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eat | Zikoko!
  • Every Food Tourist Should Experience These Festivals at Least Once

    Can any self-respecting food lover really give themselves the “foodie” title if they haven’t done some form of culinary excursion? I mean, it’s not only about being able to differentiate between pounded and poundo yam. 

    That’s where we come in. By the time you experience these food festivals, you’ll be more than deserving of your “food lover” ID card.

    Bole Festival

    Whether you spell it as “bole” or “boli”, this should be the first stop on your food tour. You’d be surprised by the different bole recipes available. Warning: You may never eat it with groundnuts again.

    Image: Bole Festival on X

    Burning Ram

    If you think about it, meat may be every food lover’s origin story. Almost all of us passed through a stealing-meat-from-the-pot phase — don’t even deny it. Burning Ram celebrates the Nigerian culture of meat and grill, and the best part? As of the date of publishing, you can still be a part of the 2023 edition.

    New Yam Festival

    Yam is the Nigerian staple, not jollof rice. How else do you explain how almost every state and tribe in the country has their own version of a New Yam Festival? For the Igbos, it’s typically celebrated after the rainy season in August, and referred to as “Iwa ji” or “Iri ji”. For the Yorubas, especially in Ekiti, it is termed “Odun Ijesu”. Irrespective of what tribe you celebrate with, you’re sure to find yam delicacies of all types, music, dance and masquerade displays at a New Yam Festival.

    Image: The Guardian Nigeria

    West Africa Food Festival

    This festival is proof you don’t have to japa to expand your tastebuds. As the name implies, this festival involves celebrating the dishes and culinary culture of West African countries. The annual festival is typically held in the countries along West Africa, and 2022’s edition was in Lagos. It features food, competitions and wine tastings.

    Image: Flickr

    Lagos Seafood Festival

    You might think you like seafood, but have you really had everything the sea has to offer if you haven’t eaten stuff like octopus or human-sized fish? The annual festival was rebranded to “Lagos Food Festival” in 2022, but you’re still sure to find interesting sea creatures when you attend.

    Argungu Festival

    The cultural festival has increasingly become associated with food, as it involves a fishing competition to catch the biggest fish. It happens in Kebbi over a four-day period every year and features agricultural showcases, musical performances as well as wrestling and swimming competitions. 

    The winner of the 2020 fishing competition was awarded ₦10m, two cars and two seats to Hajj. Excuse me while I go learn how to fish.

    Image: The Nation

    Calabar Carnival

    Termed “Africa’s biggest street party”, the carnival celebrates the Cross River culture, but the cuisine is a huge part of it. It’s an annual four-day event that features a food festival of its own, with rich Efik cuisine, grills and drinks.

    Image: The Whistler

    Jos Food Festival

    If you’ve ever entertained curiosity about what food on the Plateau tastes like, you might want to add the Jos Food Festival to your itinerary. It features indigenous food displays and local musical performances.

    Image: Sunday Alamba

    PS: You can’t have read up to this point without signing up for Burning Ram. Do it now.


    NEXT READ: Like Boli, These Nigerian Meals Deserve Their Own Festivals

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  • 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.

  • QUIZ: Choose a Meal and We’ll Predict Your 2023 Relationship Status

    If food is the way to the heart, then it can definitely be used to predict future relationships. Choose between these meals and see.

  • How to Get a Nigerian Woman to Eat

    If you ever happen to have a Nigerian woman in your life who refuses to eat or can’t decide what to eat — which is almost every time — here are six tried and trusted ways to convince her. 

    Bring the food directly in front of her 

    You’re using the food to trap her in her seat or bed. By the time the only way she can move is to eat what’s in front of her, you won’t have to tell her twice. 

    Eat beside her 

    She don’t want her own, but knowing it belongs to you will make her want to eat. She’ll keep picking at your plate until she’s finished everything in it. 

    RELATED: 6 Reasons Why Nigerian Women Don’t Iron Their Clothes 

    Pay her to eat 

    One thing women love? Money.  I can’t believe we’ve gotten to a point where we have to pay women to take care of themselves, but here we are. 

    Cook the food for her 

    If she refuses to eat, remind her that you spent hours in the kitchen cooking for her. Don’t be above using guilt to get her to take care of herself better. So enter kitchen and start cooking. 

    RELATED: 7 Reasons Why Women Love Bodysuits

    Seize her coffee or tea

    It’s become transactional. If she doesn’t eat, deny her access to her drinks. The love Nigerian woman have for those drinks will force her to eat, even if it’s a little. 

    Gist her and just give her food 

    There’s something about gist that makes a woman not even realise she’s eating. Just invite her over because you want to give her sweet gist, and be dumping the food into her lap. It’ll be gone before you know it. 

    RELATED: 7 Reasons Why Nigerian Women Love Pockets 

  • Hear Me Out: Why You Should Eat Your Sorrows Away

    Hear Me Out is a weekly limited series where Ifoghale and Ibukun share the unsolicited opinions some people are thinking, others are living but everyone should hear.


    If you ever manage to glimpse my YouTube watch history, I promise I’m not obsessed with Gordon Ramsey. Instead, zoom into those video thumbnails and see the image of my one, true love — spaghetti. 

    We’ve been skin-tight since 2021, Spaghetti and I. I’ll have to thank my depression for introducing us. The bigger picture here is that you can eat your way to happiness. Hear me out.

    Grab the closest skillet you can find. Fill it up with water and bring to a boil. Now, I wasn’t born depressed. At least, I remember being five and wanting to dance all the time. I loved Michael Jackson and practised his moonwalk non-stop. My parents fed me every day. I went to school, came home and did homework. As a teenager, I annoyed my siblings and hung out with my friends, you know, normal kid stuff. So it’s hard to say when I began to fall apart.

     One online evaluation later, I was staring at two options: psychotherapy (too expensive) or medication (pills, ugh!)

    What I know for sure is that I lost someone I loved very dearly in July of 2021, and it stung like a bitch. Though, yes, most of 2021 was a shitshow, the grief from that one singular loss pressed down upon me like the heaviest blanket. 

    Is the water boiling? Toss in a generous amount of salt. Go wild with the salt, you want that water salty. Open your pack of spaghetti, throw in your version of one person’s serving into the skillet and cover. 

    My depression diagnosis came because I’d unintentionally hurt my friend when I disappeared from her life. I felt bad that I was making her feel bad, and so with her seated on my bed, I booked an appointment with a doctor. One online evaluation later, I was staring at two options: psychotherapy (too expensive) or medication (pills, ugh!)

    Now’s the time to cook the Guanciale (cured pork cheek). Don’t worry if you can’t find that; bacon works fine. What you want to do is cut the meat into one-inch cubes and toss it into a pan or skillet under medium heat. Don’t forget to throw in a bit of butter.

    Coconut head that I am, I told myself, “I’m only a little sad, I’ll make some spaghetti and be happy again.” Your comfort food tends to be personal. Maybe it reminds you of something from your childhood or just the act of eating itself grounds you. People stress eat, but that’s not what this is about. I’m talking about the bowl of [insert favourite food] that seizes your attention (and taste buds) for a few minutes. 

    Spaghetti was my food of choice because it allowed me to be lazy. Inside the pockets of depression where I lived, I was always tired. Always sad and always numb. Check on your spaghetti right about now. You want to cook it until it’s al denté — not cooked all the way through.

    Once your spaghetti is almost cooked through, turn off the heat and dump it into the pan with your cooking meat. Remember that everything is happening quickly. Grab about half a cup of your pasta water and pour it into the spaghetti + meat mixture. Turn your heat all the way up and toss vigorously. Put your elbow into it, your ancestors are watching!

    I love the way my brain stops circling the dead thing it carries and shifts its attention towards making the best damn bowl of spaghetti.

    Discovering Spaghetti Carbonara was an accident. My depression led me through a period when I lived on spaghetti and ketchup for weeks. That ugly splash of ketchup across the spaghetti strands looked like depression in a bowl. After I ran out of ketchup, I made a list of the items left in my fridge and threw them at Google for something, anything, to eat. 

    Enter Gordon Ramsey and his Spaghetti Carbonara recipe. Filmed on a mobile phone by his daughter, the video was fast-paced and had a lot of jokes. The best part? How every second of the video left no space for thinking — just cutting, tossing and good vibes. It was perfect, delicious and easy enough that I nailed the recipe on my first try.

    In my saddest moments, I start with a skillet of boiling water and run along the steps it takes until there’s a creamy dish in my bowl. I love the way my brain stops circling the dead thing it carries and shifts its attention towards making the best damn bowl of spaghetti. Comfort food won’t kill our sadness and it won’t reverse our grief, but it will give us the space to consider anything else but the grief.

    With your tossed spaghetti in the pan, meat soaked and pasta water combined, turn off the heat completely. Very quickly crack two eggs and separate the yolks into a bowl. It’s traditional (I mean Italian, which is where the dish is from) to grate some Parmesan Reggiano into the egg yolks, but you have my permission to skip this.

    Lightly salt the eggs and beat until homogenous. Pour the egg yolks into your spaghetti and toss very quickly, allowing just the heat from the spaghetti to slightly cook the eggs. You don’t want the eggs to scramble, and this is why we turned off the heat.

    Serve in a bowl, dust it off with some black pepper, and there you go — happiness. 

    It’s beautiful, isn’t it? 

    I’ll usually open a bottle of beer with mine, but please, you do you!

    For however long we spend cooking and eating (just eating is also fine), we can learn to live beside our grief, instead of being crushed by it. My friend is even more stubborn than I am and does not believe in my spaghetti therapy. If I do end up on antidepressants, someone please tell me I won’t be too numb to still make spaghetti?

    ALSO READ: 7 Meals You Can Eat on Sunday Instead of Rice


    Hear Me Out is a brand new limited series from Zikoko, and you can check back every Saturday by 9 a.m. for new episodes from Ifoghale and Ibukun.

  • If Cooking Stresses You Out, This Post Is For You

    1. When you hear someone say it’s your turn to cook.

    Oh no, not again!

    2. When you’re done making a Nigerian meal.

    If you don’t sweat after cooking , that food can never be sweet!

    3. How the kitchen looks like a battlefield when you’re done with it.

    The more scattered, the better!

    4. Your mum’s reaction when she eats your food.

    Ahn ahn mummy, its just a little salt now!

    5. When you finally discover a Nigerian recipe App.

    Yesss! Time to shame all the people who think I’m a bad cook!

    6. When you’re making the food exactly as you saw it on Youtube, but the food is just not having any sense.

    I think this egusi has malaria!

    7. You, when you finish making swallow.

    I hate this life so much right now!

    8. After all the turning and gyrating, the swallow will now be looking like stone.

    I’m done. Just done.

    9. When you’re using your recipe app to cook and your phone dies.

    Kuku kill me!

    10. When your mum starts telling all her friends how you don’t know how to cook.

    Mummy you’re the one that taught me! So Kontinu!

    11. When that amebo aunty comes at you with that ‘You must cook for your man so he won’t leave you’ advice.

    Keep wallowing in your backward thinking ma!

    12. When the food decides to burn itself a second time, so you start thinking of dating a chef.

    At this point, that’s the only option!

    13. How you pack cartons of Indomie when shopping, because it’s the only thing saving you from yourself.

    I cannot come and die!

    14. When you finally meet a fine boy, but he says he only can only marry a good cook like his mother, so you have to package like:

    Hello overnight chef!

    15. The pep talk you give yourself when you’re about to cook.

    ‘You will not burn this rice today.’

    16. When you finally get the food done after much wahala, and someone says it’s not sweet.

    My fren keep quiet!

    17. How your in-laws look at you when you serve them croissants and coffee because you’re not trying to embarrass yourself.

    Please ma, manage it like that o! If not stay in your house!

    18. When you finally meet a bae who doesn’t mind your cooking skills and people are having headaches about it.

    Haters gon hate!
  • A Post For Nigerians Who Love Food, By Nigerians Who Love Food

    1. When you don’t want to go out but you hear “free food”.

    My body is ready.

    2. When you go for a buffet and someone tries to enter your front.

    Better respect yourself.

    3. When your mother starts doubting your stomach.

    4. When the person serving food at the owambe keeps passing you.

    See my life.

    5. When the caterer tries to block your blessing.

    Better face your front.

    6. Your plate at every owambe:

    Can’t dull it.

    7. When you follow your friend to a fancy restaurant and you see the tiny portions.

    Am I a goat?

    8. When there is still flesh on your bone and your waiter tries to clear your plate.

    You want to die, ba?

    9. When someone wants to take you on a date that doesn’t involve food.

    Are we in the abroad?

    10. Your monthly food budget:

    Food is the most important, abeg.

    11. When you buy take-away but finish the food before you get home.

    Don’t judge me.

    12. When your friend says you spend too much money on food.

    Face your front.

    13. Nigerian mothers: “…when you’re always eating.”

    Hay God!

    14. When you dish your food and one aunty comes to say “for you alone?!”

    Please, go to your house.

    15. When your siblings eat the food you kept in the fridge.

    Blood is not thicker than food oh!

    16. When the person saying grace for food starts praying too long.

    Can we eat, biko?

    17. You, leaving every party with food like:

    I cannot carry last.

    If you love food as much as we do, don’t carry last on the 500dishes Foodfest:

    YASSS!!! Zikoko will be there hosting the food competition of life – Zikoko Hunger Games.

    And before you say Zikoko never did anything nice for you, we will be giving away free tickets to some lucky readers.

    All you have to do is share this post on either Twitter or Facebook and we will pick at random.

    You can also get 10% off when buying your 500dishes foodfest tickets using the voucher code “ZIKOKO”.

    Head to 500dishes.com/foodfest to get your tickets.