Cassava Leaves and Rice |
Almost every Sierra Leonean will say Cassava leaves is their favourite dish. There is a debate in Sierra Leone about which tribe cooks the best cassava leaves. In my opinion, the draw is between The Mendes and The Fullahs. The best I’ve had was when I first visited Kambia district during the Christmas holidays in 2007. The dish was inexplicably delicious. I still remember to this day how much I enjoyed it. Yum, yum yum!
Ingredients |
Follow the
simple steps below and bring a party to your taste buds. Aprons on!
Ingredients
1. A pack of grounded Cassava Leaves
2. 300ml of Palm oil
3. Pack of Ogiri
4. 4 table spoons Peanut butter (smooth)
5. Meat or chicken
6. smoked fish
7. Scotch bonnet pepper (to your
taste)
8. 3 Onions
9. Maggie season
10. Salt (to your taste)
11. Tola (This a powdered condiment that
has a slimy effect when add to sauces) or okra
Pot of Cassava Leaves |
Directions
1. Blend onions and scotch pepper with ogiri. This should look like a thick
smooth paste.
2. Add the above mixture and your meat in a pot then and add 2 pints of
water.
3. Boil for 20 minutes or until the meat is soft.
4. Meanwhile mix the peanut better with 50ml of water so it is slightly
watery.
5. Add cassava leaves, peanut butter
a cup of water and leave to boil for 20-30min or until the leaves have a slight
brown colour and you cannot smell the rawness of the leaves.
6. Add the palm oil, maggie season, and salt to taste then, leave pot to boil for a further
15min.
7. Finally add okra or tola whichever
is at your disposal and let the sauce cook for a further 5-10 min or until the
palm oil is floating.
Voila!
Dish is done!
Cassava Leaves and Rice |
Hi there. I have been looking for this recipe for YEARS! I don't like okra or anything slimy. Can I make this without it?
ReplyDeleteThe okra/tola is so little that It won’t actually be slimy
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteHas Tola got any medicinal value?
ReplyDelete