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

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

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

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

    As told to Steffi O.

    Okpa was part of my childhood

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

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

    Experiencing okpa in Nsukka

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

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

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

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

    What exactly is okpa?

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

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

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

    RELATED: 12 Beautiful Delicacies From All Over Nigeria

    Having a family that dislikes okpa

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

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

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

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

  • 10 Nigerian Foods You’ll Miss A Lot When You Travel Abroad

    Yes, japa-ing is the latest thing. You wake up one day, pack your load and leave Nigeria and its many deficiencies alone. That’s commendable. But then, there’s one thing no one prepares you for, and that is the number of Nigerian foods you will miss when you are out of the country.

    We made a list of some of those foods:

    1. Ewa agoyin

    Ewa Aganyin - Ewa Agoyin - My Active Kitchen

    Yes, you can cook it at home. But can you, really? Can you replicate the taste? The sauce, the soft yams that are sometimes paired with it?

    Dear Opebi residents, the Ewa Agoyin you eat is cooked close to a canal |  InsideMainland

    Can you get this peculiar flavour?

    2. Suya

    LMAO. There’s no other way to say this. Suya comes with the Nigerian package. You see those TikTok videos of people making suya? Welp. If it is not suya, it cannot taste like suya.

    3. Ofada rice

    You know, you can easily cook this on your own. But can your neighbours withstand the smell? Sometimes being a good neighbour means that you have to let go of some of the things you enjoy eating.

    4. Abacha

    Can you find Abacha hawkers in Canada or New York?

    5. Efo riro

    There are a lot of plants in the abroad, but I’m sure none of those people have a farm for Efo soko or Efo tete. So, what’s going to happen?

    6. Kilishi

    Kilishi – Eazy Mart

    This one can be managed by shipping. Your people in Nigeria can ship it over to you.

    7. Agege bread

    Sure, you can get proper (and better) American bread. But can it ever be like Agege bread?

    8. Bole

    Port Harcourt people will feel this the most. But even those who are not from Port Harcourt will also know what it feels like to be in a country where bole is not readily available.

    9. Amala and abula

    Gbegiri - Abula (How to make Gbegiri) - My Active Kitchen

    We know this can be cooked at home. But can anything beat the local abula in a local buka? The heat of the buka, the sweat, the… *whew*

    10. Okpa

    CoalCityConnect on Twitter: "So you are supposed to eat one everyday for  one full week. Which would you choose. Retweet for Okpa Like for Moi Moi.  #CoalcityConnect… https://t.co/rpVNw9sQqJ"

    If you’re a foreigner visiting Nigeria for the first time, this one is for you:

    Dear Foreigners, Here Are 15 Foods To Try When You Visit Nigeria


  • Haters, Shift to One Side. This Is a Beans Appreciation Post

    1. Can your favourite meal ever look as beautiful as these akara balls?

    2. Can your fried rice give life like this Okpa?

    3. You can’t hate on this glorious Ewa Agoyin please.

    4. This moin moin didn’t come to play.

    5. Dan Wake that will make you fall in love.

    6. This ekuru that deserves its own chieftancy title.

    7. Can your favourite food ever make ewedu look this good? I guess not!