Cuisine of the Central African Republic
Centrafrican cuisine includes the cuisines, cooking traditions, practices, ingredients and foods of the Central African Republic (CAR). Indigenous agriculture in the country includes millet, sorgum, banana, yam,[1] okra, yellow onion, garlic, spinach, rice and palm oil. Imported crops of American origin include maize, manioc (cassava), peanuts, chili peppers,[1] sweet potato and tomato.[2] Additional foods include onions garlic, chiles and peanuts.[3]
Meats can be scarce in the Central African Republic, although fish is used in a variety of dishes, and other sources of protein include peanuts and insects such as cicadas, grasshoppers, crickets and termites.[3] Common meats in Centrafrican cuisine include chicken and goat.[2] Wild game is also hunted, especially in rural areas and during the grass burning dry-season.[4] Staple foods include starches, such as millet, rice, sesame and sorghum. A variety of vegetables and sauces are also consumed.[1][3]
Roadside stalls sell foods such as baked goods and makara (a type of fried bread), sandwiches, barbecued meat and snacks.[4] In the forests and in markets of Bangui where forest items are sold, caterpillars and the koko leaf are eaten.[4] Restaurants are mostly for expatriates.[4] Wild tubers, leaves, and mushrooms are used.[4] Palm oil is widely used in various dishes.[4]
The capital city of Bangui has western foods and hotel restaurants.[5] The legal drinking age is 18. Muslims are prohibited from drinking alcohol.[5] The K-Cinq area is known for its smaller restaurants serving with reasonably priced traditional dishes served.[5]
Common foods and dishes
- Bushmeat [6][7]
- Cassava and cassava greens[6]
- Chicken and cumin stew[5]
- Chichinga, skewered barbecued goat[2]
- Egusi sauce, common in many areas of Central Africa[7]
- Fish, such as Capitaine[1] (Nile perch), which is fished at the river in Bangui[7]
- Fruit, such as oranges, pineapple, plantain and banana[7]
- Foutou, pounded plantains[1] Both fufu and foutou are eaten like bread and often served with stews, soups and sauces [2][3] Mashed yams are also sometimes used to prepare foutou.[7]
- Fufu, pounded cassava[1]
- Fulani Boullie, a porridge with rice, peanut butter, millet flour and lemon[2]
- Gozo, a paste prepared from cassava flour[7]
- Kanda ti nyma, spicy meatballs made with beef[2]
- Muama de galinha, chicken with okra and palm oil[3][5]
- Muamba, a stew made with minced palm nuts. Tomato, peanuts and chicken are often added[2]
- Palm butter soup,[5] prepared with palm butter[3]
- Spinach, often cooked with groundnuts[7]
- Spinach stew [2][5]
- Shrimp with boiled sweet potato/boiled yam[5]
- Yam, which is indigenous to the Central African Republic [1] In the mid 1800s, additional new yam varieties were introduced by Europeans.[1]
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Beverages
Non-alcoholic beverages
- Coffee[2]
- Tea[2] (tea and coffee are prepared with sugar and evaporated milk from cans)[4]
- Ginger beer[5]
- Karkanji is a hibiscus flower drink from the north.[2]
Alcoholic beverages
- Palm wine [3]
- Banana wine [3]
- Soft drinks[4]
- Traditional beer used sorghum[4]
- Beer brands include Mocaf and Export (beer brand)[2]
- Alcohol made from cassava or sorghum[4]
Cuisine in Bangui
Bangui is the capital of the Central African Republic, and the staple diet of the people there includes cassava, rice, squash, pumpkins and plantains (served with a sauce) and grilled meat. Okra or gombo is a popular vegetable. Peanuts and peanut butter are widely used. Game is popular, as are the fish-based dishes such as maboké.[8] Manioc flour is used for preparing fufu.[9]
There are three types of restaurants in Bangui. Some focus on foreign cuisine, such as 'Relais des Chasses', 'La Tentation' and 'L'Escale', which are orientated towards French food, and 'Ali Baba' and 'Beyrouth', which serve Lebanese cuisine food. There are a large number of African restaurants, such as the "Madame M'boka", a favorite of the locals. A number of bars and street food stalls compliment Bangui's culinary scene.[10]
Alcoholic beverages served are locally brewed beer, palm wine and banana wine. Non-alcoholic beverages that are drunk include ginger beer.[11] Village ecologique Boali en RCA in Boali is known for its local dishes.[5]
Food scarcity
CAR's potential agricultural output can feed the entire population, however, four coups have occurred during the last decade which has significantly reduced agriculture and food production.[12] These political and economic crises have caused significant food shortages due to the burning of agricultural fields, food storage areas and villages by armed groups.[12]
History
France once colonized what is now the country of Central African Republic as part French Equatorial Africa, and French influences are present in the nation's cuisine, including French bread and wine. During the 19th century Arab slave traders brought Middle Eastern influences.[2] Earlier in its history it was then part of empires like Kanem-Bornu and Dafour based around Lake Chad, and its cuisine is similar to that of surrounding countries.[2] Today the population is mostly Christian with Muslims in a majority in the north.[2]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Woodfork, Jacqueline Cassandra (2006). Culture and Customs of the Central African Republic. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 79–88. ISBN 0313332037
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Centrafrican Food Recipes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Central African Republic." Foodspring.com. Accessed June 2011.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Culture of Central African Republic - history, people, clothing, women, beliefs, food, family, social, dress
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Central African Republic — Food and Restaurants | iExplore
- 1 2 Evans, Dyfed Lloyd. The Recipes of Africa. Dyfed Lloyd Evans. p. 159.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Jacob-Ashkenazi, Jeanne; Ashkenazi, Michael (Ph.D.); Ashkenazi, Michael (Ph.D.) (2014). The World Cookbook. ABC-CLIO. pp. 237–242. ISBN 1610694694.
- ↑ Maboke of Nile Perch (Maboké de Capitaine) Recipe from Central African Republic
- ↑ Postal, Telegraph and Telephone Workers' International (1959). PTTI Bulletin. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- ↑ Ham 2010, pp. 544-45.
- ↑ "Central African Republic". Health and welfare. Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
- 1 2 "Central African Republic." World Food Programme. Accessed June 2011.