Botswana cuisine

The cuisine of Botswana is unique but also shares some characteristics with other cuisines of Southern Africa. Examples of Setswana food include pap, samp, vetkoek, bogobe and mopane worms. A food unique to Botswana is seswaa, salted mashed-up meat. Watermelons are believed to have originated in Botswana.[1]The other foods include morogo wa dinawa, madila and dikgobe. It makes Batswana proud to have their own meal. Most of the relish they get locally. Batswana also make home made refreshing drinks using water melon, Morula and ginger powder. At weddings, sorghum meal is usually cooked mixed with dmelon and this mixture is called Bogobe jwa lerotse. Usually the melon is pre prepared with sour milk and stored to be used whenever needed. Batswana are also good in food preservation. Among others they preserve meat by cutting it into small lengths like strings then dry it. They also fetch bean leaves, cook and dry them. It is also common among Batswana to make Mageu from leftover porridge or pap. Some tribes also preserve not very bad or rotten meat by drying it to be used as relish for a long time. Batswana value their food from time immemorial. They consider it as part of their culture.

Location of Botswana
Seswaa and Bogobe

Ingredients

The markets of Botswana are filled with a large variety of foods. Some are grown locally using irrigation and some are imported from neighbouring countries. A large quantity of high-quality beef is raised in Botswana. Lamb, mutton, chicken and other meats are also plentiful. Beef is the most popular meat, followed by goat meat. River fish are also part of Botswana cuisine.[2]

Sorghum and maize are the main crops grown in Botswana. Wheat and rice and other kinds of cereals not grown locally are imported. Many different kinds of beans are grown, including cowpeas, ditloo, and letlhodi. Peanuts (manoko) are also grown. Many vegetables are grown, such as spinach, carrots, cabbage, onions, potatoes, tomatoes, sweet potatoes and lettuce. There are some vegetables that grow in the wild that are available seasonally including thepe and Delele (okra) . Dried bean leaves are a popular Setswana food.

Many fruits are locally available, including marula. Watermelons, believed to have come originally from Botswana,[3][4] are plentiful in season. Another kind of melon, called lerotse or lekatane, is also grown. There are some kinds of wild melon found in sandy desert areas which are an important food and water source for the people who live in those areas. Many vegetables are seasonal and are often dried or salted for preservation. There are many different ways of cooking dried vegetables.

Vetkoek, a pastry, with mince that originated in South Africa

Seswaa, or chotlho or leswao (pounded beef) is a very popular traditional meat dish made for most special occasions. Usually prepared by men, it is cooked in a three-legged iron pot, simmered until soft, with only salt and water. It is usually prepared using goat meat or beef and it is a staple in most traditional occasions such as funerals and weddings.[5]

Another popular dish is serobe, in which the intestines and some inside parts of goat, sheep or cow are cooked until soft. If the animal is sheep or goat, the trotters are included.

Traditionally grown chicken (free-range) is considered to be tastier than commercially grown chickens. By cooking a traditionally grown chicken for a guest, a host shows special hospitality. Cooking chicken in a three-legged iron pot on an open fire gives it the best flavour.

Porridge (bogobe) is made by putting sorghum, maize or millet flour into boiling water, stirring into a soft paste, and then cooking it slowly. Sometimes the sorghum or maize is fermented, and milk and sugar added. This dish is called ting. Without the milk and sugar, ting is sometimes eaten with meat or vegetables as lunch or dinner. Another way of making bogobe is to add sour milk and a cooking melon (lerotse). This dish is called tophi by the Kalanga tribe.

Bread flour is not part of the basic diet, but has been imported for some years, so there are various bread recipes that have become part of the national food. The most common are dumplings (matlebekwane), flat cakes (diphaphatha) and fat cakes (magwinya). For these, the flour is made into dough which is cooked in different ways such as boiling with meat, cooking in hot oil or in hot coals.

A mopane Worm

Popular foods in remote areas include morama bean, a huge underground tuber, and an edible fungus.[6] Mopane worm a caterpillar of moth Gonimbrasia belina, is cooked in hot ashes, boiled, or dried and fried.[6]

Beverages

Many soft drinks and alcoholic drinks are produced in factories in Botswana, including Fanta and Coca-Cola. Local brands are Castle and Lion beers. Milk is fermented to make madila (sour milk) which is eaten on its own or added to porridge. A favorite non-alcoholic homemade drink is ginger beer.

There are various traditionally produced alcoholic drinks. Bojalwa ja Setswana (the beer of Batswana) is brewed from fermented sorghum seeds. Other tribes, like Bakalanga, use lebelebele (millet). A commercially produced and packaged beer, Chibuku, brewed from either maize or sorghum, is a favourite drink particularly in the villages, towns, and in some parts of the city. Chibuku is also brewed in other neighbouring countries such as Malawi, South Africa (Umqombothi), Zambia and Zimbabwe. Khadi, which is brewed from various ingredients, the healthiest of which is wild berries, is also a widely consumed alcoholic drink among low-income groups in particular.[7]

See also

References

  1. Hughes, Jane (2013-10-01). The Adventurous Vegetarian: Around the World in 30 Meals. New Internationalist. ISBN 978-1-78026-124-9.
  2. ".: BW Lifestyles :". www.botsofficialbw.org. Retrieved 2020-05-24.
  3. "Food and Drink in Botswana". www.worldtravelguide.net. Archived from the original on 2017-02-25. Retrieved 2016-11-13.
  4. ".: BW Lifestyles :". www.botsofficialbw.org. Retrieved 2020-05-24.
  5. Botswana Traditional Recipes with a twist. Gaborone: Botswanacraft Marketing. 2007. ISBN 9789991209869.
  6. "Botswana Food & Dining" Archived August 18, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. iExplore. Accessed May 2010.
  7. "Food and Selected Dishes". Botswana Embassy. Archived from the original on 2013-09-11. Retrieved 2014-02-28.
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