. YES!

    You people don’t know we’re very smart sha.

    6. If you can’t stand cooking after a long day of work, just cook plenty jollof on weekends and store in the freezer.

    Who has time for rubbish, please?

    7. Need to use hot water sharply? Please find the microwave.

    P.s If this happens, abeg no mention our name o!

    8. Throw your onions inside the fridge before slicing so they won’t blind your poor eyes.

    Let no onion come and wound you.

    9. Did you know you can use your hand whisk to make amala or semo?

    Seriously, try it!
  • Learning To Cook With Your Nigerian Mother

    1. When she calls you to assist her in the kitchen:

    Hello ma there is no need to shout I’m here.

    2. When she feels you aren’t eager enough to sweat and suffer in the kitchen

    You better open those your teeth and be happy to be part f the process oh!

    3. But when you are excited to learn, she’s like:

    Let’s go!!

    4. When she get’s angry with you for not being able to do something you’ve never done before.

    But mummy I’ve never done this before how am I supposed to know how?

    5. When you know how to do some things without tutoring, your mother is like:

    Ehen! That’s my child!

    6. How she looks at you when you forget to add MAGGI:

    Mummy plis don’t kill me.

    7. Her reaction when you add too much salt:

    “And you know your father already has high blood pressure kuku kill all of us.”

    8. When she starts gisting you about something random while you’re cutting pepper.

    You have to be too careful not too laugh too much and cut yourself.

    9. You cutting onions:

    Tears everywhere!

    10. Your mother cutting onions:

    Always cool, calm and collected!

    11. When she holds a hot cooking spoon barehanded like it’s nothing:

    Is she superwoman? She must be superwoman!

    12. When you try to do the same thing:

    “It’s not that it’s paining me, water just likes coming out of my eyes.”

    13. Your mother when you take the pot off the fire too early:

    “So we should eat raw food because you want to finish on time abi?”

    14. Her reaction when you forget the pot on the fire:

    “Please explain to me where I got you from.”

    15. When you follow all her instructions but the food is not sweet.

    Which kind of problem is this?

    16. How your mother watches your movements in the kitchen:

    Please don’t kill yourself on my watch oh!

    17. When you try to make a suggestion.

    “Now you know more than me abi!”

    18. When your suggestion works she’s like:

    “Ahhhhh okay I see.”

    19. When you misbehave after messing up in the kitchen your mother is like:

    “You kuku don’t know how to do anything”

    20. When you finally master something she taught you, you’re like:

    I am now the master!

    21. And she’s like:

    But all jokes aside, Nigerian mothers are the best and as MAGGI turns 50, we want to celebrate the women who have been using MAGGI to create amazing meals for their loved ones.

    The big idea for the MAGGI 50th anniversary campaign is: Let’s Celebrate. We intend to do this primarily by sending gift boxes containing specially curated ingredients and gifts to women influencers pan Nigeria & beyond for trusting MAGGI in the past years, and in the future ahead. Clink the link below to learn more.
  • 25 Nigerians Share Their Hilarious Cooking Disasters

    When a food lover and chef on Twitter asked Nigerians to share their worst cooking experience, the responses were hilarious as we expected.

    Share your worst cooking disaster

    — Thelmzkitchen (@Thelmzkitchen_) April 27, 2016

    1. This chocolate chip cookie fail.

    https://twitter.com/LamideOB/status/725292750850105344

    2. This person’s palm oil caught fire.

    3. This person made Jollof rice soup.

    https://twitter.com/utibe_/status/725275673821089793

    4. This one about adding Ogbono to Jollof rice.

    5. When your daddy throws soggy semo on your forehead.

    https://twitter.com/LadeKale/status/725278774867181568

    6. This person’s attempt at making fried eggs.

    @Thelmzkitchen_ this was meant to be fried eggs ? pic.twitter.com/NDDMgZ8YDa

    — The Special One (@swaynkaayyy) April 27, 2016

    7. This person that cooked rotten eggs with their Indomie.

    @Thelmzkitchen_ prepared indomie with sardine and a lot of veggies. D last phase was to break egg inside. I neva new d egg was rotten

    — ♥RAIN♥ (@rianatopeyemi) April 27, 2016

    8. The struggle of preparing pap and Custard.

    9. This person that wanted to cook fried noodles.

    @Thelmzkitchen_ used oil instead of water for indomie and fried the whole thing black

    — art (@Vaness_ah) April 27, 2016

    10. This person used kerosene to cook stew.

    11. This person cooked Efo Riro with Ewedu leaves.

    @Thelmzkitchen_ thought ewedu leaf was efo , so I made it normally as efo riro. Suddenly I noticed the efo was slippery. It was a disaster ?

    — Seksan (@diamondsek) April 27, 2016

    12. This person’s ocean of beans and palm oil.

    13. This person mistook Ogbono for crayfish.

    14. The one about making pancakes with semo flour.

    15. This one about an “eggsplosion”.

    @Thelmzkitchen_ I tried to boil my egg in the microwave ( I didn’t put it in water I just dropped the egg ) it exploded ?

    — Gold ✨ (@Wura_ola) April 27, 2016

    16. This one about a chicken coming back to life.

    https://twitter.com/PurpleEllipsis/status/725397785978220545

    17. This person didn’t know chicken had to be boiled before putting in stew.

    @Thelmzkitchen_ I put chicken inside cookin stew (without washing/boiling the chicken)

    Tasted like blood,I was a carnivores animal dat day — that dada guy. (@Josh__IK) April 27, 2016

    18. When someone used Chocomilo as Maggi.

    19. This person washed the Garri before making Eba.

    @Thelmzkitchen_ I wanted to make Eba so I washed the garri first.

    — Bambi (@Nwaabekee) April 27, 2016

    20. This person made burnt offering.

    @Thelmzkitchen_ here pic.twitter.com/4MXiy64lfK

    — Omoba KD (Ari Gold ) (@Kenydebo) April 27, 2016

    21. This person used Omo to wash rice.

    https://twitter.com/jemimahnaa/status/725338244171370496

    22. This person put live chicken in hot water and sat on the lid.

    23. When someone poured Nutri C in rice to make it look like Jollof.

    24. This person baked a cake with Amala flour.

    https://twitter.com/AmazonianCub/status/725294086626926592

    25. This person that cooked burnt mop.

    @Thelmzkitchen_ I came back frm club 5am,I said let me cook spagheti.I slept off,woke up 12pm.I saw medusa in my pot pic.twitter.com/lzbpNFuLI1

    — Infamous Minded (@PRODEEGY) April 27, 2016