Stella Dimoko Korkus.com: NIGERIAN FOOD WITH FOREIGN ORIGINS

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Thursday, August 03, 2017

NIGERIAN FOOD WITH FOREIGN ORIGINS

Nigerian cuisines consists of delicious and mouthwatering dishes from the many ethnic groups in Nigeria and typically involve the use of spices and herbs with palm oil or groundnut oil to make varieties of deliciously flavoured food, often spiced with chilli peppers. However, there are some of our mouth-watering Nigerian food that actually have foreign origins.





Jollof Rice


All Nigerians are probably very familiar with the ‘Jollof wars’ by now and though which country’s Jollof rice is the best remains a topic of passionate debate, there is one interesting fact about Jollof rice that might be unknown by many – Jollof rice is actually of foreign origin. The origins of Jollof rice can be traced to the Senegambian region that was ruled by the Jolof empire.



Fried Rice


This probably wouldn’t come as a shock to many but Fried rice is another food with foreign origin that has been adopted by Nigerians to become one of the popular Nigerian cuisines. The exact origins of fried rice has actually been lost to history but it is believed to be of Chinese origin, invented sometime within the Sui Dynasty (589 – 618 AD), in the city of Yangzhou in the eastern Jiangsu province.



Coconut Rice


Over time, this dish has become a beloved dish of many seeking something different from the conventional white rice. Coconut rice is typically prepared by soaking white rice in coconut milk or cooking it with coconut flakes. Though coconut rice is found in many cultures of the world, it is believed to have its origins in the South Asia, Southeast Asia and Latin America regions.



Corn Soup


This is locally referred to as ‘Omi Ukpopka’ and is a common food of the Afemai people in northern Edo state. Though the Afemai’s people’s version of the meal is exclusive to them, the origin of meal ‘corn soup’ can actually be traced to the Native Americans. Corn soup was a popular dish of the Native Americans mainly due to the fact that corn was a staple crop for many Native American tribes. Asides the Nigerian ‘Omi Ukpoka’, there are other variations of the corn soup which include: creamed corn soup, sweet corn soup, corn crab soup, Chinese sweet corn soup, dried Indian corn soup, Mexican corn soup and Tibetan style corn soup.
by damilola Ojo.



*Which other Nigerian meal has foreign origin?


34 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Akara (meat ball) from Brazil . Spaghetti meals from Italy. And we cook it so wrongly here, it's meant to be cooked half done

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    2. Please anon, akara isn't meat ball.

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    3. Anonymous nope akara is of African origin, it was taken to Brazil by the African slaves.

      Meatpie, is of British origin

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  2. Coconut rice is a lie jare. Lagosians have long made variations of a lot of things with coconut. Indigenous lagosians have coconut in abundance which you see all over the beaches. You may say other's got their inspiration from abroad. But not Lagosians with coconut rice or anything to do with coconut. Since even my great grand father was small, coconut was used with rice and used to make delicious treats.

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  3. Wow I can see my tribe up there, proudly Afemai

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  4. Wow I can see my tribe up there, proudly Afemai

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  5. Frijon,frijoada - brazillian

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    Replies
    1. We eat that every Easter in my mum's family. Brazilian quarters of Lagos island

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  6. Jollof rice and fried rice?i LOVE but coconut rice?Can't deal abeg.I Hate it with passion,it's smell abi aroma disgusts me.Corn soup?i have never tasted it and not ready to yet,maybe when i grow up

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    Replies
    1. Coconut rice disgusts you?😲😲😲

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    2. Ah lucile for real oo.my brother's wife is from fuga edo state and she has triiiiied to make me taste the soup,but i fitint

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    3. Pure nigerian the smell of coconut rice can make me puke.i know i'm that only one that doesn't like coconut rice,my friends in school then call me weirdo

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  7. Ewa Aganyin popular beans and stew meal popular in Lagos originated from Togo.

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  8. I don't belive that jellofrice matter ooo

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  9. If I use my hard earned salary to buy cloth and come to your occasion and end up not eating jellof rice, my dear forget the friendship cos that will be the day I quit the relationship. You can't imagine the kind of hot tears I shed anytime i don't get to eat rice in an occasion. Jellof is bea

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    Replies
    1. For Pete's same, it is not jellof.. it is JOllof!!!!!

      Khai

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  10. Awww.I never knew oh.but if jolof rice originated from the oyibos,how come they don't eat it?and I'm also sure they don't know how to prepare it.I'm confused.

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    Replies
    1. Jollof Rice is foreign meaning that it is not Nigerian and in this case it comes from another African country known as Senegal. They were the Wollof people who cook thiz rice till today. Nigerians and Ghanaians have adopted it and made it popular.

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    2. Sdk first daughter you're so dumb,foreign doesn't always mean oyinbo.senegal and Gambia are Africans

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  11. I love chinese corn soup. Well, dts the only one i know and have tasted.

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  12. I love coconut rice with that its flavour. Chai.

    Let me look for money for my sis to cook for us tomorrow.

    It is well. It is good to know our food has foreign origins

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  13. Coconut rice is a traditional meal for the Efiks.
    that is why you hear in every trad marriage there is always 'Edesi Isip'

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  14. Nigerians does not use chilling pepper in their cuisine! The writer should try again.

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  15. Corn soup i remember so well, usually prepared by my grandmother nene

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  16. oyibos here cook jollof o but with plenty curry and they don't fry their tomato

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    Replies
    1. Oyinbo people don't know how to cook jolloff rice,they don't even know how to eat it except for few who are married to Nigerians or have Nigerian friends that they attend owanbe parties together.i think you are talking about curry rice and that is actually Indian cuisine as well as curry goat sauce.oyinbo people hardly eat rice...they eat bread alot

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    2. There is schzwan rice which is very similar to Jollof rice .i think that's what The anonymous is talking about

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