Food & Home Entertaining – September 2019

(Joyce) #1

tastes


OF HOME


A


ngola, Botswana, Comoros, Eswatini
(formerly Swaziland), Lesotho,
Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius,
Mozambique, Namibia, South
Africa and Zimbabwe comprise the
southernmost part of mainland and
island Africa. Typified by cities and
super-highways, as well as villages
and mud tracks, they also have forests that merge into
grasslands and deserts that become mountains, while
rivers flow into seas. The region’s human history is
equally layered as First Nation Bushman inhabitants were
subsequently joined by Bantu-speaking people migrating
from further north in Africa, then by European and Asian
settlers. As such, the resulting food cultures are infused
with a variety of influences and ancestry but, for every
point of difference, there is also
a striking similarity.

Across southern Africa, sorghum and millet were the original
indigenous grains. In the modern era, maize has become the
staple starch.
On mainland southern Africa, key cultural and community
events are often celebrated and/or commiserated, nose to
tail – from naming ceremonies to funerals – in beef. Whether
slow-cooked like Zimbabwe’s Ndebele-style amangqina (beef
trotters) and South Africa’s Xhosa umsila wenkomo (oxtail
stew) or speedily seared as steaks at an Afrikaner braai, beef

marks major collective moments. With cows comes dairy –
most commonly fermented and variously known as amasi
in South Africa, omaere in Namibia and madila in Botswana.
Chicken, which is also largely consumed across the region,
often appears as simpler street foods like Lesotho’s grilled
maotwana (chicken’s feet) and Mozambique’s frango Africano
(piri-piri chicken). The chilli-laden heat of piri-piri reappears
in Comorian poutou hot sauce, the palate-spiking perfection
that is Mauritian mazavaroo and South Africa’s Durban-style,
mother-in-law masalas.
While meat is ceremonially significant, there is a wise
South African Pedi proverb that states that “nama e a etela,
morogo ke wa ka mehla” (meat is a visitor, whereas wild
leaves are a daily food). Cape waterblommetjiebredie
meets Creole flavour relatives in Madagascan spiced
brède mafane leaves. The peppery tang of Zimbabwean
muriwo (leafy greens) is balanced by the rich, soothing
generosity of peanut butter, which also features in Malawian
mtedza stew and Angolan kitaba, as well as chilli pastes.
In these clusters of core ingredients, culinary techniques
and attitudes towards food, it is possible to identify a
regional taste profile. Until recently, these fine flavours
were found almost exclusively in a home-cooking
context. Now, modern chefs are reimagining the regional
gastronomic gems as restaurant cuisine. We catch
up with two southern African chefs at the forefront of
our food revolution to find out more about how they
are taking their food to new and greater heights.

Africa’s fine flavours are deliciously


diverse and epically ancient. Now,


a new generation of chefs are


offering innovative interpretations


of the continent’s fabulous food


genres. In this issue, the fourth of


a five-part series, we savour the


splendours of modern southern


African gastronomy


BY ANNA TRAPIDO

FOODANDHOME.CO.ZA SEPTEMBER 2019 31

CHEFS’ PROFILES PART 4

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