Fufu is a dough-like food found in West African cuisine. In addition to Ghana, it is also found in Sierra Leone, Guinea, Liberia, Cote D'Ivoire, Benin, Togo, Nigeria, Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Central African Republic, the Republic of Congo, Angola and Gabon. It is often made in the traditional Ghanaian, Ivorian, Liberian, and Cuban method of separately mixing and pounding equal portions of boiled cassava with green plantain or cocoyam, or by mixing cassava/plantains or cocoyam flour with water and stirring it on a stove. Its thickness is then adjusted to personal preference, and it is eaten with broth-like soups. Some countries, particularly the Igbo tribe in Nigeria, have a version of fufu made from fermented cassava dough that is eaten with thick textured stews. Other flours, such as semolina, maize flour, or mashed plantains, may take the place of cassava flour. FuFu is traditionally eaten with the fingers, and a small ball of it can be dipped into an accompanying soup or sauce.
Fufu
pounded swallow made from fresh or fermented cassava roots and often eaten alongside various soups
Categories:
Staple food
Characteristic of:
Angolan cuisine
Belizean cuisine
Burkinabé cuisine
Cameroonian cuisine
Caribbean cuisine
Costa Rican cuisine
Cuban cuisine
Democratic Republic of the Congo cuisine
Ecuadorian cuisine
Ghanaian cuisine
Guinean cuisine
Haitian cuisine
Igbo cuisine
Ivorian cuisine
Jamaican cuisine
Liberian cuisine
Nigerian cuisine
Panamanian cuisine
Togolese cuisine
West African cuisine
Yoruba cuisine
Contains:
Cassava
Also known as:
Wikidata ID:
Q941004
Wikipedia title:
Fufu
References:
Dupes
Inbound Links
Unlinked Mentions
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