Showing posts with label african. Show all posts
Showing posts with label african. Show all posts

Sunday, 25 September 2016

Sa Lone style Butter scotch candy

Nina's Cookery Corner
Homemade Butter Scotch Candy
Good Evening guys! I hope you all had a splendid weekend. Today is one of those days I feel nostalgic and have a sweet tooth. What best way to curb this craving than whip up some homemade butter scotch. Butter scotch is a popular treat to have as a snack when that sweet tooth carving kicks in. Growing up in Sierra Leone this snack was a lunch and after school treat that I enjoyed indulging in with no guilt.
Preparing butter scotch is every simple and easy. You only need two ingredients butter and sweetened condensed milk. The only tricky bit is the moulding stage. You have to be quick at moulding the candy into mini balls before it hardens up.  You have a window of about 10 to 15 minutes.


Ingredients

1.      150 g unsalted butter
2.      379 g of sweetened condensed milk

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Ingredients 

Method
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Stirring butter and milk in medium heat

     1.      Before you start, have a bowl of water and about 2 table spoon of either melted butter or vegetable oil and a large plate ready and aside.
      2.      Melt 125 g of butter in a cooking pot in medium heat.
     3.      Pour sweetened condensed milk into melted butter.
     4.      Use wooden spoon to mix butter and milk together until you have soft golden brown gooey consistency.
     5.      Turn heat off and let the mixture set for at least a minute then start moulding into mini balls. BE EXTREMELY CAUTIOUS! The candy will still be piping hot.
      6.      Rub some oil or butter in your palm then using table spoon scoop tiny portions of the candy and mould into round mini balls. Use water in bowl to cool your hands as you go along. Repeat this step until you mould all the candy.
      7.      Depending on how small you mould the balls you should have about 15-20 pieces.


Nina's Cookery Corner
Homemade Butter Scotch Candy


Voila! Be prepared to satisfy your sweet tooth cravings.

Monday, 25 April 2016

Pepper Soup

Pepper Soup and Red Snapper
Good Evening readers, Hope you all had an amazing weekend. I spent mine nursing a cold with the versatile West African dish Pepper Soup! Pepper soup is a popular dish across West African mostly drank towards the end of parties whilst guests banter and converse about their interests. It is also an excellent remedy for cold and flu. It clears the flu in an instance, the spicier the soup the better. Across the region its cooked quite similarly with either, assorted meat (goat, beef, cow foot, broiler chicken, pig feet, etc) or fish. I opted for red snapper and added potatoes as an accompaniment. I hope you enjoy reading and hopefully try out the recipe. Aprons on!!!

Ingredients
Serving for 4

Ingredients 

1.      4 Scotch Pepper
2.      2 medium sized onions
3.      1 huge potato
4.      2 medium Red Snapper
5.      1 tea spoon tomato puree
6.      1 maggie cube
7.      Sea salt and rosemary seasoning


Cooking Instructions

Boiling soup

1.      Cut each snapper into two pieces and season with sea salt and rosemary.
2.      Peel potato and cut into sizeable cubes and place in sauce pan.
3.      Blend onions with scotch peppers and add this to the sauce pan with the chopped potatoes.
4.      Add 1 litter of water to the pot and bring to boil.
5.      Add maggie cube, half a teaspoon of sea salt tomato puree to give the soup a slight reddish colour. Mix the pot and taste. Add more maggie if you need to.
6.      Let the pot boil for a 25 minutes then, add fish plus half a cup of water and turn the heat low and let the pot boil for a further 5-10 minutes slow cooking the rest of the soup.
perfect remedy


 Voila! Dish is done! 


Monday, 28 March 2016

Coconut Oil Black-eyed Beans Stew

Nina's Cookery Corner
Beans Stew
Hello All! Hope you all had a blessed Easter and enjoyed munching and nibbling on food and Easter treats with your friends and family.
As tradition goes on Good Friday to honour the death of Jesus Christ, Sierra Leoneans refrain from eating meat. Instead meals with fish are prepared for the day. As the current health craze is coconut oil, I decided to make Black-eyed Pea stew with coconut oil and smoked catfish. Follow the steps below to recreate this delish dish. Aprons on!



Nina's Cookery Corner
Ingredients
Serving for 4

Ingredients
·         2 large red onions
·         2 cups of Black-eyed Peas
·         100ml coconut oil
·         4 cloves for garlic
·         Hand bunch of basil
·         2 scotch pepper
·         1 maggie cube






1.      Wash and bring to beans to boil until soft approximately 30-45 min

2.      Peel and slice onions lengthwise

3.      Blend half of the onions with scotch peppers, garlic and basil into a paste.

4.      Soak the catfish over night to get a soft texture.
Nina's Cookery Corner
Maggie in stew

  5.      Pour about 100ml of oil into hot sauce pan and heat to cooking temperature.

  6.      Once oil is heated, fry sliced onions and blended paste for like 5 minutes

   7.      Add fish and let the stew cook for another 10 minutes

   8.      Add maggie cube and two pinches of salt for flavour.

   9.      Add boil beans to the pot with fried stew. Mix together and turn the heat low and let the pot simmer for 10-15 minutes or until all the extra water from the stew has evaporated and you have a really dry stew.


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Ready for serving

Sunday, 10 January 2016

Plantain Fritters

Nina's Cookery Corner
Plantain Fritters
Happy New NCC readers! Thank you all for continuously checking out my blog, Facebook page and your emails about questions regarding my recipes your support is really appreciated and I am always delighted to answer any questions. Hope your year started well and I wish you the very best for 2016.

So I came across a recipe for “plantain mosa” a popular Nigerian street food made with over ripped plantains. With a slight twist omitting the yeast that makes the mosa puffy, I made plantain fritters instead served and with prawns smeared in hot chilli sauce . Follow the simple recipe below to try this delicious fritter. Aprons on!!!

Serving for 4

Ingredients
Nina's Cookery Corner
Ingrdients

4 over ripped plantains
3 stalk of spring onions
1 scotch bonnet pepper
2 eggs
Coconut milk powder
Flour
Baking powder
Ginger
Garlic
Salt
Cooking oil




Directions



1.      Peel and mash plantain in a mixing bowl using fork
2.      Finely chop spring onions and pepper and add to bowl  
3.      Add half a tea spoon grated garlic and ginger
4.      Beat eggs and pour into bowl
5.      Add a tea spoon of coconut milk powder, with a 4 table spoons of plain flour, a pinch of salt and baking powder



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Add caption
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6.      Mix all the ingredients and let it sit for 5 minutes
7.      Preheat oil in frying pan

                     
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Mixture ready for frying



8.      Once the oil is heated, scoop the mixture using serving spoon and add to oil to fry fritters until brown. 
9.      Once fried, place fried fritters on paper towel to drain any excess oil.
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Frying frittes



Voila! Dish is done!

Nina's Cookery Corner
Delicious Dish 

Sunday, 30 August 2015

Potato Leaves "Petehteh Leaf"

Hello NCC readers! Hope you’re having a fab August bank holiday weekend and enjoying whatever activities you have lined up. Once again, thank you all for continuously checking out my blog and Facebook page your support is really appreciated.
Nina's Cookery Corner
Mouth watering Sweet Potato Leaves

In Sierra Leone our staple food is rice and we have this with a variety of greens we call “plasas”. “Plasas” are green leaf sauces cooked with assorted meat and smoked fish. Most of the green leaf dishes have a similar style of preparation however, I must add different indigenous tribes have their own style of cooking but all result to a delicious mouth watering end product. In this post, I decided to cook and blog about one of Sierra Leone’s hearty green dish sweet potato leaves “petehteh leaf" as it is known across Sierra Leone. This dish is a very delicious sauce full vitamins and iron that helps with the flow of oxgen in your blood. I hope you enjoy reading and hopefully get to try my own version of this recipe. Aprons on!!!

Serving for 4

Nina's Cookery Corner
part ingredients
Ingredients 
3 packs of already chopped sweet potato Leaves
200ml of Palm oil
Pack of Ogiri
Tin of Butter beans
4 table spoons Peanut butter (smooth)
Assorted meat of your choice
Smoked fish
Scotch bonnet pepper (to your taste)
2 medium sized Onions
Maggie seasoning (2 cubes)
Salt (to your taste)
3 okra





Directions
Nina's Cookery Corner
Chopped and washed potato leaves
Nina's Cookery Corner
Pot ready  to boil with meats and onion, pepper ogiri paste

1.       Start with washing then bringing your meat to boil until tender for approximately 30-40 minutes.
2.       Next wash the chopped potato leaves and leave it in a colander to drain any excess water.
3.       Next blend onions and scotch pepper with ogiri. This should look like a thick smooth paste.
4.       After the meat has boiled, add the above paste mixture and your meat in a medium sized cooking pot, add 2 pints of water and bring to boil for about 20 minutes.
5.       Whilst the pot boils, mix the peanut better with 50ml of water so it is slightly watery.
6.       Add peanut butter mixture, palm oil, maggie seasoning, and salt after the 20 minutes or until you have a thick soupy consistence.
7.       Then add the washed potato leaves with the smoked fish. Mix the pot and leave pot to boil for a further 15min in medium heat.
8.       Finally chop and crush okra and add to the boiling pot. Turn the heat low and let the sauce simmer for a further 5 min or until the palm oil is floating.

Voila! Dish is done! 


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Tongue smiling dish





Sunday, 26 July 2015

African Canapés

Nina's Cookery Corner
Hello Readers, hope you are all doing well. It’s been a busy summer and exciting things have been happening at Nina’s Cookery Corner. I did my first huge wedding gig in Vienna Austria, preparing and displaying a selection of African canapés for over 400 guests. I am really proud and happy this project went well and got excellent feedback not only from the client but also from guests and the prestigious Austrian catering company that catered for the three course wedding dinner.

Below are some pictures from the event and some African style canapé options.
Some of the recipes for the canapé options can be found on my blog by following the link below. http://ninascookerycorner.blogspot.co.uk/
Feast your eyes on the dishes and don’t forget to like share and comment.

Also, if you’re planning an event, dinner party and want the burden of cooking off your hands, why not let me be your super hero and cater to your needs. Enjoy reading try out the dishes and send me your feedback. Aprons on! 

Nina's Cookery Corner
Olehleh






Plain olehleh with spicy sauce

Nina's Cookery Corner
Gizzard stew and Plantain





















Chicken Gizzard and Plantain. An NCC speciality
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Akara








Akara and spicy garnished sauce.
Nina's Cookery Corner









Tasty Fish fritters that would make your tongue smile.


Nina's Cookery Corner
Fish Balls
















Fishy Fishy Fish balls



Nina's Cookery Corner
Kibbeh with red pepper olive garnish





Sunday, 8 March 2015

Kañiwa/“Foondae” with Grilled Chicken and Spinach Stew


Nina's Cookery Corner
Kaniwa/"Foondae" with Grilled Chicken and Spinach stew
Hello Readers! So last week, a friend sent me an article posted by Mail Online UK ranking countries with the best and worst diets. Sierra Leone was 2nd on the table for the countries with the healthiest diets overall. The smile on my face, broaden like the Grinch’s smile with an exciting idea.

This week’s post was inspired by the Mail Online’s article; Kañiwa/“Foondae” with Grilled Chicken and Spinach Stew. I am convinced Kañiwa is “Foondae” – not sure about spelling). “Foondae”/ Kañiwa is used as a healthy substitute for rice in Sierra Leone. From my online research I learnt it is a cousin of quinoa, or some call it baby quinoa as it is a really tiny grain. Like quinoa, it is a "pseudo-cereal" with a high level of protein (15 to 19 percent) and a more complete balance of amino acids than most grains. (Source- http://wholegrainscouncil.org/whole-grains-101/whole-grains-a-to-z)

Both of the main ingredients in this post are super healthy. Spinach is full of iron, protein, vitamins and minerals which are good for your vision, skin, and hair. I hope you enjoy reading and hopefully get to try out this recipe. Aprons on!!!

Serving for 4

Ingredients 
Nina's Cookery Corner
Ingredients
A pack of spinach
2 cups of Kañiwa grains
4 medium sized chicken thighs
2 medium sized onions
2 Scotch bonnet peppers
6 cherry tomatoes
50ml olive oil
Maggie seasoning
Chicken seasoning
Black and white, pepper
Teaspoon mixed herbs
1 tinned chopped
Tomato purée 

Cooking Instructions

Spinach Stew
Nina's Cookery Corner
Grilling chicken and cherry tomatoes

1.      Wash and season chicken with chicken seasoning, black and white, pepper
2.      Then grill chicken in a grill pan, 5 minutes on each side on medium heat.
3.      Grill cherry tomato as well 1min on each side and put aside with chicken as this would be used later to garnish the dish.
4.      Slice onions slices lengthwise.
5.       Pre-heat 50ml olive oil in a pot on medium heat.
6.      Then fry onions and chopped tinned tomatoes also adding a teaspoon of mixed herbs and tomato puree into the pot and fry in medium heat for 5 - 10 minutes or until tender
  7.      Put spinach in a big bowl and pour a kettle of hot water over it and leave it to cook by steam for 2 min.
  8.      Drain water from the bowl; using a colander getting rid of all excess water.
  9.      Then stir the drained spinach into the stew. Leave it to simmer in medium heat for about 5 min then add your grilled chicken to the stew.
  10.  Finally leave the stew to cook for further 5 min and your stew is ready.
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Frying onions and chopped tomatoes
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Spinach added to stew 









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Dish Almost done
Kañiwa/“Foondae”
1.      Boil 700ml of water in a pot
2.      Wash “Foondae”/ Kañiwa and add to boiling water with a pinch of salt.
3.      Leave to cook in low heat for about 20 -25min checking it at 5 min intervals.
4.      Should you need to sprinkle a handful of water over the kañiwa if the grain are still uncooked. 





Nina's Cookery Corner
Kaniwa/"Foondae" with Grilled Chicken and Spinach stew