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foodies | Zikoko!
  • Like an Owambe, but the Meat Won’t Finish

    The worst thing to hear at an owambe is, “Food has finished.” The second worst thing? Hearing meat has finished, and you have to eat party jollof with only your hopes and dreams.

    Unacceptable.

    Neither will be your fate at Burning Ram. We’re bringing you an exclusive celebration of Nigerian meat and barbecue culture on November 11 in Lagos, and it’ll be a full-on festival.

    There are several ticket options available, so whether you plan to explore on your own or with your food-loving squad, you can save coins by getting an early bird special or one of the group tickets.

    Remember, your ticket includes entry to the festival, where you will experience a variety of activities such as VRSUS competitions, suya-making tutorials, grilling masterclasses, meat-tasting sessions and meat-inspired art and crafts. 

    You can also enter our exclusive raffle with an additional ₦1000 and stand a chance to take home the ultimate prize of a live ram.

    Why haven’t you gotten a ticket yet? Don’t wait until they sell out!


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  • Foodies and Aspiring Chefs, Are You Sleeping on This Income Opportunity?

    Every week, Zikoko will share the hustle stories of Nigerians making it big in and out of the country. With each story, we’ll ask one crucial question in several ways: “How you do am?”

    Sola Ajao’s hustle story taught us one thing: You can do what you love, and become a baller while at it. She took her love of cooking to Boston, US and has made a profitable business out of it.

    If you also have a passion for the kitchen arts, this guide will take you step-by-step on how you can make money from it too.

    Image source: Pexels

    First off, what does it mean to be a chef?

    You might know how to throw down a mean plate of noodles and egg, but that’s not all there is to being a chef. A chef is a professional cook who knows all there is to know about food preparation, cooking techniques, recipe creation and even kitchen management. You could say a chef is someone who knows their onions; pun very intended.

    It’s a good pun. Admit it.

    Is there a difference between a chef and a cook?

    Yes. Anyone can pick up tricks from how their mum or Iya Basira down the street make Ewa Agoyin and become a cook. A cook follows established recipes to prepare meals.

    Chefs are also cooks, but they most likely had to undergo some form of training to understand flavours and create recipes from scratch. They put in the work and, in some cases, have the qualifications to match.

    Not this kind of “putting in the work”, sha.

    What are the qualifications needed?

    Many chefs and cooks start out self-taught, but if you want to make a legitimate business out of it like Sola did, you’ll need evidence of formal training like diplomas and certificates. You can get this from taking a course in a registered culinary school.

    Don’t confuse a culinary school with a catering school, though. Those train people who are interested in the catering business, which involves learning how to cook for mass distribution. Think, owambes.

    So, how do you become a professional chef in Nigeria?


    There are several culinary school options to choose from. The duration of training varies depending on what you’re training for. For example, training to be a sous chef (the second-in-command in a kitchen) would probably take less time than training to be a head chef.

    If you need help making a choice, take a look at some popular culinary schools in Nigeria.

    Red Dish Chronicles
    Crumbles Chef Academy
    Topkraft Culinary Academy
    CMK Culinary Institute
    Abuja Culinary School

    How do you make money as a chef?

    This is probably the reason you’re reading this article in the first place, and honestly, we respect it.

    As a chef, you can make money in a number of ways:

    As a job: That’s the major point of getting the  required certifications. Qualified chefs are well sought-after in high-end restaurants.

    As a side hustle: You can also decide to offer catering services on the side for the million owambes that happen every Saturday in Nigeria. There’s also the option of offering personal chef services to individuals and corporations.

    As a brand: Building a visible personal brand is a great way to make sure you stay in demand. If you’re on Instagram, you’ll know some companies now choose to take on celebrity chefs on Instagram as brand ambassadors. Secure the bag, boo.

      Does “chef” refer to a male or female?

      Can only a specific gender eat? No? Well, that answers the question. Anyone can be a chef. It’s not a gender-specific noun. Now, go forth and cook up a storm.

      NEW SITE LOADING IN…

      [countdown date=”March 9, 2023 9:00:00″]


      NEXT READ: What Does a Career in Data Science Involve? Here’s the Tea


    • 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

    • 9 Fast Foods That Can Get Nigerians In Their Feelings

      If you think it’s only credit alerts that can get people in their feelings, then you haven’t seen Nigerians eating one of these ten fast foods.

      It’s truly love at first sight. Argue with spoon and plate.

      1. Small chops

      If you’re looking for how to blow and finish Nigerians’ money, add small chops to your menu. Don’t say we didn’t do anything for you.

      2. Sharwarma

      If you’ve been toasting a Nigerian babe and she keeps airing you, order Sharwarma for her frequently and watch the magic unfold.

      3. Akara

      Akara is king, and every true Nigerian knows this. From breakfast to brunch and even dinner, it can do no wrong.

      4. Suya

      If you’ve never been disappointed by a Mai Suya when you really craved it, or used your last 1k to buy suya, then you might not understand the feeling.

      5. Burger

      How does one start to explain the feeling? Is it the tasty flavours or filling effect? *Speaks in foodacious tongues*

      6. Peppered fish/meat

      There’s something about eating peppered protein with your fingers that leaves you in orgasmic throes.

      Photo credit: Sisi Jemimah

      7. Chicken & Chips

      Dead the idea that you can successfully eat one without the other. Where’s the enjoyment in that?

      8. Pizza

      You don’t believe Pizza can get people in their feelings? Go to any Domino’s Pizza near you and see for yourself.

      9. Noodles

      What is “fast food” if noodles, a.k.a indomie leaves the group chat? And if you’re thinking only children eat noodles, we don’t know what to say to you.

    • 8 Stages Of Hunger Only True Foodies Can Understand

      There are people who eat food out of necessity, and then there are full-blown food stans. They walk, breathe and see food. If you want to kidnap them, just go where the food is at.

      If this is talking to you directly, then these stages of hunger shouldn’t be new to you.

      1. Anger and irritation

      You’re just getting angry anyhow. A hungry man is an angry man after all. If anyone does something to pepper your body, you can even bite them.

      2. Weight loss

      Their jeans suddenly fit and you’re saying “body goals”? You don’t know the flat stomach is as a result of hunger? Nothing else.

      3. Confusion

      Suddenly words cease to make sense, except it’s “food”. Even instructions like “Go” becomes “come” at this stage.

      4. Heightened sense of smell

      That’s when your nose becomes extra sensitive like that of a rat. You’ll begin to perceive fried chicken inside the toilet.

      5. Reflection

      At this point, you begin to remember all the times you had food all around and you probably wasted it. If you can just see a plate of amala now, you’ll change your ways.

      6. Forgetfulness

      You become forgetful. Even if your destiny helper asks for your account number now, you cannot remember because hunger has colonised your brain. Chai.

      7. Near madness

      It’ll be doing you as if if you don’t eat in the next minute, you’ll go mad. If you’re the friend of a foodie, avoid them at this point.

      8. Joy

      There’s happiness and then there’s joy. The joy foodies feel in their stomach at the sight of food cannot be explained. That’s if they don’t die before the food arrives.

      Send this to a fellow foodie, let them feel seen.