Berliner Boersenzeitung - Ivory Coast chefs cook up new twist on African food

EUR -
AED 4.104397
AFN 76.945413
ALL 99.231189
AMD 432.617988
ANG 2.010719
AOA 1036.724537
ARS 1074.129077
AUD 1.641361
AWG 2.011389
AZN 1.904081
BAM 1.955429
BBD 2.252673
BDT 133.324726
BGN 1.955529
BHD 0.42042
BIF 3234.286875
BMD 1.117438
BND 1.441627
BOB 7.709539
BRL 6.055052
BSD 1.115688
BTN 93.249023
BWP 14.748204
BYN 3.651208
BYR 21901.788071
BZD 2.248874
CAD 1.517202
CDF 3208.165381
CHF 0.949812
CLF 0.037598
CLP 1037.433333
CNY 7.880067
CNH 7.870123
COP 4641.820049
CRC 578.89026
CUC 1.117438
CUP 29.612111
CVE 110.244101
CZK 25.088056
DJF 198.672338
DKK 7.466767
DOP 66.967305
DZD 147.657009
EGP 54.142736
ERN 16.761573
ETB 129.466357
FJD 2.459262
FKP 0.850995
GBP 0.83876
GEL 3.051043
GGP 0.850995
GHS 17.539675
GIP 0.850995
GMD 76.548818
GNF 9639.172699
GTQ 8.624365
GYD 233.395755
HKD 8.704949
HNL 27.675753
HRK 7.597474
HTG 147.212093
HUF 393.517458
IDR 16941.25656
ILS 4.221139
IMP 0.850995
INR 93.284241
IQD 1461.522939
IRR 47035.770303
ISK 152.262556
JEP 0.850995
JMD 175.286771
JOD 0.791709
JPY 160.803866
KES 143.922717
KGS 94.13132
KHR 4531.14103
KMF 493.181764
KPW 1005.693717
KRW 1488.975611
KWD 0.340897
KYD 0.929724
KZT 534.908597
LAK 24636.329683
LBP 99909.860054
LKR 340.395471
LRD 223.1377
LSL 19.586187
LTL 3.299505
LVL 0.675928
LYD 5.297996
MAD 10.818149
MDL 19.468309
MGA 5046.04342
MKD 61.603322
MMK 3629.395577
MNT 3797.054841
MOP 8.955702
MRU 44.337595
MUR 51.268486
MVR 17.164273
MWK 1934.433289
MXN 21.697078
MYR 4.698871
MZN 71.348848
NAD 19.586187
NGN 1831.984424
NIO 41.062216
NOK 11.713438
NPR 149.198716
NZD 1.791484
OMR 0.429669
PAB 1.115688
PEN 4.181807
PGK 4.367172
PHP 62.188829
PKR 309.994034
PLN 4.274593
PYG 8704.349913
QAR 4.067529
RON 4.972492
RSD 117.064808
RUB 103.380402
RWF 1504.014883
SAR 4.193134
SBD 9.282489
SCR 14.578236
SDG 672.143165
SEK 11.364797
SGD 1.442952
SHP 0.850995
SLE 25.530448
SLL 23432.113894
SOS 637.579134
SRD 33.752262
STD 23128.713955
SVC 9.762149
SYP 2807.596846
SZL 19.593286
THB 36.793929
TJS 11.859752
TMT 3.911034
TND 3.380559
TOP 2.617156
TRY 38.132438
TTD 7.588561
TWD 35.736832
TZS 3045.822602
UAH 46.114158
UGX 4133.216465
USD 1.117438
UYU 46.101261
UZS 14197.308611
VEF 4047978.463464
VES 41.096875
VND 27494.566096
VUV 132.664504
WST 3.125992
XAF 655.832674
XAG 0.035881
XAU 0.000426
XCD 3.019933
XDR 0.826843
XOF 655.832674
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.722751
ZAR 19.426272
ZMK 10058.288435
ZMW 29.537401
ZWL 359.814634
  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.32

    -0.6%

  • NGG

    0.7200

    69.55

    +1.04%

  • BCE

    -0.1500

    35.04

    -0.43%

  • GSK

    -0.8200

    40.8

    -2.01%

  • SCS

    -0.3900

    12.92

    -3.02%

  • BCC

    -7.1900

    137.5

    -5.23%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    25.15

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    -0.5200

    78.38

    -0.66%

  • RIO

    -1.6100

    63.57

    -2.53%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    25.02

    +0.04%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    6.97

    +0.29%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    37.44

    -0.35%

  • RBGPF

    58.8300

    58.83

    +100%

  • BP

    -0.1200

    32.64

    -0.37%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    10.01

    -0.5%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    47.99

    -0.29%

Ivory Coast chefs cook up new twist on African food
Ivory Coast chefs cook up new twist on African food / Photo: Sia KAMBOU - AFP

Ivory Coast chefs cook up new twist on African food

In the kitchen of his Abidjan restaurant, Ivory Coast chef Charlie Koffi prepares his country's staggering tropical bounty with the techniques of fine French cuisine. And he's far from alone.

Text size:

A growing number of his fellow chefs in the West African nation are retouching local specialities with cooking skills picked up elsewhere.

One of Koffi's signature dishes is an adaptation of gouagouassou sauce, a local specialty.

In his version, a rabbit is stewed with African eggplants, spicy oil, powdered akpi seeds and local fefe pepper.

"It is one of the dishes I really loved as a child," Koffi told AFP. "As a chef, it was almost an obligation to come back to it."

Koffi was trained in France before opening his Abidjan restaurant, Villa Alfira, in 2017 to showcase his country's cuisine.

In the well-lit main dining room overlooking a pond where fish on the menu swim, Eric Guei tucked into a gouagouassou casserole.

"I find taste and audacity in this dish," the happy customer said. "It mixes Western know-how with local flavours."

Guei enjoyed the copious but beautifully presented meal with his friend Yasmine Doumbia. "Gouagouassou is a very traditional Ivory Coast dish, and to see it in a restaurant like this is a real pleasure," she said.

Villa Alfira is a change from the "maquis", typical animated local eateries where braised chickens and fish are eaten by hand, along with traditional sauces, manioc polenta, and fried plantains.

- Grilled okra and cassava chips -

A few kilometres away, a chef at the upscale restaurant La Maison Palmier is working on her new creation: a taster dish inspired by placali, a typical Ivorian dish made with sticky gumbo sauce, bits of meat and dried fish, accompanied by fermented manioc paste.

Hermence Kadio, who trained locally, has her own much lighter take on the classic. She grilled the gumbo (okra), while the cassava is puffed up and turned into chips.

Every week the restaurant's French head chef Matthieu Gasnier offers amuse-bouche -- small bite-sized appetisers -- like these to "re-awaken the memories of people who grew up with these dishes".

About half his clientele is Ivorian, he said.

"Even if our restaurant's cuisine is intended to be international since we are in a five-star hotel, I think it would be wrong not to take advantage of all these beautiful products that surround us," he said.

Grains such as fonio and sorghum grow in the Ivory Coast's hot dry northern savannas, said Koffi, while the forested south produces local varieties of spinach and typical tropical products such as bananas and yams.

- Healthier and tastier -

N'Cho Yapi, who founded the group Chefs: Creators of Emotions, said Ivorian cooks began going back to their culinary roots just after the turn of the century.

Before that, chefs at fancy restaurants "had the habit of offering Western dishes with imported products," he said. "But the cost of living kept going up," so they turned to less-expensive products "they had just under their noses".

And local specialties are appearing more and more on the menus of the luxury restaurants that have mushroomed across Abidjan in recent years, Yapi added.

Valerie Rollainth, an Ivorian chef trained in France at the famous Institut Paul Bocuse, insisted that typically hearty Ivorian cuisine is no longer suited to the capital's increasingly sedentary lifestyle.

"There are too few vegetables, a shocking quantity of oil, and the dishes are cooked too long" and lose their nutrients, she said.

At the nutritional workshops she organises she urges people to eat local products in new ways, such as raw okra, which "is very good against diabetes".

"Some diseases are linked to eating habits," she said. "In the Ivory Coast, not everyone has access to health care, but everyone has access to healthy food."

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)